And then there was One.
A quick glance at the 2006 statistical line of Troy Polamalu shows nothing too significant. 77 tackles, three interceptions, one forced fumble and a sack in 13 games. It’s pretty much par for the course, where he’s concerned. In his first two full seasons as a starter, he averaged 5.9 tackles per game. Last year, he averaged…5.9 tackles per game.
However, if you’ve ever watched other strong safeties in the league, and then watched Polamalu, you immediately see what it is that he brings to the table. He looks like something out of a video game: stops and turns on a dime, runs all over the place before the snap like a player controlled on the screen by some twelve-year-old with a severe case of ADD, and he blitzes when logic tells you he should be covering the pass. And yet, somehow, his instinct for what to do when the ball is snapped is exactly correct an overwhelming majority of the time.
This Samoan Warrior has a way to get in an opposing quarterback’s head — not just to mess with his mind, but to read it. It’s as if “Taz” is controlling the entire game.
And to a certain extent, he is.
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