Monday, July 21, 2025

The House, Pt. 3: The Garden



This is going to be the hardest one to write. Mainly due to the fact that the new house has most of the what the current house had - and in many ways better versions of it. Granted, it won't have a basement, as I detailed in my second post, but I already plan on co-opting the spare bedroom into a quasi-basement. But the real differentiating factor is that the new house won't have a real garden. In a literal sense, it won't because we move in there in winter and by the rules the won't actually sod a lawn until Spring, and there after be super slow building trees. Of course, even if we wanted to plant our own, that isn't really possible without getting it approved by the horticulture committee. In our current house, there was no committee - just my Mom who loved gardening and made it her life's work to make our backyard something truly stunning.

**before I got further, I should mention that the front yard is stunning as well. So many times when driving home I marveled at its beauty - but that was a public beauty. The backyard was private, it was our little secret.***

The garden was many things over the years - from a fantasy land, to an art piece, to a place of a lot of work (I did help mulch, and trim, and plant, and cut-down and what-not). But more than anything, it was the defining factor of what made our house special. I guess my Mom inherited the green thumb from her Mom, but in reality she made it something her own. It got semi-passed down to my Sister and I, but there's no mistaking my Mom's brilliance for keeping things flowering, prospering and alive, compared to my Sister and my feeble attempts to do the same.



She toiled in that space for decades, turning it little by little into something worthy of a magazine. It was a lot of work, a labor of love. Be it her planting and caring, and my dad mulching and watering, and at times me helping by not killing things. The garden doesn't become this amazing panoply of beauty overnight. In fact, it grew from essentially nothing in 1993 when we moved in, to something absurdly beautiful and abundant around 2013-14 or so. That was probably the peak, with some of the older trees needing cutting down around that time. Those times cutting down the trees were of course painful, aside from when it was fun to use a chain-saw for a bit, but small miseries, preceding the big misery now of not having it to call mine or ours anymore.

In my childhood, it was an incredible land of wonder and fantasy. I didn't build forts and stuff inside. Yes, I contorted the basement into various sports areans and courts, but the real imagination of my life was in that backyard. Pretending to be the statue of liberty standing on top of the slide. Playing various little games roaming around its wide expanse. It is hard to remember those days really at this point, with us putting in a patio in around 2003 or so. More time has been spent living with the patio than we did without it, but those early memories were so special in that time when it was all still growing. 



The trees, the plants, the roses, the flowers, the little nooks and crannies we built around its perimeter with benches and all of that was yet to come. It was still developing and nascent when I was a child. The one part that was fairly constant and similar from 2000 to 2020 was the vegetable garden. That was also probably the part I was more interested in, more active in than any other. I helped plant some of those seeds, doing my part living with the worms and soil as a child. Picking berries and corn and sunflowers. In older years, I left the planting to my Mom, who was far more successful at turning seeds into plants, but helped constructing makeshift wire canopies and boxes and so much more. 

Of course, in my time as a nascent home chef, this abundance was so enriching as well - whenever I wanted a spice, I just had to step outside into one of the pots and snip some off, be it mint, sage, rosemary, thyme. During the summers adn falls, the Friday cooking was so indebted to whatever produce came otu of that garden, from berries, to peppers to adorable little kabucha squashes. I'm already pushing my Mom to continue the vegetable garden in teh new home, probably one of the few things small and inoffensive enough to get away with building quickly.




Going back to my life and connection to the garden, from pretending to be statues, it turned into more a place of solace and peace. We ahd this one tree that I loved more than any other, because it grew so broad and wise and dense, with its red leaves. It provided a perfect canopy about halfway down the length of the yard on the left side. For so many years I would take a plush chair from the patio and put it underneath that tree - be it to read, to watch movies or TV on my laptop, or to just doze off. Granted, it rarely started out being a situation where I was hoping to doze off, but the serenity, the chirps of the birds, the light breeze and the brilliant shade of the red tree was one of those memories I'll never let go. 

Granted, technically we cut down that tree about six years ago. What we never stopped, even until our last weekend in the house, was sitting on that patio and just living life. Whether it was with my family, or just by myself, there was no place I loved in our house more than this. The view of the expansive backyard from my particular favorite outdoor rocking chair may be my single favorite view in the world - the bountiful hydrangea bush, the other series of flowers in pots or beds. The vast expanse with large trees in the back. It was all so beautiful.



And it was also such a memorable place for us as a family. So many spring, summer and fall nights spend on that patio just being with each other, chatting the night away. So many great discussions and music and food and drinks shared between each other on it. From earlier years eating ribs or burgers off the grill on the table in the patio corner, to later years enjoying glass of wine or scotch or an aperitif eating snacks before heading inside for dinner. Finally the last few years, after amateur stargazing became more popular, to go out in the backyard late at night, even in the dead of winter, and just stare upwards. Our backyard deserving of the brilliance of the illuminated night sky, just as it was so deserving of the cloudless skies during the days.

Like any good garden, we were also joined by so many animals in celebrating it. This was admittedly a lot more of a delight for me than my Mom, who saw the deer and rabbits (mostly, really, the deer) as her enemies, here to rob us of the beauty of her work. But I always saw it more as these animals agreeing in how amazing the yard was. A day never went by without seeing a bunny. Even on the last few days there were 3-4 a day, including little bunny pairs hopping and chasing each other around the crevasses adn corners. Deer was less common this year, but in past we had everything from families, to once discovering a little fawn in the grass, which was luckily found by its parents. There were of course squirrels, and a rare groundhog as well. 



But more than any of these animals, there were birds. A lot of them, providing the soundtrack and the colors. We had cardinals, and blue jays, and hummingbirds, and swallows, and vultures and crows and so many more. We had multiple nests built every year into various trees around the backyard. We were a favored spot for many birds with my Dad's various birdfeeders he would put out. So many animals called this place home. They'll get to continue to enjoy the spoils - to which I hope some find their way to our new home.

I don't know when it was when I realized how amazing this backyard was. As a child, I realized it was big and an area of exploration, imagination and fun. But didn't really appreciate the beauty. In later years, that is all I can think about. Those days just sitting on my chair, rocking back and forth, reading or watchign something, but getting the urge every thirty seconds to just look up and stare at the floral greenery around me. I took so many pictures all from that relative same position. I've pulled out all those photos into one folder that covers a roughly 10-year span. Different phones of different camera quality, but the beauty oozes out as much in 2014 as it did in 2024. 




I never get tired of taking in beautiful sights. People never understand why I've been to Cape Town seven times, and can still find enrapturing beauty in staring at Table Mountain from the V&A Waterfront. It's for that reason I've taken roughly 100 pictures from those same spots at the Waterfront over the years. Of course, in the end, I had my own Table Mountain landscape beauty in my own backyard the whole time.

I'm not sad about moving. Or I should say it that I am excited about the future and still 100% think it is the right decision. The garden plays a role in that - with teh yardwork becoming more tiring for my parents over the years. What use is this incredible garden if it takes too much effort and energy to keep it up. My Mom gets a new blank canvas that is better sized for where we are in our lives to mold. But that doesn't mean the loss of that wonderland is any less real. This is one of the two places that won't be replaced - the other being the basement. This will never be replaced, but always a seared memory in my mind I can picture if I close my eyes. It's pretty easy to do that when you've spent your life taking it in enough times to make that memory permanent.



Wednesday, July 16, 2025

The House, Pt. 2: The Basement

I don't know when the basement became "mine". Maybe it was in 2005, when I watched the Astros playoff games in a small TV on one wall of the basement, sitting on god knows what chair (it was, after all, twenty years ago). Certianly at that point, I was the person who spent the most time there. Of course, there was a whole 12 years in the house before that, where the basement was used for birthday parties, and roller blading, and tons of other random merriment - and of course every now and then some crickets. But it wasn't really mine then.

More officially, it probably was in 2012, when I graduated early from college, bought a big 60" LG TV with my sign-on bonus money from my first job, put that in the basement, with two adorning futons, a comfy as hell chair from IKEA, and two lamps to provide some mood lightling. From say the 90 day period from then until I left for my RTW trip, I probably spent four nights out of five in the basement, with just the lamps, on the futon, watching god knows what. That was perfection.

