Truro News

Patriots by far class of AFC again

- By Barry Wilner New England 3-1 Green Bay 7-1 Pittsburgh 12-1 Seattle 12-1 Oakland 12-1 Dallas 12-1 Atlanta 16-1 Houston 22-1

Let’s get it out of the way immediatel­y: If there’s a team good enough to stop the Patriots from winning the AFC again, we don’t see it.

Of course there aren’t any locks in pro sports, especially in the NFL, where teams rise and fall annually. Well, except for New England, which appears even more stacked than last season, when it won everything.

At 40, Tom Brady might still be in his peak years.

“I think it’s a lot easier now for me than it’s ever been,’’ Brady says of getting prepared for the season, which the Patriots kick off on Thursday by hosting Kansas City. “I feel like my routine is better than it’s ever been. When you’re younger you don’t know what to do. After 17 years, going into my 18th year, I know what to do. I know how to prepare. I’m never sore. I could practice every day. It’s just fun being out here competing.”

And in New England, those players go out and win, to the tune of 14-2 in 2016. The AFC East could be over by Halloween given the weaknesses of the opposition for Brady and company — even though Brady lost his favourite receiver, Julian Edelman, to a torn-up knee.

At least the conference should feature some tight races in the other divisions, particular­ly the AFC West and South.

AFC EAST

Brady needed a deep threat, so the Patriots brought in Brandin Cooks. They lost rushing TD machine LeGarrette Blount in the backfield, but are plenty deep there. Stud TE Rob Gronkowski is healthy again. The offensive line is among the best in football.

And now the defence, which probably doesn’t get the credit New England lost a few pieces from its 2016 championsh­ip run, but returns with a mostly intact lineup, led by what seems like an ageless quarterbac­k in Tom Brady (12), even at 40 years old.

it deserves, has added key ingredient­s in cornerback Stephon Gilmore and linebacker David Harris. Watch for developing end Trey Flowers.

The schedule isn’t daunting, particular­ly intradivis­ion. Miami has had the worst preseason imaginable with all its injuries; Jay Cutler as the answer at quarterbac­k? Buffalo can’t seem to figure out who is staying and who should go, and its best receivers (Sammy Watkins, traded to the Rams) and Anquan Boldin (retired) are gone.

The Jets are odds-on to be the worst team in the NFL.

AFC SOUTH

Many observers believe you can put a blanket over Houston, Tennessee and Indianapol­is because their talent bases are that close. We demur.

The Texans have a terrific defence that gets back the incomparab­le J.J. Watt and could be enough to overcome a mediocre offence with an unproven QB and suspect passing game. They are well coached and rarely beat themselves — until the playoffs, that is.

No team appears more ready to make the next big step in the AFC than the Titans. They are deep at running back, secure at quarterbac­k and on the offensive line, and have a developing D with playmakers such as Jurrell Casey and Brian Orakpo. The coaching staff is innovative, which fits nicely in Music City — and maybe atop the division.

Indy is a far bigger question mark because of the uncertaint­y of Andrew Luck’s right shoulder. Just as uncertain is the Oline charged with protecting the franchise quarterbac­k. As for the Odds to win Super Bowl LII By Gracenote Carolina 22-1 Denver 22-1 N.Y. Giants 22-1 Kansas City 25-1 Minnesota 33-1 Arizona 33-1 Indianapol­is 33-1 Tampa Bay 33-1 Tennessee 40-1 Baltimore 40-1 New Orleans 40-1 Miami 50-1

defence, it doesn’t measure up to Houston’s or Tennessee’s. Could be a tough year for Chuck Pagano to hold onto his coaching job.

Jacksonvil­le will be tougher with Tom Coughlin in the executive offices. Better? A bit.

AFC WEST

A three-team scramble is likely, with only the San Diego — oops, Los Angeles — Chargers unable to make a charge.

Oakland appeared headed for a showdown with New England until Derek Carr went down late in December. Should he stay healthy, the Raiders are the favourites to hold off the Chiefs, who sneaked past them to win the West last season, and the Broncos.

The Raiders have difference makers throughout their offence, and a line equal to the Patriots. Defensive player of the year Khalil Mack is by far their best defender and that unit must come through in a big way in the NFL’s best sector.

Kansas City will be stout on defence, somewhat dull but effective enough on offence, and well coached. The Chiefs’ season could be made or broken in a six-game stretch when they face Houston, Pittsburgh, Oakland, Denver, Dallas and the Giants.

Denver is the wild card out West. Its defence could carry it very far, as it did in winning the Super Bowl two seasons back. Washington 50-1 Cincinnati 50-1 Philadelph­ia 50-1 L.A. Chargers 66-1 Detroit 66-1 Jacksonvil­le 75-1 Chicago 80-1 Buffalo 100-1 L.A. Rams 150-1 Cleveland 200-1 N.Y. Jets 200-1 San Francisco 200-1

There are standouts at receiver and a deep backfield, but the quarterbac­king is precarious and the protection is problemati­c. Never underestim­ate Von Miller and cohorts, though.

AFC NORTH Everything in this division depends on whether Baltimore rebounds from a mediocre season. If the Ravens don’t — and their need for QB Joe Flacco to remain healthy is paramount — the Steelers will romp.

Baltimore added talent in the secondary with safety Tony Jefferson, but needs to revitalize the pass rush, as well as its pass protection.

Pittsburgh is the class of the North regardless. No offence is more dynamic, and the defence, while no Steel Curtain, has stoppers such as Bud Dupree and Ryan Shazier. It’s not a long shot that WR Antonio Brown, RB Le’Veon Bell and QB Ben Roethlisbe­rger will be in the running for league MVP.

Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis enters his 15th season in charge and needs a turnaround from 6-9-1, plus, at last, a post-season victory to secure his status. The Bengals are pretty good with the ball, not much without it.

Cleveland won’t go 1-15 again. That doesn’t mean the alwaysrebu­ilding Browns won’t contend for the top overall draft selection.

 ?? AP PHOTO ??
AP PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada