13-1
Weird to see A-Rod fail to do what Tebow’s been doing in his sleep all season long — double-digit-point comebacks with less than 5 minutes go.
Weird to see A-Rod play as good as he’s played all season but his receivers decided to take a day off.
I mean, come on guys. Come on. Really? We’re going to turn this into “lol Rodgers isn’t as good as Tebow!” Haha. This is a team sport, and if you actually watched the game, you’d know that this wasn’t Aaron’s fault. I mean, no pass rush? 8 drops?
Yeah. Shame on you, Aaron. You should be playing every position on the field, asshole.
Meanwhile, Tebow scored one touchdown against the Bears last week, and then the game was tied up by a 59 yard field goal. It was also won by a 51 yard field goal. So clearly, clearly, Tebow is the superior QB.
LOL settle down there. Nobody’s turning it into a “Tebow is better than Rodgers” argument. And I certainly never said that, and will never admit that Tebow is better. My commentary was just an observation.
My point is: We see a guy like Tebow routinely coming back late in fourth quarters and overtimes that we kind of expect a guy like Rodgers, having one of the best stretches as a quarterback ever, to do the same. But we kind of forget that, no matter how good you are, overcoming double-digit leads late in games is actually a really difficult thing to do. Takes luck and an accumulation of many little instances of the ball bouncing your way.
A-Rod’s having an amazing, record-setting season, but it just goes to show just how amazing a season Tebow is having as well—in a different kind of way. Some how, some way, the little things are bouncing his way late in games — more than it is for his peers — and it’s incredible to watch.
