Only 14 teams have a winning record after the sixth week
of the 2018 campaign, but I've assigned myself the task of finding reasons for
optimism for every NFL squad this season. It's going to be easier
with some teams than others, but let's give this a shot.
PITTSBURGH
STEELERS: Holding the Bengals'
offense to 275 yards just one week after holding the Falcons to
17 points is better news for Pittsburgh than Le'Veon Bell's
return, whenever that happens (with the latest twist being news that the
team does not actually
expect him to report this week).
ARIZONA CARDINALS: It's
possible that cornerback Patrick
Peterson has never played better. Defensive end Chandler
Jones, safety Budda Baker and
linebacker Josh Bynes are
all flying around in Coach Steve Wilks' defense. That group -- and rookie
QB Josh Rosen's
laudable willingness to make tough throws in a nearly impossible situation --
provide reasons for depressed Cardinals fans
to keep tuning in.
ATLANTA FALCONS: The
season isn't over at 2-4. The Falcons earned
a win they desperately needed over Tampa,
with a home game coming up against the
Giants before a Week 8 bye. Matt Ryan has thrown
for 12 touchdowns with no picks over the last four weeks and the Falcons have
eclipsed 30 points in every home game. Eventually, Ryan must prove this offense
can travel.
BALTIMORE RAVENS: Only
the Rams have
a better scoring differential than the Ravens,
who have managed a difficult early slate with aplomb. At 4-2 after a three-game
road swing, Baltimore owns the most cohesive and creative team defense in
football. In a pass-dominant league, the best pass defense is a trump card.
BUFFALO BILLS: Buffalo's
defense has held three of its last four opponents under 300 yards, with
defensive end Jerry Hughes,
defensive tackle Kyle Williams and
breakout linebacker Matt Milano all
playing well. LeSean McCoy's
return to form gives the Bills a
path to stay competitive if they can get anything out of their quarterbacks.
Big if.
CAROLINA PANTHERS: The
offensive line has stabilized in recent weeks and the team's young cornerbacks
are mostly playing well. The Panthers are
a 3-2 squad without glaring weaknesses in any facet of the game and a lot of
room for improvement if youngsters like D.J. Moore and Curtis Samuel can
develop.
CHICAGO BEARS: Tarik Cohen's
breakout game against the
Bucs was backed up by another 121 yards from scrimmage against the
Dolphins. Taylor
Gabriel's early slump is over, and the return of rookie Anthony
Miller is a plus. The severe disappointment of losing in Miami
shows how far Coach Matt Nagy has already moved the goal posts for this
organization.
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Sunday's loss
to Pittsburgh undoubtedly stings. It will conjure memories of
all the other losses from ahead during the Marvin Lewis era,
but Andy Dalton's
big-boy drive before the Steelers'
game-winning touchdown was different. Week after week, Dalton is playing his
best in the game's biggest moments.
CLEVELAND BROWNS: It
took until Baker
Mayfield's fourth NFL appearance for the No. 1 overall pick to look
like a rookie. That alone is a victory. Coordinator Gregg Williams'
boom-or-bust approach to defense will produce games like Sunday's loss
to the Chargers, but this season should ultimately be judged on
whether the Browns have
finally found their quarterback. Mayfield has already shown enough to provide
that answer, and the slump-busting Bucs defense is next on tap.
DALLAS COWBOYS: Sunday's
40-point outburst against the
vaunted Jaguars defense came out of nowhere. The Cowboys'
defensive performance against Jacksonville did not. Dallas suddenly has a deep
pass rush that is supported by the standout play of young linebackers Leighton
Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith.
It's enough to make Cowboys fans
-- and ownership -- completely unrealistic about their prospects.
DENVER BRONCOS: John
Elway has problems, but his 2018 rookie class isn't one of them. Royce Freeman and
undrafted stud Phillip
Lindsay have made an incredible backfield duo. No. 4 overall
pick Bradley Chubb broke
out with three sacks of Jared Goff on
Sunday, and wideout Courtland
Sutton looks like a keeper. Even fourth-round linebacker Josey Jewell has
been a valuable role player. This is the type of draft class that turns an
organization around, even if it doesn't happen under this coaching staff.
DETROIT LIONS: Bill
Belichick often figures out his team in September before covering up its
weaknesses and highlighting its strengths after that. Could Matt Patricia do
the same? At 2-3 (with two quality wins) coming out of their bye week,
the Lions'
offense is more balanced than ever before, with Kerryon Johnson adding
juice to the running game and Kenny
Golladay making the leap to a No. 1 receiver.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: This
season could look a lot worse than 3-2-1. Aaron Rodgers'
smile was extra wide after another daredevil prime-time
comeback Monday night because he has two weeks to rest his knee
while his wideouts heal, too, as the Packers have
their bye in Week 7. Winning just enough games in ugly fashion early in the
season before Rodgers goes on a run late is basically the Packers'
annual formula.
HOUSTON TEXANS: Bill
O'Brien's crew is somehow tied for first place despite starting 0-3;
allowing Deshaun
Watson to be hit 66 times and failing to play one truly
complete game as a team. The stars here are healthy and almost all playing
well, especially J.J. Watt.
In short: This team can get a lot better.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: No
team has worse injury luck. That reality -- and Andrew Luck's
return to form -- are more important than any record in coach Frank Reich's
first season.
"In my core, I'm not discouraged," Luck said
after Sunday's loss
to the Jets. "From a 10,000-foot perspective, I'm not happy we
lost. But I think we are going in the right direction and the results will
come."
This sounds like athlete-speak, but I totally buy it in
this case.
JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS: Just look around the rest of the AFC South. Despite the Jaguars'
disappointing start, they are still tied atop the division and their
painstakingly constructed defense remains intact and healthy. The Jags started
3-3 last season, too, and this team still looks better on paper.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: I
never want to hear a Chiefs fan
complain about not developing a homegrown quarterback again. Even in a loss to the
Patriots, Patrick
Mahomes made five throws Sunday night most organizations have
never produced. The Chiefs'
defense has enough talent to improve by January and anything less than a
playoff bye will be a massive letdown.
LOS ANGELES
CHARGERS: Center Mike Pouncey has
provided a nastier edge for an offense that revolves around big passing plays
and big production from running backs Melvin Gordon and Austin Ekeler.
This can be one of the league's most balanced teams, and the performance by the
Bolts' secondary over the last two weeks shows their upside. Only one AFC team
has a better record than the 4-2 Chargers.
LOS ANGELES RAMS: The Rams have
shown over the last two weeks they can win any style of game, in any
climate. Jared Goff sets
defenses up and Todd Gurley has
knocked them down in the fourth quarter. Despite all the star power on this
roster on both sides of the ball, it might be the low-profile offensive line
that is dominating the most.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: The Dolphins might've
found the right coach if Adam Gase can scheme up 541 yards and 31 points on
the Bears'
defense with Brock
Osweiler at quarterback, all while reviving Frank Gore's
infinite career and making Albert Wilson a
free-agent bargain. That Gase can engineer this much production out of
disparate parts, however, does make me wonder if Miami still needs to upgrade
at quarterback.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Despite
all the early turbulence, the Vikings are
3-2-1, half a game out of first place, coming off a much-improved rushing
performance with 195 yards in their win
over Arizona. Cousins has been at his best this season when
under pressure, a trait that is only going to become more vital as the games
become more important.
NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS: The Patriots lost
to Kansas City in Week 1
last season partly because they failed on two fourth-and-1
situations. On Sunday night, they converted four third-and-short situations,
including Sony Michel's
patient run on third-and-1 during the game-winning drive. The New England
running game is undeniably tougher this year, leaning on strong interior linemen
and Michel's decisiveness.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: New
Orleans' defense has transformed from disastrous to passable since
transitioning to a safer, more zone-based scheme over the last two weeks.
"Just approach average" is not a worthy slogan for the Saints'
D, but it's all the unit needs to be in order to support a razor-sharp offense
that is only growing more dynamic with the return of Mark Ingram and
the emergence of rookie wideout Tre'Quan
Smith.
NEW YORK GIANTS: Saquon
Barkley is on pace for more than 2,100 yards from scrimmage in
his rookie season. The folly of passing on a quarterback in last year's draft
is re-litigated every time Manning drops back to pass, but at least
Barkley is delivering the goods, making the team far more watchable for years
to come.
NEW YORK JETS: Sam Darnold's
best two games have been his last two, and the Jets have
averaged 41.3 points in their three wins. If Jets fans
had been able to read that sentence before the season started and knew it was
written after Week 6, they probably would have passed out in ecstasy.
OAKLAND RAIDERS: This
is shaping up as a lost season in Oakland, but rookie defensive linemen Maurice Hurst, Arden Key and P.J. Hall are
all playing competent snaps. Hurst is currently ranked as a top-20 interior
defensive lineman (out of 93 qualifiers) by Pro Football Focus. Not bad for a
fifth-round pick.
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES: Fletcher Cox should
be a Defensive Player of the Year candidate. Brandon
Graham, Michael Bennett and Derek Barnett are
starting to show up every week as defensive line disruptors. Chris Long is deep
into his career renaissance. While the rest of the Eagles work
out the kinks, the D-line is ready to carry the team once again.
SAN FRANCISCO
49ERS: It feels like the 49ers are
wasting two years of Kyle Shanahan's coaching prime, but there is no doubt they
have the right guy. Shanahan's offensive vision creates results like C.J. Beathard, Raheem
Mostert and Marquise
Goodwin putting up 30 points in Lambeau Field on "Monday Night
Football." Shanahan is Sean McVay without the infrastructure.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: Repeat
after me: The Seahawks'
offensive line is no longer a liability. It might even be an asset, at
least on running downs. The dramatic transformation of the most-maligned unit
in football -- on display in the comfortable muck of Wembley Stadium -- has
given this Seahawks team
legitimate playoff aspirations.
TAMPA BAY
BUCCANEERS: The Bucs came out of their bye week with their best
rushing performance of the season in Atlanta, with Peyton Barber's
resurgence and Jameis
Winston's underrated scrambling leading to 123 yards on 20 attempts
(6.2 per carry). A little balance would go a long way toward taking pressure
off Winston's arm and the team's lackluster pass defense.
TENNESSEE TITANS: There
were legitimate questions about head coach Mike Vrabel's defensive bona fides
after he struggled in his only year as an NFL defensive coordinator. Six weeks
into his first year at the helm in Tennessee, the Titans are
third in scoring defense with a creative attack led by a complete secondary.
After a dispiriting home-shutout
loss to the Ravens, perhaps Vrabel can bring Mike Mularkey back to
run the offense.
WASHINGTON
REDSKINS: The Alabama defensive line duo of Jonathan
Allen and Daron Payne held the Panthers'
rushing attack, previously ranked first in the NFL, to 81 yards. (Christian
McCaffrey had 20.) No opposing running back has topped 61 yards
against the 'Skins all season. Jay Gruden has the team he always wanted -- a
smashmouth outfit that can run and stop the run -- even if that identity is out
of step with today's NFL trends.
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