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Published: November 11, 2009 3:00 a.m.

NFL midseason: Parody of parity

Gap widens between the haves and have-no-shots

Barry Wilner
Associated Press
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Associated Press photos

It’s been a tough first half for Cleveland fans and quarterback Derek Anderson to watch. The Browns are 1-7 and have scored 78 points.

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Associated Press photos

Austin Collie, top, Hank Baskett and the Colts have much to celebrate as they are off to an 8-0 start and have won 17 straight regular-season games.

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Associated Press photos

Austin Collie, top, Hank Baskett and the Colts have much to celebrate as they are off to an 8-0 start and have won 17 straight regular-season games.

NEW YORK – Same old same old in the NFL? Not even close this season.

Sure, the Colts ripped through the first half of their schedule for the fourth time in five seasons, and the Patriots are dominating the AFC East. Yes, Adrian Peterson is running away from defenses and the Saints are passing over them. The Steelers are their usual stingy selves and the Lions as incompetent as ever.

Still, this has been a year of disparity and uncertainty.

On the field, there are two unbeatens and five clubs with just a single win. Off it, there’s the specter of an uncapped 2010 season, then perhaps no football at all in 2011. And things could get a whole lot more muddled in the near future.

“This will be a long process,” commissioner Roger Goodell said of talks with the union for a collective bargaining agreement.

This season, the NFL welcomed back Tom Brady, who’s beginning to look like his superstar self, and saw Michael Vick return to lots of attention but a virtual non-role in Philadelphia.

Brett Favre’s flirtation with the Vikings reached fruition when he unretired for the second straight year, and now he has Minnesota leading the NFC North at 7-1.

Favre’s return to Lambeau Field this month to play the Packers was hyped like a Super Bowl, and the 40-year-old quarterback responded with four touchdown passes in a win.

New Orleans and Indianapolis are 8-0, and both will need to get by the Patriots – who are eager to protect their unprecedented 16-0 regular-season mark in 2007 – to remain unbeaten.

The Colts play host to the Patriots on Sunday night, and the high-scoring Saints get their chance Nov. 30. Both are prime-time matchups that can only further boost the league’s strong TV ratings.

“Every one of the teams we play from here on out has us marked with a big star,” Saints quarterback Drew Brees said. “We understand what’s at stake here and obviously the opportunity we have just doesn’t come along all that often. So would we like to win them all? Absolutely, but you can never look too far ahead. It’s all about the next game.”

Even if, at times, that next game is merely a walkover. Consider that the Saints are on a record scoring pace with 303 points at the halfway mark. They still have St. Louis, Tampa Bay (twice), Washington and Carolina on the schedule, opponents with a combined 7-25 record.

Those tailenders, along with Oakland, Cleveland, Kansas City, and Washington, generally have established a new nadir for ineptitude. Parity? Pfft.

There has been such a gap between the haves and have-no-shots this season that no Brady to Randy Moss rockets could bridge it. As some of the awful teams fall deeper into the dysfunctional abyss, repeats of New England’s 59-0 romp past Tennessee – the league’s most puzzling team, going from 13-0 last year to 0-6 this season before two recent wins – might become commonplace. Matchups between contenders and failures could get even uglier.

Sure, there have been aberrations (Oakland over Philadelphia, Tampa Bay over Green Bay), but they have been few and far between. The “any given Sunday” theme has been displaced in 2009 by “ain’t got a chance Sundays” for nearly three months.

Has that had an effect at the stadiums? Attendance declined 2.4 percent through eight weeks, modest compared with some other sports, and the weak economy likely is more to blame than any other factors.

Television ratings, meanwhile, have soared. Through two months of the schedule, the average audience was up 15 percent from last season, the biggest one-year increase of the last two decades. NFL games were watched by an average of 17.2 million viewers through eight weeks, the highest total since 1989.

In some cities, however, blackouts once more became a dark topic. Jacksonville hasn’t come close to a sellout for its four home games and won’t likely approach one the rest of the way. There have been just nine blackouts overall through nine weeks, and with so many teams struggling, filling stadiums could become impossible in a half-dozen other places.

Those generally are the teams that can’t score. Cleveland and St. Louis, both 1-7, have scored 155 points combined. Twenty-one clubs have scored more than 155.

Throw in Oakland and its 78 points and the Raiders, Browns and Rams have 233, 11 fewer than the Vikings and 70 less than the Saints.

Overall, scoring is down from 44.2 points a game to 43.6, which still ranks fourth all time through nine weeks.

The drop is attributable to fewer field goals; the 651 touchdowns are third-most through nine games and 22 more than in 2008.

But the big plays that excite everyone except the teams victimized by them are coming at a record clip. There have been 91 touchdowns of 50 or more yards, the most through nine weeks since 1970.

While there’s been no sidelining of a star of the magnitude of Brady this half-season, injuries have, as always, made a difference.

Chicago lost linebacker Brian Urlacher and the Jets lost Leon Washington. Both teams are 4-4 without such key contributors.

Seattle’s outstanding tackle Walter Jones never even made it onto the field this season. The Seahawks are 3-5.