But maybe perfection was these last five years, or more pointedly, 2020-2022, when the outside world was still a bit of an unknown. I would spend Monday to Friday working upstairs, and then Friday evening cooking, and then come 11pm Friday would descend to the basement. I've probably spend roughly 60% of my weekend nights since Covid started in the basement, watching something or the other from roughly 11:30pm to 3:30am on that same TV I bought with my bonus money.

What did I watch, you ask? Well at first it was random old football games. Then, when Tom Brady won another damn Super Bowl in Feb 2021, I swore off football and watched random old tennis, soccer, basketball, baseball games, and concert videos of Van Halen, Billy Joel. And then when Tom Brady retired, it went back to football. For the last 18 months or so, it's been a fairly normal routine - the 2015 AFC Championship and 1999 Super Bowl plus random stuff on Friday, and the 2007 Super Bowl and 2006 AFC Championship Game and random stuff on Saturday. And music - a ton of random old music on both days (more to come on that).

The basement was my refuge. Everyone knew that, from my parents and sister, who ceded that space to me for no real reason (or in my sister's case, a very specific reason - the crickets and mice that would infest it from time to time... my friends!). My friends knew it - I remember so many zoom calls with my friend group in the height of covid, the joke being the fire alarm that perpetually had an expired battery that would beep every ten minutes or so. From a Zoom angle, it was a haunted place. From my angle, it was amazing.

The real peak, if there was one, of the basement was before my stated date of taking it over. It was earlier, when I role played every sport in that say 15x30 part of house. I threw footballs to myself, but that was more silly and performative than anything. It was tennis and baseball that were the real ones. In the beginning, on one wall was a couch and the other wall I used to stand, and hit tennis balls against the wall. Now, it was an unfinished concrete wall - I don't think there was anything detrimental about this, but still, that was my forte. That was coupled with me throwing baseballs, pretending to be random made up people, against the old couch until it gave way.

When the couch did way (which coupled as the "net" for my tennis), what did I do? Well, I turned 90 degrees, to the longer dimension of the basement, and threw baseballs as a pitcher against a mattress I would move and stick up against a wall. I spent so many evenings, particularly October evenings, throwing baseballs against it, pretending to be some pitcher. When I started this random routine, it was probably 2004 or so. I used to pretend i was in the year 2035. Somehow, we aren't so far away from that at this point.

The basement has been a constant part of my life, even from before I really remember what "my life" is. It used to be unfinished in every way, and I used to roller skate on it until I tore up the concrete where that wasn't possible anymore. It was the place my cousins and I used to hang out. In the early days that was innocent. In the medium days (say 2009), it was where I would sneak beers down and play ping pong with Ian, Carl, and Andy. In later days, it was where the cousins (including me) would sleep - but in more reality just chat away until 5am or so.

But more than anything, the basement was my refuge. I already spoke earlier about my Covid night routine in the basement, but the turning point if anything, was when I came back home the day after Thanksgiving in 2022, in what should've in theory been a celebration, but instead was a dour, scary trip. My Dad the week before in Florida was diagnosed with a small brain hemmorage. Luckily it was small, adn caught early, and he's fine, but I had flown back to get some things to then return to Jacksonville (where thsi all took place) the next weekend. I returned to the basement in my normal routine, but this time needed a pick me up. So, around 2am, I just put Youtube up adn started playing old 90's and 00's music. And played it loud, probably close to max volume. It was a way to esacpe a scary time, even if just for a short period.

I make no apologies for making the basement my place for basically the last 20 years. If anything, no one else was battling me for it. It was dark, it was scary (for a child). It had a mouse infestation in 2015 or so (which has lingering 1-2 mouses a year ever since), which was only adorable to me. The rest of the family ceded the basement to me, adn I took full advantage. 

My parents new house doesn't have a basement. It has a lot else - it has basically the same amount of above-ground square footage as our current house, but there's no basement. I'll need to jerry-rig some random room into my version of my cave, but it won't be a cave. It won't be nicely warm in winter, and nicely cool in summer. It won't be with this minimalist, semi-finished combination of wood and stone. It won't be that basement. More than anything, it won't be my basement - that semi-finished place that I continually saw the beauty, the equity and the flexibility of for over 20 years - more like 30 if you include my roller skating days.

I write this two days before my final weekend in the basement. In about 75 hours, I'll be sipping a beer in teh basement, with Billy Joel's "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" playing on Youtube, with me sitting in my chair that I bought from Ikea a decade-plus ago, looking at old vacation photos on my laptop. And soon after that, I'll ascend the stairs back to level ground, back to modernity. I've climbed those stairs probably 100,000 times. I'm not ready for the final one.

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

The House, Pt. 1: Dealing with the Decision

It all happened really fast over this Christmas Break, my mandatory week off from work between Christmas and New Years. It was a slow day, and my Mom suggested she take my Sister and I, who were both a bit bored, to visit a 55+ community down the street, with really nice single-family homes built by Toll Brothers. We were visiting because she had recently taken a few of her retired friends to visit, some of which expressed interest.

From the second we walked into the model house, which admittedly was decked out with every upgrade imagineable, my sister and I fell in love - more than with the house itself, but the idea that my parents shoudl take this moment to move there. I mean - it made a ton of sense. They could likely sell our current house for more, so net out positive in the deal, and mvoe into a 55+ community, with people their own age (our current neighborhood is basically 97% new people compared to when we moved in, granted not too surprising since that was 1993...). And they could do it literally down the street - a 20 minute walk, so not having to change any part of their actual life. It all seemed perfect. It all was really rushed, too.

Within 10 days, they had put a deposit down - though there were multiple days in between where opinions from all of us waffled from they should go, to they should stay, and everywhere in between. But by end of January, when my parents were taking their annual snowbirds trip to India, they had put a further deposit, and it was basically all in motion.

The house will only be ready in Jan/Feb 2026, but more pressing we have to move out of our current house, and therein lies the problem. This is the only house I've ever known (I mean, other than my various apartments and dorms and what-not). It is my refuge. It is the place I grew up in. There's grainy family movie footage of baby and toddler me in our older house. I love the fact that footage exists, but I don't remember it. I remember this house. And now, with us needing to move out in two weeks, it really is starting to feel all too soon.

My parents were always surprised how quickly my Sister and I took to the idea of them moving. She has some memories, in theory, of the earlier house, but even to her this is the only house she;s really ever known. We made our peace in a way in January when we pushed heavily for the move - and I do think for all good reasons, from my parents not being at an age where they can expend the energy to take care of their beautiful, large yard, to the house being 32 years old and at high risk of some major repair event in the offing. But also because it seemed still a bit distant when it would happen. It is distant no more.

I don't know when I started counting down the weekends left in our house, in my house. We're down to two as I write this (and probably one when I post it). It probably was back in April when I took a weekend to travel with friends to visit a friend in San Diego. It definitely started by the time I had to visit India for work, and decided to come home Friday Night / Saturday Morning instead of spend the second weekend in India - I didn't want to miss one last weekend in my home.

There's so many incredible memories in that house, and that will largely be the focus of subsequent posts. Many of those memories were in our backyard, which will also be a post. I'm sure there will be an A to Z when it is all said and done. But for now, I just want to state how lucky I feel - lucky that this is the first time I need to face this.

Many of my childhood friends moved away from New Jersey. In fact, it was almost comical how easily 4-5 people that I would've called my best friend at various points from ages 5-12 moved away. My high school friends and I are all still tight - and while some of them have moved, many of their parents have as well. Out of course nine, only three of us still ahve our parents living in the house they were in during our high school. In a way, my family's move a 5-min drive away doesn't really change that, but it still matters - a new address to share.

But through it all, I haven't had to move. I haven't had to help pack, to make the decision of throw vs. continue to hold onto - a decision making process I waver between rationality and madness with the frequency of a metronome. I haven't had to deal with someone else living in my house. Even when I moved into my own apartment, I mostly built that up from scratch so it was the joy of moving in without the pains of moving out. I do realize how priveliged this whole thing sounds for someone who is 34, but it is nevertheless all too real.

