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The midseason report

Matt Bowen hands out his half-season awards. Matt Bowen

Print This November 04, 2009, 02:59 PM EST
19 Comments

As the midway point of the 2009 season begins to sneak up on us, let’s take a look back and hand out some hardware for the best — and worst — of the season’s first half.

MVP: Darren Sharper, Saints

I handed this one out this morning to the Saints’ Darren Sharper over Peyton Manning, Drew Brees, Cedric Benson and Brett Favre. Sharper makes the Saints a Super Bowl favorite instead of just another playoff contender. Argue away.

Runner-up: Manning, Colts

Coach of the Year: Josh McDaniels, Broncos

In the middle of August, if someone had told me that the Broncos — stuck in a mess of a situation with WR Brandon Marshall — would be sitting in first place with a 6-1 record, I wouldn’t have bought it. But they’re the best of the west at midseason because McDaniels found a way to hold his team together — and move forward.

Runner-up: Marvin Lewis, Bengals

Assistant Coach of the Year: Gregg Williams, Saints

Williams’ defense in New Orleans isn’t going to lead the league in total defense, but his scheme is predicated on ball disruptions (pass breakups, sacks, QB hits, interceptions, forced fumbles), and they’re making game-changing plays. As I wrote about Sharper, without Williams and this defense, the Saints would be a sexy pick that wouldn’t have the defense when it counted — in January.

Runner-up: Cam Cameron, Ravens

Rookie impact: Percy Harvin, Vikings

What’s special about Harvin this season, more than his ability to work in the slot of the Vikings offense with Brett Favre, is his impact on special teams. Harvin has provided scores and set up the Minnesota offense with short fields. Adrian Peterson gets a lot of credit as Favre’s right-hand guy, but it’s Harvin who’s pilling up hidden yardage that leads to scores.

Runner-up: Johnny Knox, Bears

Rookie bust: Darrius Heyward-Bey, Raiders

It might be unfair to single out DHB because of the situation he was drafted into, but that doesn’t hide the fact he hasn’t produced at all this season. To put it into a better context, 49ers rookie WR Michael Crabtree has 11 receptions in his first two NFL games, while DHB has five receptions in eight games for the Raiders. Can we now call him a reach at No. 7?

Runner-up: Andre Smith, Bengals

Free-agent sleeper: Brian Dawkins, Broncos

Dawkins wasn’t wanted in Philly, but he has again become a defensive leader, this time in Denver — in charge of a unit that ranks first in total defense. Dawkins continues to make an impact no matter what uniform he’s wearing — an invaluable commodity in the secondary.

Runner-up: Jim Leonhard, Jets

Defensive Player of the Year: Darren Sharper, Saints

Can Sharper take home two awards in one season? Seven interceptions and three TDs through seven games -- he has the numbers right now.

Runner-up: Jared Allen, Vikings

Free-agent bust: Michael Vick, Eagles

Vick’s signing this summer was the biggest NFL story in the last five years, but he has become nothing more than a sideshow in Philly. Talk of the wildcat, exotic formations and big plays have been replaced by minor appearances without results. He has basically become the Eagles’ third-string QB.

Runner-up: Terrell Owens, Bills

Surprise player: Brett Favre, Vikings

The thing about Brett that should surprise all of us is how he’s protecting the football: only three interceptions in eight games compared with 16 touchdown passes. He’s playing better than he did for the ’07 Packers — and has two big wins over his former team to show for it.

Runner-up: Miles Austin, Cowboys

Surprise team: Denver Broncos

As we talked about with McDaniels, this team was written off too soon, and we can’t talk about the Broncos without mentioning Kyle Orton and Mike Nolan’s defense. A loss last week on the road to the Ravens isn’t going to change my mind about this club.

Runners-up: Houston Texans

Biggest disappointment (player): Shawne Merriman, Chargers

“Lights Out” has been anything but. There were plenty of rumors floating around about Merriman at the trade deadline, and I can see why — he isn’t dominant anymore. Through seven games, Merriman has totaled just 25 tackles and two sacks for a defense that’s giving up over 132 yards a game on the ground.

Runners-up: Packers offensive line

Biggest disappointment (team): Tennessee Titans

The Titans bounced back with a win over an average Jacksonville team on Sunday, but that doesn’t hide the fact this team is a long way from last year’s 13-win squad. A 59-0 beating at New England doesn’t help. Is V.Y. the answer?

