I expect SF to be able to sack Mahomes 3 or less times in the game - he has the fewest sacks per pass attempt in the league and in 33% of SF games this season they only achieved 2 or fewer sacks, Sherman cannot cover 3WR + Kelce, Chiefs win, total goes over 62 (at least). Chiefs can score 2 TD in any quarter hence the o13.5 first half TT bet.
Enjoy the game and GL to All!
1
To remove first post, remove entire topic.
6u to win 5u Kansas Chiefs ML (-120)
1.1u to win 1u o53.5 FG
1.1u to win 1u Chiefs TT o13.5 1H
1.1u to win 2.1u o61.5 FG (Alt)
I expect SF to be able to sack Mahomes 3 or less times in the game - he has the fewest sacks per pass attempt in the league and in 33% of SF games this season they only achieved 2 or fewer sacks, Sherman cannot cover 3WR + Kelce, Chiefs win, total goes over 62 (at least). Chiefs can score 2 TD in any quarter hence the o13.5 first half TT bet.
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.
But, if he loses........crickets.
0
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours.
And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work.
Did the rans do shit last year? No.
Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No.
Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
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Quote Originally Posted by Donkey_Punch_:
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
The game won't even exceed 45 points.
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours.
And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work.
Did the rans do shit last year? No.
Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No.
Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours.
And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work. Did the rans do shit last year? No. Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No. Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
you have wax in your ears kid, just stop embarrassing yourself.
0
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
Quote Originally Posted by Donkey_Punch_:
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
The game won't even exceed 45 points.
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours.
And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work. Did the rans do shit last year? No. Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No. Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
you have wax in your ears kid, just stop embarrassing yourself.
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours.
And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work. Did the rans do shit last year? No. Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No. Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
Matchups, offensive scheme against defensive scheme. This matchup favors the over..
1
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
Quote Originally Posted by Donkey_Punch_:
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
The game won't even exceed 45 points.
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours.
And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work. Did the rans do shit last year? No. Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No. Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
Matchups, offensive scheme against defensive scheme. This matchup favors the over..
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours. And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work. Did the rans do garbage last year? No. Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No. Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
you have wax in your ears kid, just stop embarrassing yourself.
youre the behind here, buddy lol
0
Quote Originally Posted by Donkey_Punch_:
Does the Pope poop in the woods? SF's last 12 games, 3 went UNDER (25%) KC's last 3 games, all OVER In SF's 8 games that went over here are the scores: 51 51 53 57 62 64 65 94 Average = 62.125 Median = 59.5 For Mahomes 14 games Chiefs have averaged 29 ppg, with 7 of the games going for 30 or more points. GL with that well-founded theory of yours. And I'm telling you that stat is meaningless. The SB does not follow trends from 16 games. It destroys them. It entirely deviates from them. They never work. Did the rans do garbage last year? No. Did the Panthers offense do anything in SB 50? No. Both defenses will kill this game. They will cancel each other out.
you have wax in your ears kid, just stop embarrassing yourself.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS RUSHING OFFENSE AT KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUSHING DEFENSE (GOOD MATCHUP)
Kyle Shanahan has led effective NFL ground games for years, but this 49ers unit enters the Super Bowl on a run of dominance that seems ripped out of a Madden tournament. After finishing the regular season second only to the Ravens with 31 rushes and 144 yards a game, they’ve actually bumped up a notch here in the postseason. In the Divisional Round, Tevin Coleman and Raheem Mostert combined for 163 at a 4.8 per carry. A week later, Coleman sat out but Mostert rode the hot hand to a stunning 220 and 4 touchdowns. The Packers had no answer for Mostert, who scored on runs of 36, 9, 18, and 22 yards. Coleman still looks iffy to suit up after dislocating his shoulder two weeks ago, but even if he does, Mostert has all but run away with the lead role. He’s produced 6.1 yards per rush dating back to Week 11, and his explosiveness is hard to draw a bead on in the open field. Shanahan’s attack boasts two strong blocking tight ends (George Kittle and Levine Toilolo) and a world-class fullback (Kyle Juszczyk), allowing his quick-footed runners to bounce plays effectively off the edges. However the opportunity is split up, this has the look of the Super Bowl’s most glaring mismatch. The Kansas City run defense lacks impact players up front, so Shanahan will likely test them relentlessly whenever game flow allows him to.