Privilege takes many forms - from me living at home for years when I was mostly traveling during the week, to our house, and more pointedly the yard, being our refuge during the darkest days of Covid, to the nice cool breezy feeling when opening the door to home coming back late at night, be it from my parents' friends' place when my Sister adn I were kids, to from late night flights back from weeks on the road, to that moment when we drive up 66 Kinglet after spending a few weeks on vacation. This was our home, my home, and soon it will be a memory. Thankfully though, one that is just a three minute drive away. 

Twenty-Three Years of NFL Playoffs: Ranking the Conference Title Games, Pt. 2

Tier IV – The Great Games



19.) 2008 AFC Championship – (A6) Ravens 14 @ (A2) Steelers 23


Review: In the first year of the newly-revived Steelers-Ravens rivalry, the Steelers beat the Ravens for a 3rd time after beating them 23-20 in Heinz and then 13-9 in a smashmouth game at M&T Bank capped with a 92-yard TD drive by Ben. This one wasn’t as close, but the hits were just as many. It started out in (smashmouth) style with two Ravens needing medical attention after the opening kickoff. It featured sacks by the usuals: Suggs, Woodley, Ngata, Polamalu, and great play by everyone around on both defenses. Every score seemed like a minor miracle. Any first down for the Ravens (198 yards in the game) seemed like a large miracle. The Steelers led 13-0 and 16-7, but both leads were answered with Ravens’ TD runs by Willis McGahee, keeping the Ravens in a game they were mostly outclassed in by a defense that was just 5% better. Flacco played like a rookie in a Conference Title Game, throwing three interceptions and going just 13-30, but timely red-zone defense kept the Ravens in the game. In the end, it ended the way any Ravens-Steelers slugfest should, with a dramatic pick-6 as the Ravens were driving for a potential game-winning field goal. Troy Polamalu did the honors, cutting in front of a Flacco pass and weaving his way to the house for the capper in a hard-hitting night in Heinz Field. 


Interesting/Memorable Play: Steelers 2nd round bust Limas Sweed had an interesting two plays. First, he dropped a walk-in touchdown and then, in what is mostly seen as an act of cowardly fright, faked being hurt so he could curry up some sympathy. Two plays later, he laid out Frank Walker with a massive, Hines-Ward-ian block.


Interesting/Memorable Play 2: The Steelers first touchdown came courtesy of one of the strangest plays you will ever see. Ben Roethlisberger, like he does, escaped a sack and spun and heaved a ball downfield off-balance. The Raven defender overran the ball, and Holmes came back and caught it, and then weaved his way for a 62-yard touchdown. The play really should have been a sack or an interception, but somehow, someway, Santonio Holmes did what he did constantly in the 2008 postseason.


18.) 2017 AFC Championship - (A3) Jaguars 20 @ (A1) Patriots 24




Review: The Patriots trailed 14-3. The Patriots also seemed like a lock to win the whole time - so mismatched was Brady vs. Bortles. The Patriots trailed 20-10 at the start of the fourth quarter, and it still seemed like a lock. It wasn't without its fun along the way, though. The Jaguars were able to consistently move the ball, but Bortles in the end was felled by pressure, very un-Patriots-like pressure. The Patriots rallied first with a huge TD right before half, and then back-to-back TDs to Danny Amendola, moving from a 20-10 deficit to an insurmountable 24-20 lead. But the comeback almost never happened. First was a fumble by Dion Lewis that arguably should have become a Jaguars TD, but the whistle blew too early after the Jags recovered. Then, on their drive that made it 20-17, the Patriots were forced into 3rd and 18, before a 21-yard strike to Amendola. The Jaguars final comeback ended when Trey Flowers sacked Bortles - an inevitable end to what was an entertaining game where we learned how close a Bortles-led team could get to beating a Brady-led team.

Interesting/Memorable Play: The Patriots scored a TD to cut it to 14-10 with a minute to go in the first half. Despite having a timeout, the Jaguars decided to have Blake Bortles kneel twice and go into halftime. There might have been some feeling to accept the 14-10 lead, but you can't beat New England playing scared. I'm pretty sure Doug Pederson doesn't kneel there.

Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the seventh time that Gillette Stadium hosted a Conference Title Game ('03, '07, '11-'12, '14, '16-'17), placing it in a tie with Candlestick Park for the most title games hosted ('81, '84, '89, '90, '92, '94, '97, '11). Obviously, Gillette has the clear upper hand in a race to get to an 8th.




17.) 2021 AFC Championship - (A4) Bengals 27 @ (A2) Chiefs 24



Review: This is maybe the most stunning upset in Championship Game history. Not in the macro sense - this was not a great Chiefs team (at least comapred to the prior three) and the Bengals were on something special, but in the micro sense. The Chiefs were up 21-3, and a yard away from being up 28-10 at halftime. But then seemingly just forgot to play football for a half. It was stunning in its slowness of the collapse. The Chiefs started the game with three straight touchdowns, and then managed just a field goal in their final 8 drives, going three-and-out more times than scoring. The Bengals got better obviously, but it was jarring to see in the second half Mahomes just not find people open, be skittish about throwing, waiting too long, and even getting sacked multiple times instead of throwing hte ball away. The Bengals scores were on a beautiful screen pass to Perrine and a beautiful quick jump ball TD to Chase. The Chiefs still had their chances, the two biggest missed opportunities being a three-and-out after picking off Burrow at midfield, and then on their lone scoring drive, having 1st and Goal at the 5, with 1:30 on the clock, and having Mahomes get sacked twice, necessitating a 44-yard field goal to jsut get to OT. In OT, despite winning the coin toss this time, Mahomes got picked off and it was all over. It was stunning, it was memorable, it was a potential dominant AFC team for years to come growing up in front of our eyes. But most of it, to repeat, it was jsut stunning.



Interesting / Memorable Play: I skimmed over the real turning point. After scoring three straight TDs to start, the Chiefs had 1st and Goal from the 1 with 0:09 left in the first half up 21-10. After a Mahomes incompletion, Mahomes convinced Reid to give them another shot instead of immediately taking the sure field goal. Mahomes' screen pass to Hill was perfectly read by Eli Apple who tackled him for a loss, in the field, and the clock ran out.



Interesting / Memorable Fact: Evan McPherson became the first kicker in NFL history to hit two game winning kicks on the last play of the game in the same postseason, with this coming off hte heels of his walk-off field goal against the Titans in the divisional round.


16.) 2008 NFC Championship – (N6) Eagles 25 @ (N4) Cardinals 31



Review: The Colts comeback from 21-3 down in a game still to come on this list was as memorable as any in recent memory, but here, the Eagles came back from a 24-6 halftime deficit on the road and took a 25-24 lead after a 62-yard TD by DeSean Jackson. Too bad for the Eagles, though, as Kurt Warner and the Cardinals put together their only drive of note in the 2nd half just in time, with a 7:40 long, 14-play march to retake the lead for good. The drive featured a 4th and 1 pitch-out to Tim Hightower at midfield and a 3rd and Goal screen pass for a TD to Hightower again. The game itself was a wild affair, with Larry Fitzgerald scoring three 1st half TDs, including one on a end-around pitchback that I alluded to back in the description of the 2005 Wild Card Game between the Steelers and Bengals. Donovan McNabb and the Eagles answered with three straight TD drives of their own in the 2nd. In what was the final NFC Championship for both quarterbacks, McNabb was slightly erratic at times, but threw for 375 yards with 3 TDs and 1 INT, while Warner was brilliant, going 21-28 for 279 yards and 4 tds with no picks. Fitz, DeSean Jackson, Kevin Curtis and Brent Celek all had big games. It was a nice shootout that was never really boring (even as the Cards took that 24-6 lead). A nice precursor to the epic shootout that would be in that stadium 51 weeks later.


Interesting/Memorable Play: The game really turned on one brilliant pass. It was the Eagles 2nd drive of the 2nd half (after a fumble and then a Cardinals punt), and with 6:41 remaining in the quarter, still down 24-6, the Eagles faced a 3rd and 18 from their own 31. In what may have been his best pass as an Eagle, McNabb perfectly shot a 50-yard pass to Kevin Curtis, which changed the game completely. If the Eagles won, it might be remembered as one of the biggest plays of the 2000s.


Interesting/Memorable Fact: The Game set a couple records that aren’t exactly good ones. This game marked the first time that both Title Game participants won fewer than 10 games (not to mention the first time since the 2002 AFC Title Game where neither team won 12 or more games), with the Cardinals going 9-7 and the Eagles going 9-6-1. It also marked the lowest combined seeds for Title Game opponents, with the Cardinals being the NFC’s 4th seed and the Eagles the 6th.


15.) 2012 NFC Championship - (N2) 49ers 28 @ (N1) Falcons 24


Review: The 49ers did something amazing in this game. No, it wasn't just coming back from 17-0 on the road to win a Championship Game. That was incredible. What was better was doing it without really stopping the Falcons more than twice. The Falcons punted just twice in the game, and only once was in the half. Matt Ryan turned the ball over twice during the 2nd half, where once was when his receiver slipped and the other was a terrible snap. The 49ers, of course, played quite well on offense themselves, capitalizing on a soft run defense with a great game from Frank Gore, who had 90 yards on 21 carries with two TDs. The Falcons kept Kaepernick in the pocket, but he had his best game throwing of any in the playoffs, going 16-21 for 233 yards and a TD with no INTs. Of course, this wasn't close to Matt Ryan, who went 30-42 for 396 yards with three TDs and one pick. Matt Ryan's incredible statline just underscores what a strange comeback this was for the 49ers, who played terrible defense all day. The game actually mirrored the Super Bowl in that way, with the losing team having a large advantage in yardage (the Falcons outgained the 49ers by 104), but the 49ers, like the Ravens did to them, stopped the Falcons in the red zone with a controversial non-call on 4th down. It is hard to for 49ers fans to complain about the Super Bowl since they saw that exact same story play out two weeks earlier. It didn't stop them from complaining, but it happened.


Interesting/Memorable Fact: Another example of how well the Falcons played in a losing effort: against a top pass defense, all three of the Falcons main weapons went off. Julio Jones was the star with 11 catches for 182 yards and two TDs. Of course, Roddy White chipped in with 100 yards on 7 catches, and Gonzalez had 78 yards on 8 catches with a TD.


Interesting/Memorable Play: Another example of how the Falcons stopped the Falcons, and not the 49ers, was what happened a handful of plays before their incomplete on 4th down. Throwing from the 50 yard line, Ryan found Harry Douglas wide open on a wheel route near the 30, with absolutely no one inbetween him and the end zone. What did Douglas do? Fall down trying to catch the well thrown ball and turn a sure TD into a 22 yard gain.


14.) 2023 NFC Championship - (N3) Lions 31 @ (N1) 49ers 34


Review: Much like the game above it, the 49ers came back from a 24-7 deficit in the start of the second half, and much like their win eleven years earlier, did it by pretty much never really stopping their opposition. The Lions second half instead became a series of defensible, but harrowing fourth down decisions, before it was just a bit too late. For the game, Goff and Purdy were both excellent, especially Purdy adding in 48 rushing yards. Jameson Williams started it off with an end around 42-yard TD, and the Lions added two more rushing TDs when building that lead. But little by little, the league's best offense in 2023 made it known with a stellar second half, going FG-TD-TD-FG-TD to end the game. Yes, they got some help, from what probably should've been a pick by Kendal Vildor hitting his face mask and landing softly to a falling Brandon Aiyuk for a big gain (when it was still 24-7), and then a fumble giving them a short field. But the 49ers capitalized on all of it, finally taking the lead for good on a McCaffrey TD run after the second failed 4th down conversion. In the end, the two 4th down conversions is what people will remember - the Lions doing it first up 24-10 (the drive before the Vildor near pick), and then down 27-24 - both times at the edge of field goal range. But in reality, they knew what we all did - they weren't likely stopping the 49ers offense at that point.



Interesting/Memorable Play: The first 4th down is probably the more harrowing one. It was just 4th and 2, and from the 28-yard line, and the Lions went for it. That wasn't a surprise, but them throwing for it was. It was still nearly complete, but Josh Reynolds bobbled a slightly low throw, and the avalanche started.



Interesting/Memorable Fact: This game put the 49ers back on top of the overall leaderboard of most times hosting a Championship Game, this being their 12th - breaking a tie with New England and Dallas.


13.) 2014 NFC Championship - (N2) Packers 22 @ (N1) Seahawks 28


Review: In what was a fascinating game of two teams competing to play as badly as possible, it ended up being the Packers who decided to make a few more mistakes than the Seahawks did. The game itself was a wholly defensive affair, with the Packers defense absolutely confusing a terrible Russell Wilson into four interceptions, and the Seahawks playing the Packers tight and picking off Rodgers twice themselves. Those two QBs had a combined 6 interceptions in their first 16 playoff games. The Packers built a 16-0 lead, but it should have been so much more. Twice the Packers kicked field goals on 4th and Goal from the 1 and 2 yard line, and once more Rodgers was picked off inside the 20. They could have ended this game, and also moved it far back on the list. Instead, they didn't and the Seahawks woke up. The Seahawks first bite back came on a beautiful fake field goal for a TD. Then a normal drive ended in a TD to make it 19-14, but with 1:25 left it was still basically over. Except the Packers forgot to recover the on-side kick, that part of the equation fell through and the Seahawks scored quickly enough to not only take the lead but give the Packers enough time to send the game to OT with a fifth Mason Crosby field goal at the gun. In the end, Russell Wilson finally put together two good plays in succession, with back-to-back 35 yard passes in OT. First to get them out of 3rd and 7, and next a strike to Jermaine Kearse to walk off a winner. It was a frantic game that changed a lot of perceptions about how bad Russell Wilson could play and still win a playoff game, and how many things a team can do wrong, from Drive 0 to Drive N to lose a game.



Interesting/Memorable Play: The game could've ended numerous times, but other than the bobbled on-side kick, the real 'agent zero' play was the interception by Morgan Burnett, the 4th pick of Wilson on the day. At the time there was 5:15 left, with the Packers up 19-7. Burnett picked it off at his 40, with open field ahead of him and instead of try a return, he slid to safety. It was understandable, but kicked off a horrific series of events.



Interesting/Memorable Fact: Right after that interception, the Packers had a 99.9% chance to win the game. That ties the highest win probability for an eventual loser in NFL Playoff history, and breaks the record for a 4th quarter. The last team to do it, though, was not too long ago. The Chiefs had a 99.9% win probability up 38-10 in the 4th quarter of their Wild Card loss to the Colts in 2013.


12.) 2021 NFC Championship - (N6) 49ers 17 @ (N2) Rams 20



Review: So many games up in this list are made better by the strong home crowd atmosphere. The Championship Games being the one even where hardware is handed out where the majority of fans are real fans. Well, this was a version of that, but with a Super Bowl mix as unsurprisingly there were a lot of 49ers fans in attendance. That wild, unique atmosphere improved what was a close, well played and dramatic game between two division rivals. The 49ers took a 17-7 lead off strong situational play, a rare great Deebo receiving game (4-72 with 1 TD). It helped that the 49ers picked off Stafford in the end zone after a long drive. The Rams got back in teh game doing what they did so often - just ball out with Cooper Kupp, who had 142 yards on 11 catches with 2 TDs. Odell Beckham played a huge role as well with a 9 catch 113 yard game. The game reached its apex after the Rams made it 17-14 early in the 4th. First the 49ers ran for no gain on 3rd and 2, before punting on 4th and 2. The Rams then avoided disaster, with the 49ers dropping a sure interception, which led to a Rams field goal to tie a few plays later. The 49ers couldn't do anything, and the Rams went on the drive of Matt Stafford's career, converting to 3rd downs, leading to Matt Gay's field goal to make it 20-17. The 49ers couldn't muster anything, with Aaron Donald and Von Miller taking over, the final play with Garoppolo flinging the ball away while being flung to the ground by Donald, for the game sealing interception. It was a well played, if defensive game, between two teams that knew each other innately.



