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New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady holds his leg after being hit by Kansas City Chiefs safety Bernard Pollard during the first quarter of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008, in Foxborough, Mass. Brady was scheduled for an MRI on Monday amid reports that he had torn his anterior cruciate ligament, an injury that would end his season.  (AP Photo/The Boston Globe, Jim Davis)        **MANDATORY CREDIT. NO SALES. MAGS OUT. INTERNET OUT. BOSTON HERALD OUT. QUINCY OUT**
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady holds his leg after being hit by Kansas City Chiefs safety Bernard Pollard during the first quarter of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008, in Foxborough, Mass. Brady was scheduled for an MRI on Monday amid reports that he had torn his anterior cruciate ligament, an injury that would end his season. (AP Photo/The Boston Globe, Jim Davis) **MANDATORY CREDIT. NO SALES. MAGS OUT. INTERNET OUT. BOSTON HERALD OUT. QUINCY OUT**
Mike Klis of The Denver Post
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

To be concise, and cruel, nothing about Week 1 had a greater impact on the balance of NFL power more than the injury to Tom Brady.

It wasn’t Peyton Manning and the Colts playing terribly against the Bears. It wasn’t the Chargers losing on a final-second touchdown, then finding out later it would be the season’s last play for Shawne Merriman.

It wasn’t the disappointing starts of Jacksonville, Seattle and Cleveland, nor was it the encouraging beginnings of Donovan McNabb, Brett Favre, Tony Romo, Aaron Rodgers and Jay Cutler.

The Patriots were one of the best teams in history last season. Even if they didn’t win it all, the Patriots were the team to beat this year. Brady was the best player on the best team.

And now that Brady is gone with a season-ending knee injury, the odds of winning the Super Bowl for every team just got better.

“You lose one of the best players in the league, it’s hard to overcome, but they’ll find ways,” Broncos receiver Brandon Stokley said.

Removing Brady may open up the AFC, but this is not good for the NFL. Losing Brady dilutes the product, in the way the NBA suffered during Michael Jordan’s temporary retirement from 1993-94. If a team other than the Pats represent the AFC in Super Bowl XLIII, it will be remembered as the team that triumphed in The Year Without Brady.

“For the league it’s not good,” said Broncos tight end Daniel Graham, a Brady teammate from 2002-06. “But like every other team, you lose guys every week. I’m sure they’ll do what they’ve been doing since I was there, putting in the next guy in line and keep it moving.”

The next quarterback for the Patriots, though, didn’t even start in college. Granted, Matt Cassel is the only QB in history to back up Carson Palmer, Matt Leinart and Tom Brady in a seven-year stretch. And with or without Brady, the Patriots’ intricate passing system is something to behold.

But New England will lose some intimidation factor this year. Opponents will not go into the game fearing Cassel.

Tales of two quarterbacks

They have watches to time speed. Weights to measure strength. Film to grade ability. But toughness? There are no consistent patterns. Look at quarterbacks Eli Manning and Vince Young.

Manning’s strength of leadership was ridiculed at this time last year by former teammate Tiki Barber. Manning had grown up in privilege in the Garden District of New Orleans, the son of a great NFL quarterback, the younger brother of another great quarterback.

In a late November game against Minnesota last year, Manning threw four interceptions. Three were returned for touchdowns. The Giants were humiliated in front of their home crowd 41-17.

Manning was mercilessly booed by Giants fans, hammered by the New York, pack-of-dogs press.

Manning, though, was tougher than anyone knew. He led the Giants to wins the following two weeks, then four wins in the postseason, including the Super Bowl against the Patriots.

“He’s gone from some quiet, unassuming quarterback who doesn’t have command in the huddle, to a guy who has ice water in his veins and is unflappable,” ESPN analyst and former Broncos guard Mark Schlereth said.

Then there’s Young. At 6-foot-5, 233 pounds, he is large and strong by quarterback standards. He was raised by his mom and grandmother in a tough Houston neighborhood. His father spent time in prison on a burglary conviction. As a kid, Young was nearly killed when he was struck by a car while riding his bike.

Young knows tough. Yet, when he heard boos in Nashville last week, Young ran away. Don’t be surprised if Young is essentially finished. No matter how hard he tries to show toughness from now on, his teammates will always wonder if he’ll quit.

“His teammates are going to say the right things,” Schlereth said. “But when you’re in that huddle and you call the play and you break that huddle, you’re going to go, ‘We don’t have a chance.’ I’ve been in that huddle before.”

The hot seat

From 101 to grad school

Who: Matt Cassel, quarterback, Patriots

When: 2:15 p.m. today at New York Jets

Why: The sky is seemingly falling in New England after the season-ending knee injury to quarterback Tom Brady. Cassel, right, isn’t generating much confidence as Brady’s replacement, though he played efficiently last week, completing 13-of-18 passes for 152 yards and a TD with no interceptions. For his first start, Cassel will have to beat none other than living legend Brett Favre.

Rise and fall

New faces have impact

ON THE RISE

1. Buffalo Bills. Thornton’s own Ryan Denney scores special- teams TD in impressive rout of Seattle.

2. Denver Broncos. Had Brandon Marshall not been suspended, would Eddie Royal have been a household name this week?

3. Philadelphia Eagles. Donovan appears to be Donovan again, and Cowboys are next.

LOSING MOMENTUM

1. Jacksonville Jaguars. They not only lose opener to Tennessee, they’ve lost three offensive linemen (Collier, Manuwai, Williams) for the season.

2. New England Patriots. They’ll still be good, but they won’t be great without Tom Brady.

3. San Diego Chargers. They lose their opener on a final-play TD pass, then lose Shawne Merriman for the season.

Rookie watch

Riches with later picks

Who: DeSean Jackson, receiver, Eagles

When: 6:30 p.m. Monday at Dallas

Why: When the Broncos were ready to make a pick at No. 42, they were surprised Jackson was still there. The Broncos had planned all along to take Eddie Royal at No. 42, but Jackson’s presence caused them pause. Ultimately, the Broncos stuck with their instincts. Jackson had a sensational debut last week against St. Louis, catching six passes for 106 yards and returning eight punts for 97 yards. Royal had 146 yards receiving with a touchdown, two punt returns for 19 yards and two carries for 9 yards.

At issue

NFL in the dark on blackout rule

What: NFL blackout rule

Background: Since its first days of television, the NFL has utilized home-city blackouts. The Greatest Game Ever Played, the 1958 NFL championship between the Giants and Colts, was blacked out in New York. In 1973, the league said it would black out within a 75-mile radius home games that weren’t sold out within 72 hours of kickoff. This season, commissioner Roger Goodell has had to give extensions to San Diego in Week 1 and Arizona in Week 2.

Klis’ take: This rule should go the way of leather helmets. Ticket sales were the league’s primary source of revenue when the blackout rule was instituted. Now the big money comes from television. What sense does it make to take it away? Movie theaters did not become extinct because of video and DVD players — they thrived. There are too many ways fans can watch the game, anyway, either through cable or satellite packages, or at the local sports bar. All the punitive blackout rule does is inconvenience the customers, like not having liquor stores open on Sundays. If Colorado can learn, so can the NFL. And don’t blame the fans in San Diego or Arizona. The economy stinks and the world offers too many leisurely alternatives.

Mike Klis: 303-954-1055 or mklis@denverpost.com

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