Run defense remains the true Achilles’ heel of this Kansas City team. They finished the regular season 26th in raw yardage allowed, and only 3 teams game up more on a per-rush basis. They drew praise for holding the dominant Derrick Henry to 69 yards last week, though it’s worth noting he had little trouble creating yardage early on (53 over his first 11 attempts). Overall, this defense is built more to threaten opposing passers and receivers than to shut down the run. Even with star tackle Chris Jones on the field - he returned for 28 snaps in the AFC Championship - this is a relatively light unit up front. The rest of the line rotation lacks run-stuffing power, and the linebackers have been clear liabilities for much of the season. Anthony Hitchens has been particularly shaky, routinely blowing assignments and missing tackles on the second level, and Damien Wilson offers little support. Reserve Reggie Ragland worked in for heavy snaps against Henry and the Titans, but while he’s a decent two-down tackler, he lacks pursuit ability when the play goes wide. Altogether, this is an extremely beatable unit, even with Jones and the ageless Terrell Suggs making the occasional play. This Super Bowl could very well hinge on whether they can keep Kyle Shanahan’s crew of runners from turning short runs into huge, game-changing plays.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS RUSHING OFFENSE AT KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUSHING DEFENSE (GOOD MATCHUP)
Kyle Shanahan has led effective NFL ground games for years, but this 49ers unit enters the Super Bowl on a run of dominance that seems ripped out of a Madden tournament. After finishing the regular season second only to the Ravens with 31 rushes and 144 yards a game, they’ve actually bumped up a notch here in the postseason. In the Divisional Round, Tevin Coleman and Raheem Mostert combined for 163 at a 4.8 per carry. A week later, Coleman sat out but Mostert rode the hot hand to a stunning 220 and 4 touchdowns. The Packers had no answer for Mostert, who scored on runs of 36, 9, 18, and 22 yards. Coleman still looks iffy to suit up after dislocating his shoulder two weeks ago, but even if he does, Mostert has all but run away with the lead role. He’s produced 6.1 yards per rush dating back to Week 11, and his explosiveness is hard to draw a bead on in the open field. Shanahan’s attack boasts two strong blocking tight ends (George Kittle and Levine Toilolo) and a world-class fullback (Kyle Juszczyk), allowing his quick-footed runners to bounce plays effectively off the edges. However the opportunity is split up, this has the look of the Super Bowl’s most glaring mismatch. The Kansas City run defense lacks impact players up front, so Shanahan will likely test them relentlessly whenever game flow allows him to.