Interesting / Memorable Play: A little more nuance is needed before slamming Garoppolo for the stupid last interception. Yes it was comical (I mean look at the picture), but it was also 3rd and 13, with 1:19 left. If he just takes a sack, the game is basically over (they were starting down a 4th and 20). If he's able to throw it away first, it's still 4th & 13. Also, let's not forget that the pass did hit Jamychal Hasty on his hands.



Interesting / Memorable Fact: With the Rams win, this was the second straight year that a team ended up playing the Super Bowl at home. However, unlike with the Buccaneers the year before, the Rams became the first team to play the Conference Championship Game and Super Bowl in teh same stadium (of course, it being their home stadium to boot).



11.) 2018 AFC Championship - (A2) Patriots 37 @ (A1) Kansas City 31



Review: Oh if only for Dee Ford not being an inch offsides. The Chiefs were set to beat the Patriots 28-24, with Brady driving late but having a pass tipped at the line and intercepted. It was his third of the day, including a brutal one early in the second quarter at the goal line. It was not his best game, but for a half it didn't matter as the Chiefs couldn't really get their offense going. It woke up eventually though after trailing 14-0 at halftime, scoring five plays into the second half. The Chiefs took their first lead midway through the fourth, scoring two plays after Brady's second interception. After trading more TDs, including the one scored two plays after Dee Ford's ill-fated offsides, the Chiefs had 0:39 on the clock to get a field goal. Somehow they got into position to even take a shot at a win, but didn't get it. We went to OT, where the Patriots won the toss, and Brady completed three 3rd and 10s on the same drive, ultimately leading to Rex Burkhead's game winning TD. I would love to blame the now thankfully old OT rules for that loss, but we should credit Brady for the three straight 3rd down completions. I guess.



Interesting / Memorable Fact: This was the first road playoff game Tom Brady & Bill Belichick won in twelve years. The last was their 2006 Divisional Round escape in San Diego. After that they lost their only three other road playoff games - the three AFC Championship losses to Manning teams.



Interesting / Memorable Play: I obviously focus a lot on the near interception that would've ended the game, but I should credit Brady, and more-so Gronk. After the penalty it was still 3rd and 5, but Brady the play after connected with Gronk for 25 yards. They just killed the Chiefs on 3rd down all day.


10.) 2018 NFC Championship - (N2) Rams 26 @ (N1) Saints 23



Review: Sure, it is easy to say the fact I have this ranked higher than the other 2018 Title Game classic is because in that one Brady won. And that is part of it. But I think in terms of lasting impact, this was a more memorable, and admittedly infamous game. Both games that day swung on a late call that if went the other way the other team wins. While Dee Ford was offsides, here, it was a blown missed call. The pass interference that wasn't, that gave the Rams new life. The game itself before that was a cagey affair with both teams playing better defensively than expected. Both QBs had similar stat lines, completing around 60% of their throws for ~250 yards, and a pick each. But the Rams did just enough, from a brilliant fake punt pass by Hekker on the drive that made it 13-7 when the Rams were down 13-0, or the interception of Drew Brees in OT, who threw it while being hit and floated a pop-up. The Rams still needed to eek out a few yards, but they just did enough to make it work. In the end, it was a well played game by all units, with both defenses playing both offenses to a draw. It didn't have the dynamism of the AFC game that year, but it had every bit the intrigue and ultimately way more controversy.



Interesting / Memorable Play: Ok, we have to talk about the missed DPI. It absolutely cost the Saints the game - they would've been able to essentially kneel the ball, and kick a field goal with about 0:15 left. Instead they gave the Rams about two minutes. Also it probably is the worst missed penalty call I can remember. I'm sure there are ones before my time watching the game, but I can't think of any that were as meaningful and impactful as this.



Interesting / Memorable Fact: Greg Zeuerlein's 57-yard FG to win in OT set a few records. It became the longest field goal in playoff OT history and also, and this is an odd one, the longest field goal ever hit by a road kicker in a playoff game.


9.) 2022 AFC Championship - (A3) Bengals 20 @ (A1) Chiefs 23



Review: The Bengals entered the game 3-0 against the Chiefs in the Burrow/Mahomes era, and with a lot of confidence, but in a supremely well played game, the Chiefs broke that little curse in dramatic fashion, with effectively a walk-off field goal. We all expected a great game, and my word did we get one. The Chiefs started fast, getting a 13-3 lead, but the Bengals answered consistently. Burrow was good, but his receivers better - with Chase and Higgins both having remarkable catches against double coverage for big gains - the Higgins play tying in at 13. Mahomes was great (29-43, 326 yards, 2 TDs) and Burrow about as good. But neither was amazing, which is why I really love this game - both defenses played well also. The Chiefs young secondary did great, but the Bengals receivers were too good. Chris Jones finally got off the playoff schneid with a monster game, including a huge sack to force a Bengals punt that led to the game winning field goal. We may all remember the penalty by Joseph Ossai (late hit out of bounds) that set-up the game winning field goal, but even that was a scramble due to great coverage. This was about as well played, tightly played, a game the modern NFL could give us. No one unit dominated, but not one unit was dominated either. Lou Anarumo and Steve Spagnuolo both had great games to give their teams a chance - ultimately the Chiefs two best players won it, with the Jones sack adn the Mahomes scramble - a worthy way for it to end with Arrowhead remaining so, and not getting renamed Burrowhead.




Interesting/Memorable Play: It's hard to overstate though that the Chiefs had a chance to run away with this, driving up 20-13 in Bengals territory, Mahomes simply fumbled the ball untouched, with the Bengals recovering. It was so weird, so off for Mahomes, that one would even think it was the football gods playing a hilarious prank to ensure the game remain close.



Interesting/Memorable Play 2: The Mahomes rush and penalty wasn't without controversy - not on the flag on Ossai. Most were in agreement that was a clear penalty. Many though claimed there were numerous holds on KC lineman - but this is where still images really distort things. In actual footage, it was clear how good a job Chiefs lineman did at letting go at just the right moment. Great work by them to rightfully avoid a penalty.


8.) 2011 AFC Championship – (A2) Ravens 20 @ (A1) Patriots 23



Review: This game probably would go in the higher section if either Lee Evans gets that 2nd foot down in time (or holds onto the ball, but if he got the foot down a little sooner what Sterling Moore does becomes irrelevant) or Billy Cundiff makes his kick and it went overtime. Instead, we got merely a great game between the AFC’s best offense and best defense in 2011. The Ravens used every ounce of resourcefulness that they had to stay with the Pats, three times holding the Patriots to field goals and twice picking off Tom Brady (including a sweet pick that Bernard Pollard tipped to Jimmy Smith off of a ridiculously dumb deep pass by Brady to Matthew Slater). Joe Flacco, after a useless 1st quarter, got into a rhythm, and ended up with over 300 yards, largely to both Torrey Smith and Anquan Boldin had huge big days. In the end, the Patriots did what they used to do in 2001-2006, win a close game where they were possibly outplayed. The Patriots offense was able to run the ball better than what most would have expected, but their passing game was limited by a Ravens defense that tackled exceptionally well, making sure. The game featured everything, including a classic Brady drive (although it came quite early in the 4th) which ended with a Brady 4th and 1 QB-sneak for the game-winning touchdown, a weird matchup where the Patriots tried covering Anquan Boldin with Julian Edelman on their final drive, and in the end, some kicker-related luck bailing the Patriots out.. If not for that last part of that last sentence, this could have been the 1st of two classics on the best title game day in recent history.

Interesting/Memorable Play: Right before the Ravens last drive, the Patriots were in almost the exact same position they were in five yearas earlier. The Patriots had the ball with 4 minutes to go needing one first down to effectively ice the game. Just like last time, they couldn’t get it. Just like last time, it was a great safety defensing a pass on 3rd and 4. Last time it was Bob Sanders nearly pick-sixing Brady, here it was Ed Reed playing great coverage on Aaron Hernandez. Sad the similarities didn’t perfectly continue in the ensuing drives.


Interesting/Memorable Moment: After the game, Jim Nantz, before letting Tom Brady speak, rhapsed poetic about Brady being the 2nd QB to make it to 5 Super Bowls and basically stopped just short of giving Tommy a Happy Ending. Then, in one of my few favorite Brady moments, Tommy took the mike and immediately debunked Nantz’s shit, saying “I played like crap today.”


