Arab Times

Top NFL teams seek playoff spots

Season enters home stretch

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WASHINGTON, Dec 1, (RTRS): The first weekend of December football signals the start of the NFL stretch run with Houston, New England, Denver, Baltimore and Atlanta poised to clinch playoff spots, while others fight to stay on the postseason path.

American Football Conference (AFC) division races look close to being locked up, but the National Football Conference is full of question marks with five weeks left in the regular season.

“This is when you need to be playing your best ball, heading into the playoff atmosphere,” New York Giants defensive end Justin Tuck said this week. “This is when you want to be playing your best.”

The Super Bowl champion Giants (7-4) could be dragged into a battle for the NFC East title by the Washington Redskins (5-6) and their gifted rookie quarterbac­k Robert Griffin III, who could climb to within a game of New York with victory on Monday.

The Giants know they could have their hands full with the explosive Redskins quarterbac­k. RG3 put Washington ahead with a late TD pass in their October meeting before Eli Manning threw a 77-yard bomb to Victor Cruz with 73 seconds left to win it.

The NFC North-leading Chicago Bears (8-3) entertain wildcard hope- fuls the Seattle Seahawks (6-5), and the Green Bay Packers (7-4) host the Minnesota Vikings (6-5) in a key NFC North clash.

In one of the league’s fiercest rivalries, the Pittsburgh Steelers (65) go up against AFC North-leading Ravens (9-2), desperate for a victory to fortify their wildcard aspiration­s.

The Steelers will be hard-pressed to avert a third straight loss as it looks likely they will be without injured starting quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger.

“I firmly believe that (Charlie Batch will play well),” Roethlisbe­rger told reporters on Friday about the 37-year-old fill-in, who threw three intercepti­ons in last week’s loss to the Cleveland Browns.

“They know what he’s capable of. He’s been doing it a long time. They respect him. I think he’s ready to rise to the occasion.”

A key inter-conference game pits the hard-charging Denver Broncos (8-3) and MVP candidate quarterbac­k Peyton Manning against the visiting Tampa Bay Buccaneers (65), who are clinging to their wildcard hopes.

“Our goal is to keep winning and get to the big one,” said Broncos wide receiver Demaryius Thomas, whose team is riding a six-game winning streak.

Denver can clinch the AFC West division with a win or a San Diego loss to the wildcard hunting Cincinnati Bengals (6-5).

Baltimore can claim the AFC North crown with a win and a Bengals loss. A victory over the Steelers would ensure them of a playoff spot.

New England (8-3) takes another AFC East title if they beat the Miami Dolphins (5-6), while AFC-leading Houston (10-1) can secure a berth in the postseason with a win over the Tennessee Titans.

The Atlanta Falcons, 23-13 winners against the New Orleans Saints on Thursday, would clinch the NFC South division if Tampa Bay loses, or a playoff berth should Seattle lose.

One fresh face among the top AFC teams belongs to the Indianapol­is Colts (7-4) and rookie signal caller Andrew Luck, who take on the Detroit Lions (4-7).

At the moment, the Colts, who got to select Luck with the top pick in the NFL Draft because they had the league’s worst record last season, would be in the playoffs. to beat American teammate Stacey Cook by 1.73 seconds. Germany’s Maria HoeflRiesc­h and Liechtenst­ein’s Tina Weirather tied for third in 1:54.35 in the race interrupte­d a few times because of fog and poor visibility.

Vonn raced for the second time since returning from a stomach bug that landed her in the hospital. Last week in Aspen, Colorado, she was 21st in the giant slalom, and then skipped the slalom.

In Beaver Creek, Colorado, Christof Innerhofer of Italy glided through a demanding course to win his first World Cup downhill in nearly four years.

Innerhofer completed the Birds of Prey course in 1 minute, 41.69 seconds Friday, holding off Norway’s Aksel Lund Svindal by 0.23 seconds. Svindal’s teammate Kjetil Jansrud was third.

Innerhofer, whose last downhill win was Dec. 28, 2008, in Bormio, Italy, could barely train in the offseason because of his chronicall­y aching back.

After this performanc­e, the Italian skier was wondering if he should ever practice again.

“I shouldn’t train - maybe I should just take a holiday,” the charismati­c Innerhofer said, laughing. “I’m crazy happy right now, because I really can’t believe it.”

His back has been so irritating that he has only been on the slopes for a handful of practice runs since September. He took some painkiller­s before the race to calm it down. Following his run, he found something that worked even better - the euphoria of a win.

“It was an amazing run,” said the 27-yearold Innerhofer, who grew up idolizing Italian great Alberto Tomba. “I took all the risks, more straight lines, just like in training.”

These days, skiing more swiftly than Svindal is quite a feat. Svindal was coming off two straight wins in Lake Louise, Alberta, last weekend and showed no signs of slowing down all week in training, even

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