Run defense remains the true Achilles’ heel of this Kansas City team. They finished the regular season 26th in raw yardage allowed, and only 3 teams game up more on a per-rush basis. They drew praise for holding the dominant Derrick Henry to 69 yards last week, though it’s worth noting he had little trouble creating yardage early on (53 over his first 11 attempts). Overall, this defense is built more to threaten opposing passers and receivers than to shut down the run. Even with star tackle Chris Jones on the field - he returned for 28 snaps in the AFC Championship - this is a relatively light unit up front. The rest of the line rotation lacks run-stuffing power, and the linebackers have been clear liabilities for much of the season. Anthony Hitchens has been particularly shaky, routinely blowing assignments and missing tackles on the second level, and Damien Wilson offers little support. Reserve Reggie Ragland worked in for heavy snaps against Henry and the Titans, but while he’s a decent two-down tackler, he lacks pursuit ability when the play goes wide. Altogether, this is an extremely beatable unit, even with Jones and the ageless Terrell Suggs making the occasional play. This Super Bowl could very well hinge on whether they can keep Kyle Shanahan’s crew of runners from turning short runs into huge, game-changing plays.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUSHING OFFENSE VS SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS RUSHING DEFENSE (BAD MATCHUP)
The Kansas City backfield looked crowded entering the postseason, but has ultimately boiled down to a one-man show. Through 2 playoff games, Damien Williams has commanded 91% of offensive snaps and 29 of 30 running back carries. Seemingly at his season peak, Williams is dominating the backfield on all three downs as the clock-control component of this dynamic machine. He’s been only marginally effective, turning those 29 rushes into 92 yards (just 3.2 apiece). But with his versatility and occasional explosiveness, coach Andy Reid has had little reason to turn to backups Darwin Thompson and LeSean McCoy. Still, the ground game is mostly secondary in this offense, which finished the regular season 27th in rushing attempts and 23rd in yardage. Here in the playoffs, over 45 snaps with the score within a touchdown, Kansas City backs have taken just 12 called runs (27%). Of course, quarterback Patrick Mahomes has dazzled on the ground in the postseason, racking up 106 yards and a game-changing long touchdown. But Mahomes’ mobility is most valuable in the passing game, biding his receivers time by darting in and out of the pocket. He only cleared 25 rushing yards twice during the regular season.
The San Francisco defense has been fantastic for most of the 2019 season, but markedly less effective against the run than the pass. The 13-3 49ers didn’t face much rushing volume, but gave up the league’s 10th-most yards per carry (4.5) and allowed 7 different runners to top 75 yards. The front line is stout, with DeForest Bucker and Arik Armstead true forces against the run and prized rookie Nick Bosa excelling on all three downs. That since Week 12 has been a different unit as it struggled with Dre Greenlaw filling in for Kwon Alexander early on. Since Week 12, Greenlaw has been excellent and the results have showed as they have not allowed a running back to top 70 yards and have faced stiff competition in Aaron Jones twice, Dalvin Cook, Alvin Kamara, Mark Ingram, and Todd Gurley. The 49ers do boast a strong run-support secondary, with Jimmie Ward and Richard Sherman consistently giving help in the box. Still, a successful unit shouldn’t rely quite so much on its last line of defense. Unless Kansas City can bust off a big play, expect them to struggle in this game.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
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KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUSHING OFFENSE VS SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS RUSHING DEFENSE (BAD MATCHUP)
The Kansas City backfield looked crowded entering the postseason, but has ultimately boiled down to a one-man show. Through 2 playoff games, Damien Williams has commanded 91% of offensive snaps and 29 of 30 running back carries. Seemingly at his season peak, Williams is dominating the backfield on all three downs as the clock-control component of this dynamic machine. He’s been only marginally effective, turning those 29 rushes into 92 yards (just 3.2 apiece). But with his versatility and occasional explosiveness, coach Andy Reid has had little reason to turn to backups Darwin Thompson and LeSean McCoy. Still, the ground game is mostly secondary in this offense, which finished the regular season 27th in rushing attempts and 23rd in yardage. Here in the playoffs, over 45 snaps with the score within a touchdown, Kansas City backs have taken just 12 called runs (27%). Of course, quarterback Patrick Mahomes has dazzled on the ground in the postseason, racking up 106 yards and a game-changing long touchdown. But Mahomes’ mobility is most valuable in the passing game, biding his receivers time by darting in and out of the pocket. He only cleared 25 rushing yards twice during the regular season.
The San Francisco defense has been fantastic for most of the 2019 season, but markedly less effective against the run than the pass. The 13-3 49ers didn’t face much rushing volume, but gave up the league’s 10th-most yards per carry (4.5) and allowed 7 different runners to top 75 yards. The front line is stout, with DeForest Bucker and Arik Armstead true forces against the run and prized rookie Nick Bosa excelling on all three downs. That since Week 12 has been a different unit as it struggled with Dre Greenlaw filling in for Kwon Alexander early on. Since Week 12, Greenlaw has been excellent and the results have showed as they have not allowed a running back to top 70 yards and have faced stiff competition in Aaron Jones twice, Dalvin Cook, Alvin Kamara, Mark Ingram, and Todd Gurley. The 49ers do boast a strong run-support secondary, with Jimmie Ward and Richard Sherman consistently giving help in the box. Still, a successful unit shouldn’t rely quite so much on its last line of defense. Unless Kansas City can bust off a big play, expect them to struggle in this game.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS PASSING OFFENSE VS SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS PASSING DEFENSE (NEUTRAL MATCHUP)
The legend of Patrick Mahomes grows week after week, achievement after achievement. One week after spearheading a 51-7 run to upend the Texans, Mahomes carved up Tennessee with 294 too-easy yards and 2 scores in the Championship Game. Andy Reid’s bunch seems never truly out of a game, so long as Mahomes is given the chance to beat defenses downfield with his lethal receiving corps. Armed with the NFL’s collection of wideouts, Mahomes is often given a wide array of options all over the formation. Tight end Travis Kelce looms over all, and all indications are that his knee injury from last month are behind him. Kelce was bracketed well by the Titans in the Championship Round, but the Texans are still having nightmares of his 134-yard, 3-touchdown eruption the week before. He’s one of football’s toughest covers over the middle and up the seams, and a Rob Gronkowski-level mismatch near the goal line. For their parts, Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins, and Mecole Hardman are ever-present threats to blow a game wide open with a single play. Hill scored twice last week, on a jet-sweep toss and a fantastic one-on-one win down the field. Watkins put Kansas City up big with a 60-yard go-route touchdown, and Hardman later sealed the game by drawing a 49-yard interference penalty. That said, drops have been a noticeable problem this postseason, with at least five catchable throws missed. All told, though, there hasn’t been a more frightening attack in years, and there’s virtually no ceiling for the plays they’re capable of making.
Most would argue that the 49ers are in the Super Bowl thanks mostly to their pass defense, which has been fantastic for much of the season. No team has allowed fewer yards through the air, and only 4 of 18 opposing passers has topped 250 in a game. (It bears noting that two of those opponents relied heavily on garbage time to do it - including Aaron Rodgers two weeks ago.) The dominance starts up front, where Nick Bosa and Dee Ford have bent the edges consistently and combined for 19.5 sacks through 18 games. Between them, Arik Armstead (10.0) and DeForest Buckner (7.5) push the pocket exceptionally well, and life is rarely easy for opposing passers. Behind them, second-year man Fred Warner broke out as one of football’s most impactful pass-defending linebackers. In the secondary, All-Pro Richard Sherman leads a group that’s consistently been greater than the sum of its parts. Emmanuel Moseley and Ahkello Witherspoon are somewhat beatable across the field, but K’Waun Williams remains extremely stingy in the slot. Together, they stifled Stefon Diggs and Adam Thielen (a combined 107 yards) in the Divisional Round, then held Davante Adams to little more than screen catches in an impressive NFC Championship showing. They’ll have their hands full with Kansas City’s speed, and Travis Kelce is a walking mismatch at tight end. But if any defense boasts the depth, four-man pass rush, and downfield physicality to slow Patrick Mahomes and his weapons, it’s this one.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
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KANSAS CITY CHIEFS PASSING OFFENSE VS SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS PASSING DEFENSE (NEUTRAL MATCHUP)
The legend of Patrick Mahomes grows week after week, achievement after achievement. One week after spearheading a 51-7 run to upend the Texans, Mahomes carved up Tennessee with 294 too-easy yards and 2 scores in the Championship Game. Andy Reid’s bunch seems never truly out of a game, so long as Mahomes is given the chance to beat defenses downfield with his lethal receiving corps. Armed with the NFL’s collection of wideouts, Mahomes is often given a wide array of options all over the formation. Tight end Travis Kelce looms over all, and all indications are that his knee injury from last month are behind him. Kelce was bracketed well by the Titans in the Championship Round, but the Texans are still having nightmares of his 134-yard, 3-touchdown eruption the week before. He’s one of football’s toughest covers over the middle and up the seams, and a Rob Gronkowski-level mismatch near the goal line. For their parts, Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins, and Mecole Hardman are ever-present threats to blow a game wide open with a single play. Hill scored twice last week, on a jet-sweep toss and a fantastic one-on-one win down the field. Watkins put Kansas City up big with a 60-yard go-route touchdown, and Hardman later sealed the game by drawing a 49-yard interference penalty. That said, drops have been a noticeable problem this postseason, with at least five catchable throws missed. All told, though, there hasn’t been a more frightening attack in years, and there’s virtually no ceiling for the plays they’re capable of making.