Interesting/Memorable Moment 2: One of the few memorable images of the end of the game situation that I like to see is that beautiful picture of Vince Wilfork (who played stellar) with his helmet off and steam rising from the top off his head.


Tier V – The Epics


7.) 2011 NFC Championship – (N4) Giants 20 @ (N2) 49ers 23 (OT)



Review: Other than Lambeau Field, no stadium in the NFL has as much 'mystique and aura' as Candlestick Park, and with the new stadium coming soon, this could easily be the last playoff game played in the 'Stick, and damn was it great. As the rain slowly went away, the game become more and more special, a truly awesome spectacle of defensive football played in a sparkling, dark night by the Bay. Both defenses dominated, with the Giants sacking Smith three times, and the 49ers repaying the favor six times. Justin Smith absolutely killed David Baas, Chris Snee and Kevin Booth. It was just staggering watching Eli Manning drop back 64 times and getting hit repeatedly, but keeping his team in the game just enough. For the 49ers, the story was, once again, Vernon Davis, who had three catches for 112 yards and a pair of scores. Alex Smith returned to mostly what we think of Alex Smith, going 12-26, but much of that has to do with the insane pressure he faced, and the incredible inability of any of his receivers to get open (The 49er receivers combined for one catch for three yards). Still, with the two Davis TDs (one catch and run for 72 yards and one 27-yard deep post), they led 14-10 midway through the 4th quarter. The 49ers forced a Giants' three-and-out capped with an Aldon Smith sack, when Kyle Williams went back to punt. Then, his name forever became etched in San Fran history right next to Roger Craig (at least when it comes to fumbling), as the punt bounced off of his knee. The Giants recovered, and six plays later, Manning fired a 17-yard TD to Manningham on 3rd and 15. The 49ers then proceeded to dominate the Giants offense the rest of the day, sacking Manning two more times, but only put up a field goal to tie the game. They almost got their fumble (in what would have been eerily similar to the Craig fumble scenario), but Bradshaw's fumble was ruled dead as forward progress was stopped. Then, to cap off this play was Act III: OT. The new rules were, again, deemed unnecessary, as both teams couldn't get anything going. But after the Giants second-punt of OT (set up by a Ahmad Brooks sack), Kyle Williams again fumbled, and the Giants recovered. The only drama left was Lawrence Tynes, who has a history of both huge makes and bad misses, but he nailed his 2nd NFC Championship Winning Field Goal in OT in 5 years, ending a game that no team deserved to lose.


Interesting/Memorable Play: Kyle Williams (who I learned later is the son of White Sox GM Kenny Williams) was only the main returner for the 49ers because Ted Ginn Jr. was hurt in the Saints game, and I'm sure he, more than anyone, would've wanted Ginn to play. That said, it was his 40-yard kick-off return that set up the 49ers at the 50 for their game-tying field goal in the 4th quarter.


Interesting/Memorable Moment: Before the OT coin-toss, the game ref does a little meet-and-great with the players, telling the rules, giving them the timeout and challenge scenarios, and all that generic garbage. Well, Ed Hochuli decided that instead of being rote, he would take the time to recite Shakespeare, giving us a 1 minute 11 second long introduction to OT. The best part of the moment was the audible groan that came on the crowd at about the 0:40 mark of the speech.



6.) 2024 AFC Championship - (A2) Bills 29 @ (A1) Chiefs 32


Review: We all expected an epic, and my God did we get one. Maybe not quite as insane as the 2021 Divisional Round, but a better version of their 3-point margin Divisional Game the year before. No matter what, though, at the end of the day it ended with the same outcome - the Chiefs moved on and the Bills were left to rue the few small plays that could've changed the outcome. It was such an even game - the Bills threw for 227 net passing yards, the Chiefs 233. The Bills ran for 147, the Chiefs 135. The Chiefs, as they almost always do against the Bills, found moving the ball relatively easy, but a key sack-fumble by Mahomes, and an amazing throw from Allen to Mack Hollins right before halftime, made what was a 21-10 Chiefs lead into 21-16. The Bills opened the second half with three TDs in four drives, and actually forced a few punts for once, but in between was the super controversial play when Josh Allen was "stopped" on a tush push attempt at the KC 41 up 22-21. It was a close call, but the general consensus is that he probably did get it, but was just not given it. Either way, the Chiefs quickly got a TD, and more crucially a 2-pt conversion (the Bills were 0-2 on 2-pt conversions for the game). The Bills answered with a TD, including an amazing tightrope throw and catch by Curtis Samuel on 4th and Goal to tie it. The Bills even then got a huge sack on the ensuing drive to ultimately force the Chiefs into kicking a field goal. It was all set for the Bills and Josh Allen - 3:33 to go, down three, a good TD drive away from slaying the dragon. Instead, after getting one first down, the Chiefs pass rush finally really got to Allen, who missed two deep throws, and then of course the ultimate final play - a brilliant blitz call by Spagnuolo taht caught the Bills - Allen still contorted a random lob throw that should've been caught. But with the Bills in this rivalry, there's just too many "should've"-s that don't go their way. It still wasn't over, however, as the Chiefs had a 3rd and 9 with 1:35 left. The Bills were out of timeouts, but a stop there and teh Bills get it back with 30-40 seconds likely needing a FG. Instead, a beautiful little swing pass to Samaji Perine ended it once and for all.



Interesting/Memorable Plays: The drive the Bills ran to go up 22-21 was a harbinger of things to come. They had 2nd and Goal from the 2, ending with a run for one yard, Allen getting stoned on a tush push, but redeemed by an amazing run by James Cook - who got stopped short but jumped, laid out and leveraged himself up by his hand to just cross the plane.


Interesting/Memorable Play 2: That said, arguably the most underrated play of the game came on 3rd and 10 on teh Bills last drive, the play before the Kincaid drop. Allen audibled to a quick throw out to Amari Cooper, who was being played in off coverage with few others on that side. Somehow, George Karlaftis ran out, tracked him down and limited Cooper to a 5-yard gain on a play that should've gone for at least 15.





5.) 2015 AFC Championship - (A2) Patriots 18 @ (A1) Broncos 20



Review: The last game in the Brady-Manning rivalry played out in a way that was entirely unexpected, and entirely incomprehensible to anyone who had documented and lived through what Brady-Manning meant. For once, it was Manning's side whose defense came to the party, whipped the Patriots lineman, harrassed the QB, forced timely interceptions and wrapped the game up by making one last great play. The last game between these two titans were not about them, but about Denver's historically good defense outplaying the Patriots defense. The Broncos offense started strong marching right down the field for a TD, but after that the defense just took over. They sacked Brady four times, and hit him 18 other times. The total 22 hits was the most any QB took in any game, regular or postseason, in 7 years. The rush was relentless, the coverage nearly as good, as they held Julian Edelman and Danny Amendola in complete check. If not for an inhuman game by Rob Gronkowski, who had 144 yards on 6 catches, the Patriots might never have scored a TD. Instead, the game was finally decided by Denver's defense making two straight 4th down stops, both highlighting one aspect of their defensive dominance. The first came on a 4th and 1, when Demarcus Ware didn't bit on the playfake and harrassed Brady into ruining a nice little throwback play. The second was another rush forcing Brady to throw a lob to a triple-covered Gronkowski. What makes this game a true epic, though was the last drive where the Broncos couldn't make 4th down stops. On the Patriots final drive, Brady threw 10 passes, three of them complete, and the other seven almost all plays where the rush forced Brady to throw up a lob that was lucky for not being intentional grounding. The Patriots trump card in Gronk turned a 4th and 10 and a 4th and Goal into positive plays, but on the final real play of the game, one last great pass rush forced Brady to roll and throw against his body. Aqib Talib, finally healthy enough to complete a Championship Game, batted the ball into the waiting arms of Bradley Roby to end it. When it was over, Manning got a 3-2 lead in his head-to-head playoff meetings, one Brady and the Patriots would never get a chance to match, and for the 2nd time in three years, the Broncos knocked out New England in an AFC Championship, this time because of Manning's team finally bringing the hammer.