Runners-up: Washington Redskins

Biggest disappointment (coach): Eric Mangini, Browns

The mess that exists in Cleveland right now leads back to Mangini, and his team is worse on the field. I can’t see him back on the sidelines next season, and don’t be surprised if the new GM sends him home this season.

Runner-up: Jim Mora, Seattle

The sophomore slump: Matt Forte, Bears

Forte has struggled behind an offensive line in Chicago that isn’t getting the job done, and his numbers pale in comparison to last season. Through seven games, Forte has only 408 yards on 118 carries — good for an average of 3.5 yards per carry. And two of his touchdowns came last week against Cleveland. Not good.

Runner-up: Eddie Royal, Broncos

The High Five: My top teams

1. New Orleans Saints
2. Indianapolis Colts
3. New England Patriots
4. Pittsburgh Steelers
5. Minnesota Vikings

The Low Five: My bottom-feeders

1. Cleveland Browns
2. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
3. Detroit Lions
4. St. Louis Rams
5. Kansas City Chiefs

Follow me on Twitter: MattBowen41

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Comments

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Yeah
Nov 04, 2009
07:03 PM

I'm not surprised one bit by Miles Austin. As a Titans fan, I wanted either HIM or Nate Washington this past offseason. I noticed Austin early on in last year's season. That kid is tops.

Coach of the year to McDaniels? Nah. So they happened to win 6 in a row. A good coach doesn't cause all the chaos he caused before the season, and a good coach can control the chaos better than he did. We'll see. He may prove me wrong, but my bet is that this year's Broncos are "last year's Titans". Next year may be a little s h itty for them.

Surprise team: 49ers
Biggest disappointment (team): Okay, I'll buy naming the Titans here, but the Redskins as runners up? I knew they would suck. CHARGERS runners up.

Free Agent sleeper: Chris Carr

Biggest Jackass: Tom Brady
Runner up: Philip Rivers

Ugliest throwback unis: Denver Broncos
Runner Up: New York Jets

Dumbest Goodell decision: football in London
Runner Up: letting Vick back into the NFL
Second Runner Up: Wearing those stupid throwback uniforms so many damn times!!



jerry in texas
Nov 04, 2009
10:42 PM

Sharper as MVP? LOL. How about Favre? He's was the piece the Vikings were missing, and, at 40, is putting on quite a show. Would Minny-ha-ha be 7-1 without him? Would Tavaris Jackson or Sage Rosenfels be able to have the same impact? Get serious. Sharper is a resurgent player, but Favre has been transcendent.

Bye-the-bye, I have been a die-hard Packers fan for about 39 years- but I can also be realistic. Favre, at this point, deserves the MVP. Because he is the player that made the most impact on a franchise, so far, this year.

ptensioned
Nov 04, 2009
10:46 PM

@ Yeah

I agree with some of what you say, but have one question:

Are you talking about Chris Carr on the Ravens?

Really!? At $2.5 mil a year? He's about to have both the KR and nickel/dime jobs taken by Ladarius Webb, a 3rd round rookie.

I liked the signing at the time, but not so much now. He's clearly trying hard, but it just isn't clicking...

JCH
Nov 04, 2009
11:41 PM

I don't get all the dissatisfaction with the offensive line of the Green Bay Packers. They're just trying to train Aaron Rodgers to get rid of the ball. It's not working, but if it did, I would nominate them as assistant coach of the year.

keithwhodatfan
Nov 05, 2009
12:58 AM

like it all except best free agent consideration not given to Jabari Greer

Newsmediaspan
Nov 05, 2009
03:29 AM

Very good article.
Thanks

drewthorn
Nov 05, 2009
02:36 PM

So Yeah...I guess your logic is that McD should have kept a QB that wanted out and didn't fit and let Marshall do the 2-year old thing unabated? I guess some people don't want to let reality interfere with a predisposed opinion. The truth remains that the player have swallowed the McD plan hook, line, and sinker. They keep saying: What off-season chaos? Maybe its time to start believing them.

You might be right that Denver's record is high for the talent level, but Rome wasn't rebuilt in a day...just like the Denver Broncos haven't been rebuilt in a single off-season. McD is off to a hell of a start, though. This team is in Matt's bottom five right now had McD towed the line and followed the status quo, or if Shannahan was still running it. They were hardly 'a pass rusher away' from elite, even if that was fashionable fan and media spin. They were in steep and deep decline and going absolutely no where but down.

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