Most would argue that the 49ers are in the Super Bowl thanks mostly to their pass defense, which has been fantastic for much of the season. No team has allowed fewer yards through the air, and only 4 of 18 opposing passers has topped 250 in a game. (It bears noting that two of those opponents relied heavily on garbage time to do it - including Aaron Rodgers two weeks ago.) The dominance starts up front, where Nick Bosa and Dee Ford have bent the edges consistently and combined for 19.5 sacks through 18 games. Between them, Arik Armstead (10.0) and DeForest Buckner (7.5) push the pocket exceptionally well, and life is rarely easy for opposing passers. Behind them, second-year man Fred Warner broke out as one of football’s most impactful pass-defending linebackers. In the secondary, All-Pro Richard Sherman leads a group that’s consistently been greater than the sum of its parts. Emmanuel Moseley and Ahkello Witherspoon are somewhat beatable across the field, but K’Waun Williams remains extremely stingy in the slot. Together, they stifled Stefon Diggs and Adam Thielen (a combined 107 yards) in the Divisional Round, then held Davante Adams to little more than screen catches in an impressive NFC Championship showing. They’ll have their hands full with Kansas City’s speed, and Travis Kelce is a walking mismatch at tight end. But if any defense boasts the depth, four-man pass rush, and downfield physicality to slow Patrick Mahomes and his weapons, it’s this one.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS PASSING OFFENSE AT KANSAS CITY CHIEFS PASSING DEFENSE (TOUGH MATCHUP)
The 49ers’ ideal passing attack - low-volume and low-impact - has been on full display this postseason. Jimmy Garoppolo got past the Vikings and Packers dropping back just 30 times and completing 17 total passes. On the regular season, the 49ers as a team threw the league’s fourth-fewest passes a game and a good-not-great 28 touchdowns. They were efficient, though, ranking fourth league-wide in net yards per attempt. Without much of a downfield component - they lack a true deep threat, while Garoppolo has long struggled with his long ball - this unit relies heavily upon its playmakers to weave magic on short and intermediate routes. Leading the way is full-fledged superstar George Kittle, who may be facing his tight end equal (Travis Kelce) on Sunday. Kittle has been quiet this postseason, spending most of his time blocking, but averaged 75 yards a game on a whopping 28% target share during the season. Garoppolo has also seen success, if only sporadically, when throwing to Emmanuel Sanders and dynamic rookie Deebo Samuel. Sanders can still win downfield, but hasn’t caught more than 3 balls in a game since Week 14. Shanahan manufactures 4-7 weekly touches for the explosive Samuel, and he’s responded nicely. But if all goes to plan for the 49ers, they’ll control the Super Bowl on the ground and supplement with just a few well-timed splash plays from their receivers.