Interesting/Memorable Play: The game really turned on Brady's first interception, which was thrown in the shadow of his own end zone to Von Miller, who dropped brilliantly into coverage and undercut Gronkowski. Miller was the star of the game, adding his interception to 2.5 sacks.



Interesting/Memorable Fact: Never escaping controversy, the Patriots play in this game spurred yet another rule change. No inquiry this time, but the intentional grounding rules were slightly changed in the ensuing offseason, seemingly allowing Brady's "Toss up the ball to any general direction when being sacked" play an intentional grounding.




Interesting/Memorable Play: It wasn't a play, but a moment, but after the game, Manning basically repeated to both Brady and Belichick the following sentiment, "This might be my last rodeo, so it sure has been a pleasure." Him saying this to Belichick got picked up clearly by the NFL Films mics, but the CBS game mics picked up a softer record of Peyton saying the same to Brady too.





4.) 2013 NFC Championship - (N5) 49ers 17 @ (N1) Seahawks 23



I can't wait for the 2015 NFC Championship game. The last four times the NFC has had the late title game, they've been classics (spoiler, they rank #5-#2 on this list). This is the only one of the four to not end with a walk-off field goal in OT, but it didn't make it any less great. I still argue Carolina was as good as San Francisco, but this matchup seemed a little predestined. Thankfully, despite getting gutted the last two times traveling to Seattle (losing 42-14 and 26-3), the 49ers showed up and made this a game. They showed up from the first play, with Aldon Smith stripping Russell Wilson. The Seahawks defense held firm early on when Kaepernick looked like the only person on the field who could do anything, running peerlessly through the defense. Kaepernick racked up nearly 100 yards rushing in the first half. Of course, the Seahawks gave up just 10 points in that half. It took Seattle forever to get going on offense, but the Seahawks finally hit a play before the half when Wilson evaded a few sacks and launched a bomb. The 2nd half was a great Greek Play. First was Marshawn Lynch's great run to tie the game. Then a few defensive battles. Kaepernick threw a laser TD to Boldin right over Earl Thomas's head to take a 17-10 lead, but that would be all. A 4th down TD to Jermaine Kearse on a bomb tied it, and then Kaepernick fell apart. Three 4th-quarter turnovers ruined their chances. But still, after a goal line stand, the 49ers had a chance. Kaepernick was driving them. Crabtree was making a few catches. They had 30 seconds and 20 yards to go, and then Kaepernick decided to challenge the best corner in teh NFL. The best corner won, tipping it to Malcolm Smith, ending a classic in front of an awesome 12th man crowd. The best NFL games seem like events from a different world, a strange unique setting,. This was definitely one of them, taking place in the isolated Northwest. What a special game.



Interesting/Memorable Play: The play will be remembered for NaVarro Bowman's scary injury, but the reason the injury will be replayed and replayed was Bowman, after essentially tearing all the knee, recovering a fumble that was not given. The rule changed in the off-season, and the justly the Seahawks were stoned on the ensuing 4th down.



Interesting/Memorable Play 2: The last play was a great individual moment by Richard Sherman, but of course what is more notable was what happened after the interception, with Sherman and Crabtree getting into a little hissy fight and then Sherman's great interview with Erin Andrews. Sherman acted like a dick, but an awesome dick. Thing is, though, Crabtree had a pretty decent game.





3.) 2009 NFC Championship – (N2) Vikings 28 @ (N1) Saints 31 (OT)


Review: Well, what became maybe the 2nd most famous Championship Game of this era, has now become easily the most infamous. Truthfully, my opinion of this classic is skewed a little because of the events of 'BountyGate', but for this, I will try to forget what I now know. The game itself was a case of the Vikings doing everything in their power to both win and lose the game at the same time. It was a study in drama, with both teams having many moments where their fans must have felt it was all doomed. The 1st half was mostly normal, with the teams trading touchdowns, as the Vikings opened the game with back-to-back TD drives capped off by a 18-yard run by Peterson and a touchdown toss to Sidney Rice. The Saints got their two with a screen pass for 38-yards to Pierre Thomas and another TD pass to Devery Henderson. Then, on a seemingly innocous punt right before the half, the game became a greek tragedy. Reggie Bush muffed a punt. That set off a string of unlikely, and for most Minnesotans, harrowing events. Set up at the 5-yard line, the Vikings gave the ball right back as Favre and Peterson screwed up a handoff. The 2nd half was more of the same, with the Vikings thoroughly dominating play, outgaining the Saints 235-48 in the 2nd half. Yes, you read those numbers right. The more shocking side was the Vikings defense just swallowing up the Saints, forcing four three-and-outs in the Saints 6 possessions in the 2nd half. The Vikings themselves moved the ball right down the field on all but one of their six 2nd half drives, but other than two touchdowns on angry Peterson runs, they ended in infamy. Four 2nd half turnovers, including a fumble by Bernard Berrian at the Saints 5 yard line, and a fumble by Percy Harvin at the Vikings 10, and a interception by Brett Favre (on a play that should've been called roughing the passer) all played a part in the Vikings inability to win a game they absolutely deserved to. They still had a chance, though. After giving their win away, they had a chance to still win, despite losing the turnover battle four to one. On their last drive, the Vikings drove down to the Saints 33 with over a minute to go, when their true meltdown occurred. First, came a 12-men-in-the-huddle penalty, and then, on 3rd and 15 and the prospect of a 56-yard field goal, Favre rolled out and tried to make a play, but Tracy Porter undercut the route and picked it off. To OT it went, and a Saints drive that could've ended twice, but after a bad pass interference call gave the Saints a 1st and 10 at the Vikings 29, it was all over. Garrett Hartley nailed the 40-yarder to give the Saints a win they didn't really deserve, but considering the Vikings gave it away, it wasn't as if the Vikings deserved it any more.


Interesting/Memorable Play: Why did the Saints OT drive have controversy? First, on a 4th and 1 jump rush by Pierre Thomas, the ball appeared to be dislodged for Thomas's arm. He did 'recover' the ball, but by then he was back behind the yard line that he needed to get to. A case could be made it should've been a turnover on downs. Two plays before that, Brees (who was only 17-31 on the day - again, just a bad game for the Saitns offense) overshot Colston, but Ben Leber knocked the ball out of Asher Allen's hands. Even in OT, the Vikings had their chances.


Interesting/Memorable Play 2: That Favre interception resulted in over-criticism for Favre, because had he just thrown it away, it was still a 56-yard field goal, but I can understand why Favre didn't try to run the ball. He had been battered all day. BountyGate or not, it was a beating that elicited a response of "how mean the Saints are" from my Mom. Favre's ankle resembled a misshapen plum after the game. They beat him down, yet he still went 28-46 for 310 yards. It was, in all honesty, the last great game of Favre's career.




Tier VI - The Games that Defined the Decade


2.) 2007 NFC Championship – (N5) Giants 23 @ (N2) Packers 20 (OT)


