ksdsoft12f14 |
Wysłany: Pon 22:16, 04 Paź 2010 Temat postu: Neil Rackers Jersey |
|
Commentary
Game-winning kick almost a shoeless try
By RICHARD JUSTICE
Copyright 2010 Houston Chronicle
Sept. 22, 2010, 9:59PM
OK, never mind. The Houston Chronicle strives to be a family newspaper. Back to the action.
Snell found the shoe and hustled back to the sideline, and Neil Rackers Jersey got it on in time to kick a 35-yarder for a 30-27 overtime victory.
Twenty years from now, they'll sit around the campfire and laugh about the day the kicker's shoe came apart moments before he was to attempt the game-winning field goal.
There are a few different ways to kick game-winning field goals, but barefoot isn't Neil Rackers Jersey' favorite.
"I was warming up into the net, and my shoe sole started to pull away from the leather,NBA Jerseys," Neil Rackers Jersey said. "I hit one more ball, and my toe was almost shooting out the side of the shoe."
"Normally, to break in a shoe, I wear it in the hot tub and walk around in it for a bit," Neil Rackers Jersey said. "I've got Flintstone feet, and the leather needs to stretch out a little bit. It had a different feel to it, but you do this enough, and you just go out and kick the ball."
Neil Rackers Jersey: "I need a shoe."
Marciano: "Come again?"
"You can't print my reaction," Marciano said.
Neil Rackers Jersey had the same thing happen in warmups once before while playing for the Cardinals. His shoe flew apart, and he kicked his snapper, Nathan Hodel, in the back of the head.
Like I said, there will come a time when the whole thing is knee-slapping funny. For now, it was a lesson learned.
Neil Rackers Jersey: "I blew my shoe out."
As you might recall, the Texans have an unpleasant recent history when it comes to late-game field-goal attempts. Last season, Kris Brown missed kicks that would have forced overtime against the Colts and Titans, and those misses are why Neil Rackers Jersey was signed in the first place.
"(Snell) should be a track star," Neil Rackers Jersey said. "He was flying. There was a little adrenaline."
Truth be told, Gary Kubiak would have been surprised at everything that was going on behind him.
"Hopefully," Marciano said, "he has to have another shoe out there with him (on game days)."
Talk about bad timing. The Texans had clawed and scratched their way from 17 points down to force overtime on an amazing Matt Schaub-to-Andre Johnson touchdown pass.
He didn't say if Pollard laughed, but there will come a time when we'll all be laughing about the day that was and the kick that almost wasn't.
We take you now to the sidelines at FedEx Field last Sunday afternoon. Listen in on a chat between Texans special teams coach Joe Marciano and kicker Neil Rackers Jersey.
During further review
How about those apples, Joe?
Now, in his first big moment for his new team, he'd suffered the ultimate wardrobe malfunction.
Not his first foot fault
"I should have made the first kick," Neil Rackers Jersey said. "We shouldn't have been in that situation. Bernard Pollard got a nice thank-you from me for blocking their field goal and giving me the opportunity. I told him a starter on defense doesn't always go as hard as he does on special teams."
As Joel Dreessen's 28-yard reception was being reviewed, Neil Rackers Jersey sent assistant equipment man Chris Snell sprinting for the locker room to retrieve a backup shoe.
"That was going to be an option if the shoe wasn't out there," Neil Rackers Jersey said. "I would have given it a shot. It would have been better than having (the busted) shoe on."
Snell later joked that if he'd been unable to find the shoe, he would have kept running right out of the stadium and back to Houston.
Last Sunday, the stakes were slightly higher. On a day when he'd missed a 47-yarder and connected from 47 and 43 yards, the Texans put their hopes on his shoulders.
"I know one thing," Marciano said, "I wasn't going to go tell the head coach."
Marciano: "Hey, we're going to kick it on third down. What hash mark do you want (the ball on)?"
Cough. Choke. Gulp.
This is when the Texans benefited from instant replay, and who says karma isn't turning around? The Texans have been bitten by instant replay enough times that it was time they caught a break from it.
Now they were positioned to win one of those special games, one that just might have some carryover in terms of confidence and resilience and all those other things coaches love. |
|