The much-maligned Kansas City pass defense took a dramatic turn for the better midway through the 2019 season. Dating back to Week 9, they’ve allowed just 6.3 yards per attempt and 239 a game, with only 3 opponents (aided by garbage time) topping 225. The Texans’ trio of DeAndre Hopkins, Will Fuller and Kenny Stills found success in the Divisional Round, but that had all the looks of a true outlier. Houston spent much of that game in desperation mode, and the Kansas City defense allowed just 46 passes of 20+ yards this season, eighth-best in football. Outside cornerbacks Charvarius Ward and Bashaud Breeland are volatile in coverage, but both possess shutdown ability against downfield wideouts. Against the 49ers, though, the biggest burden will be on their slot unit as they seek to keep the likes of George Kittle, Deebo Samuel, and Emmanuel Sanders from making plays underneath. Slot cornerback Kendall Fuller had an up-and-down season, but has traditionally been strong inside, while safety hybrid Tyrann Mathieu has excelled as an on-ball playmaker (16 pass breakups and 4 interceptions). It’s not a bulletproof unit, and they allowed a handful of big games to slot men and tight ends down the 2019 stretch. But often, opponents are pushed into shootouts early on, and the swarming pass rush forces a number of errant and ill-advised throws. As a result, this is no longer an easy group to throw on, even when the game is blown wide open. Kyle Shanahan and Jimmy Garoppolo will need to get creative to make big plays happen Sunday.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
0
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS PASSING OFFENSE AT KANSAS CITY CHIEFS PASSING DEFENSE (TOUGH MATCHUP)
The 49ers’ ideal passing attack - low-volume and low-impact - has been on full display this postseason. Jimmy Garoppolo got past the Vikings and Packers dropping back just 30 times and completing 17 total passes. On the regular season, the 49ers as a team threw the league’s fourth-fewest passes a game and a good-not-great 28 touchdowns. They were efficient, though, ranking fourth league-wide in net yards per attempt. Without much of a downfield component - they lack a true deep threat, while Garoppolo has long struggled with his long ball - this unit relies heavily upon its playmakers to weave magic on short and intermediate routes. Leading the way is full-fledged superstar George Kittle, who may be facing his tight end equal (Travis Kelce) on Sunday. Kittle has been quiet this postseason, spending most of his time blocking, but averaged 75 yards a game on a whopping 28% target share during the season. Garoppolo has also seen success, if only sporadically, when throwing to Emmanuel Sanders and dynamic rookie Deebo Samuel. Sanders can still win downfield, but hasn’t caught more than 3 balls in a game since Week 14. Shanahan manufactures 4-7 weekly touches for the explosive Samuel, and he’s responded nicely. But if all goes to plan for the 49ers, they’ll control the Super Bowl on the ground and supplement with just a few well-timed splash plays from their receivers.
The much-maligned Kansas City pass defense took a dramatic turn for the better midway through the 2019 season. Dating back to Week 9, they’ve allowed just 6.3 yards per attempt and 239 a game, with only 3 opponents (aided by garbage time) topping 225. The Texans’ trio of DeAndre Hopkins, Will Fuller and Kenny Stills found success in the Divisional Round, but that had all the looks of a true outlier. Houston spent much of that game in desperation mode, and the Kansas City defense allowed just 46 passes of 20+ yards this season, eighth-best in football. Outside cornerbacks Charvarius Ward and Bashaud Breeland are volatile in coverage, but both possess shutdown ability against downfield wideouts. Against the 49ers, though, the biggest burden will be on their slot unit as they seek to keep the likes of George Kittle, Deebo Samuel, and Emmanuel Sanders from making plays underneath. Slot cornerback Kendall Fuller had an up-and-down season, but has traditionally been strong inside, while safety hybrid Tyrann Mathieu has excelled as an on-ball playmaker (16 pass breakups and 4 interceptions). It’s not a bulletproof unit, and they allowed a handful of big games to slot men and tight ends down the 2019 stretch. But often, opponents are pushed into shootouts early on, and the swarming pass rush forces a number of errant and ill-advised throws. As a result, this is no longer an easy group to throw on, even when the game is blown wide open. Kyle Shanahan and Jimmy Garoppolo will need to get creative to make big plays happen Sunday.
Please refer to the NFL's injury report for the latest injury news regarding your players.