Review: For one night, it seemed like nowhere in the world mattered as much as Green Bay, Wisconsin. During a asininely cold night in Green Bay (the temperature stayed steady between -1 and -3 degree, with the wind chill between -20 and -23) the Giants and Packers played out a true epic. The Giants set the tone early, with a field goal march to open the game, highlighted with Brandon Jacobs running over Charles Woodson, a pointed statement to the Packers that this would still be a highly physical fight despite the frozen conditions. The Giants added another field goal on a drive that, much like the rest of the game, featured a lot of Plaxico Burress. Matched up against bump-and-run extraordinaire Al Harris, Burress abused the pro-bowler, with 9 catches and 110 yards in the first half alone. The Packers offense was largely stagnant, but scored a dramatic 90-yard touchdown from Favre to Donal Driver: the longest touchdown in Packers playoff history. Then, despite the temperature still being low enough to make it the 3rd coldest NFL playoff game ever (behind the Ice Bowl and Freezer Bowl), the game itself heated up. The Giants and Packers and Giants again drove for touchdowns in a tightly played third quarter. The Giants first TD drive was the most memorable, as they got two straight 3rd Down conversions via penalties, as Harris was called for Pass Interference, and then Nick Collins called for roughing the passer. All this set up a 4th Quarter with the Giants leading 20-17. The Packers quickly tied the game with a field goal set up by a crazy play where Favre, after eluding a sack, blindly tossed one deep and was picked off by McQuarters, only for LT Mark Tauscher to force a fumble which was recovered by the Packers. From that moment on, the Giants dominated the game, but just couldn't put the Packers away. They stoned the Packers run game (Grant 11-19 on the day), and force Packers punt after punt, but the Giants couldn't capitalize. First, midway through the quarter, Tynes pushed a 43-yarder. They traded punts before the Giants forced another Packers 3-and-out, where the craziness reached its apex. On the punt return, McQuarters was stripped, and three Packers had a good chance to recover the ball around the 50. The Packers were that close to potentially stealing the game (they were outgained on the day 377-264), but Dominik Hixon jumped on the ball. After gaining two first downs, the Giants were in position to win the game, but on the last play of regulation Tynes shanked a 38-yarder giving the Packers one more chance. The Packers did win the toss, but on Favre's final throw as a Packer, he threw behind Donal Driver and Corey Webster picked him off. Three plays later, with the Giants now facing a field goal longer than either of the two 4th Quarter misses, Coughlin called on Tynes one more time. The third time really was the charm, and Tynes just nailed the 47-yarder. The Lambeau crowd that was loud throughout fell into an eery silence. They must all have felt that they waited out four hours of an epic football game in epic weather just to see the Giants come in and end Favre's dream season, and in the end, his Packer career.

Interesting/Memorable Play: Plaxico Burress was just insane. He caught every type of pass against  Harris. Quick posts, fade routes, fade stops, crossing routes, deep throws, quick outs. It was just masterful. During the game, after making his 8th catch, he went over the the Packers sideline and shouted "You Can't Cover Me! This Fucker Can't Cover Me!". And the Packers switched Woodson on him for a play, and Burress caught another one. Just an exceptional game.


Interesting/Memorable Moment: Lawrence Tynes would get his 15 minutes of fame, appearing on Dave Letterman the next week. He was, surprisingly, a good guest, quipping that after he missed the 2nd field goal he was "thinking what it would be like to live in Green Bay" in fear of what the NYC crowd would do to him.


Interesting/Memorable Moments: The cold did wreak havoc on the game, and it led to some great moments. First, was Michael Strahan's perfect speech before the game, where he stated "the past is the fucking past. This is the present. Cold is temporary, a Championship is Forever." The cold is probably best remembered, though, for what it did to Tom Coughlin's face, as he became as red and frozen as a strawberry popsicle.


Interesting/Memorable Fact: Something that really helps this game was just how aesthetically beautiful. The Packers green jersey is quite brilliant, and the Giants road uniforms (despite, oddly, not featuring blue) are the better of the two. Either way, with the uniforms, the almost white field and the  dark, isolating feel of Green Bay, the game itself just looked like you were watching an epic film more than a football game.





1.) 2006 AFC Championship – (A4) Patriots 34 @ (A3) Colts 38



Review: This might just go down as the most famous non-Super Bowl in the modern NFL. It was the game that best personified the Manning/Brady rivalry, as it was the first time both really played well in the same game, and that combined with a little comeback, some crazy scores and a great finish equated two the best Championship Game maybe ever. It all started out so normal for Colts fans, as the Patriots looked like the Patriots from their dynasty days, and the Colts looked like little sheep. After trading punts, the Patriots sandwiched a Colts field goal with two TDs that both featured 4th down conversions during the drive. Then, already up 14-3 midway through the 2nd, Asante Samuel picked off Manning and raced back for what looked to be a game-stopper. The Patriots compounded this dominance by sacking Manning twice on the next drive (although they nearly allowed a 97-yard TD to Marvin Harrison), and driving on their next possession inside the 20, until a little offensive-pass interference pushed that drive back. The Patriots had to punt, and the Colts put together their first real fluid drive of the game right before the half. They had to settle for a field goal, but the game was back to normal pace, and, as many Patriots would later attest, Manning had figured it out. 32 points in the 2nd Half later, that much was obvious. The Colts first scored TDs on back-to-back possessions to start the 3rd quarter, erasing the 15 point deficit in 11 minutes. The Patriots answered with a crazy scrambling TD toss after a long kick-off return by Hobbs. The Colts answered that with a TD drive that included a beautiful sideline post route to Dallas Clark. That score happened early in the 4th Quarter, which would prove to be among the most dramatic quarters in NFL history. First, the teams traded punts and then they traded field goals. The Patriots were aided by good special teams returns, but also didn't get what looked like a pass interference call which forced them to kick a field goal to make it 34-31. Then, looking at 80 yards to potentially change his whole career, with just 3:43 on teh clock, Manning threw three straight incompletions. It was Manning fulfilling so many's worst impressions, as he "failed in the clutch." Luckily for Manning, Brady and the Pats, for what would be the first time late in a close playoff game, choked harder. Needing just one first down to essentially wrap up the game, the Pats were first called for a 12-man in the huddle penalty (something completely forgotten about the game), then after two quick completions, the Pats had a 3rd and 4. Four yards away from another win against the Colts. Four yards away from beating the Colts in their own building, and a date with an eminently beatable Chicago team. The Pats went for the kill, as they spread the field and tried to hit Troy Brown on a route that he's run hundreds of times, but Sanders read it and nearly picked off Brady. Manning got one more chance to perform big in the clutch, and that he did. Against a furious pass rush, Manning completed a quick 11-yarder to Wayne, a deep post for 32 to Fletcher off his back foot and a 21-yarder to Wayne. Then, with 1st and 10 at the 11, the Colts did the most un-Colts-like thing: run three straight times, pounding it down the "physical" Pats. Addai scored on 3rd and 3, finally giving the Colts the lead. The Patriots would go as far as midfield on the next drive, but Brady finally threw a pick at a 'clutch' moment, as Marlin Jackson caught it and slid to the ground, hugging the ball. The RCA Dome exploded like never before, and the rivalry, and league in general (I'll get to this) was never the same.

Interesting/Memorable Plays: Three lineman scored touchdowns in this game. One was the Colts pulling a Belichick on the Pats, with Manning tossing a 1-yard pass to Dan Klecko, but the other two made for an eery coincidence, as both Logan Mankins and Jeff Saturday recovered fumbles by their running back in the end zone for touchdowns.



Interesting/Memorable Player: Reche Caldwell had a notoriously awful game. He had just two catches, and two infamous drops. One was a wide-open drop in the end zone. The other was more infamous, as the play started with teh Colts having only 10 guys on defense, and leaving Caldwell wide open. Caldwell furiously waved his arms trying to get Brady's attention, but never could. By the time the ball was snapped the Colts were racing over the Caldwell, but he dropped a simple catch. Of course, nothing is more memorable from Caldwell than his deer eyes.



Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the largest comeback ever in a conference championship game, with the Colts coming down from 21-3. The Colts also set a record for most points in the 2nd Half of a Title Game, with 32. From the 2:00 Warning of the 1st to the end of the game, the Colts outscored the Pats 35-13, and outgained them 289-115.




Interesting/Memorable Fact: I'll write more about this later, but this game was arguably the game that started the NFL's paradigm shift to offense-first teams. The previous six teams to win teh Super Bowl before 2006 (Ravens, Pats, Bucs, Steelers) were all defense first teams that allowed under 300 points. Including the '06 Colts, the last six (Colts, Giants twice, Steelers, Saints, Packers) have been more mixed, with four allowing more than 300 points, including the three of the four highest totals for  Super Bowl winning teams. The game also signalled the end of the defense-first Patriots that won Super Bowls. Fuming over the offenses inability to put up more points in teh 2nd half, the Pats went out and traded for Stallworth, Welker and Moss and turned into an offensive juggernaut. The modern pass-happy NFL started that night, and all because Brady couldn't complete a simple 4-yard pass to Troy Brown.

About Me

I am a man who will go by the moniker dmstorm22, or StormyD, but not really StormyD. I'll talk about sports, mainly football, sometimes TV, sometimes other random things, sometimes even bring out some lists (a lot, lot, lot of lists). Enjoy.