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.But, if he loses........crickets.
Lol what difference does it make? Who wins a tv entertainment game is the most unimportant thing on earth. Aside from the win or loss of money. Which is also fake and worthless paper anyway. = matrix
Secondly.. ,thanks capt obvious . Yeah, theres no need to say anything if I'm wrong about outcome.
Because you'll be too childish and think that proves its not staged. .which it wouldnt.
I'm already correct that games are staged. But you'll only listen if I'm right about this.
0
Quote Originally Posted by Cooler999:
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.But, if he loses........crickets.
Lol what difference does it make? Who wins a tv entertainment game is the most unimportant thing on earth. Aside from the win or loss of money. Which is also fake and worthless paper anyway. = matrix
Secondly.. ,thanks capt obvious . Yeah, theres no need to say anything if I'm wrong about outcome.
Because you'll be too childish and think that proves its not staged. .which it wouldnt.
I'm already correct that games are staged. But you'll only listen if I'm right about this.
My casino on line let me place this bet on parlay, i like a lot: 1. Eather team SC 4 unanswered times?... NO (-292) 2. Largest PTS lead of the game. Under 16.5 (-152) 3. Alternative lines Chiefs +7.5 (-336) $1000 to win $1888
Interesting, I'd be most afraid of (1), I do not know how often it occurs.
0
Quote Originally Posted by Atchison:
My casino on line let me place this bet on parlay, i like a lot: 1. Eather team SC 4 unanswered times?... NO (-292) 2. Largest PTS lead of the game. Under 16.5 (-152) 3. Alternative lines Chiefs +7.5 (-336) $1000 to win $1888
Interesting, I'd be most afraid of (1), I do not know how often it occurs.
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.But, if he loses........crickets.
Lol what difference does it make? Who wins a tv entertainment game is the most unimportant thing on earth. Aside from the win or loss of money. Which is also fake and worthless paper anyway. = matrix Secondly.. ,thanks capt obvious . Yeah, theres no need to say anything if I'm wrong about outcome. Because you'll be too childish and think that proves its not staged. .which it wouldnt. I'm already correct that games are staged. But you'll only listen if I'm right about this.
This is next level retardation
Victory Belongs to the Most Tenacious
0
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
Quote Originally Posted by Cooler999:
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.But, if he loses........crickets.
Lol what difference does it make? Who wins a tv entertainment game is the most unimportant thing on earth. Aside from the win or loss of money. Which is also fake and worthless paper anyway. = matrix Secondly.. ,thanks capt obvious . Yeah, theres no need to say anything if I'm wrong about outcome. Because you'll be too childish and think that proves its not staged. .which it wouldnt. I'm already correct that games are staged. But you'll only listen if I'm right about this.
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.But, if he loses........crickets.
Lol what difference does it make? Who wins a tv entertainment game is the most unimportant thing on earth. Aside from the win or loss of money. Which is also fake and worthless paper anyway. = matrix Secondly.. ,thanks capt obvious . Yeah, theres no need to say anything if I'm wrong about outcome. Because you'll be too childish and think that proves its not staged. .which it wouldnt. I'm already correct that games are staged. But you'll only listen if I'm right about this.
This is next level retardation
Expect nothing less from this poster, PB...
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Quote Originally Posted by packersbackers:
Quote Originally Posted by chic-cardinals:
Quote Originally Posted by Cooler999:
I already know what he is going to do if his prediction is true.....He will WOOF all over covers on what a GOD of gambling and soothsayer of all betting in the Universe.But, if he loses........crickets.
Lol what difference does it make? Who wins a tv entertainment game is the most unimportant thing on earth. Aside from the win or loss of money. Which is also fake and worthless paper anyway. = matrix Secondly.. ,thanks capt obvious . Yeah, theres no need to say anything if I'm wrong about outcome. Because you'll be too childish and think that proves its not staged. .which it wouldnt. I'm already correct that games are staged. But you'll only listen if I'm right about this.
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