MY TOP TAKEAWAYS
FROM SUNDAY'S WEEK 5 NFL ACTION
The Browns won a football game on a Sunday for the first
time since 2015. The Chiefs laid down a whooping on the Jaguars, staking their
claim as the conference’s best team through the first five weeks.
The Cleveland Browns won a football game on a Sunday for
the first time since 2015. Staying in the AFC, the Kansas City Chiefs laid down
a whooping on the Jacksonville Jaguars, staking their claim as the conference’s
best team through the first five weeks.
Out west, the Los Angeles Rams continued early-season
excellence with an imperfect win over the Seattle Seahawks. And in
Philadelphia, the defending champion Eagles proved that they might be in the
midst of a Super Bowl hangover.
THESE ARE AMONG THE TOP TAKEAWAYS FROM
SUNDAY’S WEEK 5 NFL ACTION.
STEELERS MAKE IT A POINT TO GET JAMES
CONNER INVOLVED
It wasn’t as much to make a statement in Le’Veon Bell’s
direction. Instead, Ben Roethlisberger’s early-season struggles forced
Pittsburgh to rely more on this second-year back Sunday against a bad Atlanta
Falcons defense. Boy did Conner respond in a big way. The kid gained 185 total
yards on 25 touches, including two touchdown runs. From there, the balance he
created on offense helped Big Ben connect with Antonio Brown in the passing
game.
This is no small thing. By now, the issues between
Roethlisberger and Brown are well known. Feeding Conner the ball and creating
said balance helped Pittsburgh to an easy 41-17 win to move to .500 on the
season. Now with 581 total yards in five games, it’s going to be hard for
Conner to give up primary ball-carrier duties once (and if) Bell does return
from his holdout.
SUPER BOWL HANGOVER IS REAL
The Philadelphia Eagles pretty much sleepwalked through
the first half of their game against Minnesota on Sunday. In a rematch of last
year’s NFC Championship Game, Carson Wentz and Co. put up 81 total yards in the
first two quarters. That span of action included Philadelphia’s offense giving
up a touchdown on a Linval Joseph fumble recovery. In reality, Doug Pederson’s
offense provided more points for the Vikings than its own team in the first
half. Ouch.
While Philadelphia did respond in the second half to make
a game of this, there are still some major issues that need to be worked out
before this team can be taken seriously. That includes a lack of skill-position
weapons and an offensive line that allowed three sacks and eight hits of Wentz
in Sunday’s 23-21 loss. Now at 2-3 on the season, Philadelphia needs to bounce
back soon. It’s that simple.
THE PACKERS STILL AREN’T RIGHT
Being without both Geronimo Allison and Randall Cobb
impacted the Packers in a big way during Sunday’s loss to the division-rival
Lions. Mason Crosby missing four field goals and an extra-point attempt also hurt
Mike McCarthy’s squad. That’s fine. But the issues for these Packers go much
further than that.
Primarily, play-calling on offense has been a major
issue. How in the world do the Packers continue to call slow-developing pass
plays with a banged up Aaron Rodgers under center and the team extremely thin
at wide receiver? It led to Rodgers losing two fumbles. Each turnover resulted
in a Lions score, leading to 10 extra points for the home team in a game the
Packers dropped by eight points. McCarthy has been criticized on a never-ending
loop in recent years. But right now, it’s more than justified.
BLAKE BORTLES STILL ISN’T ANY GOOD
We’re not too sure what the Jacksonville Jaguars were
expecting when they signed Bortles to an extension this past offseason. After a
four-year sample size, it became readily apparent what he was. Maybe, a
mid-tier starting quarterback. That’s if we’re being positive. Objectively,
Bortles has been nothing better than a bottom-10 starting quarterback
throughout his career.
That came out in a big way during Sunday’s blowout loss
against the Chiefs. Facing a defense that had been torn to shreds through the
first quarter of the season, Bortles threw three inexcusable interceptions. One
resulted in a Kansas City pick-six. The second one, coming on the very next
possession, hit off the head of an offensive lineman and was intercepted in the
end zone. That’s a possible 14-point swing in a game Jacksonville ended up
losing by 16.
TIME TO BLAME JOHN ELWAY
For far too long, Denver’s general manager has been saved
from criticism by the signing of Peyton Manning years back. That time must now
come to a conclusion, with Elway finding himself on the hot seat. After
starting the season 2-0, the Broncos have now lost three consecutive games.
Sunday against a lesser Jets squad, that included an humiliating effort in a
34-16 defeat.
Case Keenum was downright horrible for the vast majority
of the game before he padded his stats in garbage time. Meanwhile, a previously
elite Broncos defense yielded 512 total yards of offense. That included
310-plus on the ground. In terms of team-building, Elway has failed. Sunday’s
blowout loss in Jersey was just the latest example of this.
DOLPHINS CRAP THE PROVERBIAL BED
Up 17-0 through the first 35-plus minutes of the game
Sunday against Cincinnati, the old Miami Dolphins came back to haunt fans in
South Beach. Ryan Tannehill threw two interceptions, one of which was returned
by Michael Johnson for a touchdown. He also lost a fumble, which was returned
for a touchdown itself. All said the Dolphins’ final five drives resulted in a
punt, interception, fumble, fumble and interception.
At 3-1 heading into Sunday’s game and with everything
looking stellar early on, the Dolphins found a way to crap this game away in a
big way. It’s a continuation of what we saw from Adam Gase’s squad last season.
And after a 3-0 start to the season, any feelings of grandeur have been
replaced with the reality that this team is nothing more than average.
DESHAUN WATSON CONTINUES TO MAKE PLAYS
Following last week’s stirring performance in Houston’s
first win of the season; Mr. Watson was back up to his old tricks against the
Dallas Cowboys Sunday night. Having been hit 10 times throughout the game,
Watson’s toughness showed in more ways than one. Sure these pass protection
issues represent a black eye for head coach Bill O’Brien, but it’s still
amazing to see what the second-year quarterback did.
Following an interception late in regular that forced
overtime, Watson led his Texans on a seven-play, 72-yard game-winning drive
that culminated in a chip-shot 36 yard field goal. After being attended to in
the medical tent prior to the drive, a hobbled Watson completed both of his
passes for 61 yards. It was yet another defining moment in a young career full
of them. And by virtue of Sunday night’s 19-16 win, the Texans’ season has been
salvaged.
49ERS’ SEASON NOW ONE OF IRRELEVANCE
San Francisco should have dominated a winless Arizona
Cardinals team at home on Sunday. And while the final box score might tell us
that story, five costly turnovers and some dumb mistakes led to a 28-18 loss at
Levi’s Stadium. This, despite the fact that the 49ers put up 33 first downs and
nearly 450 yards of total offense.
Now at 1-4 on the season, San Francisco is about as
irrelevant as they come. Given the high expectations surrounding this team
heading into the 2018 season, this has to be a bitter pill to swallow. Such is
the nature of the beast when a rebuilding team loses both its franchise
quarterback and prized running back for the season before Week 4. It’s now all
about the youngsters and seeing what they have to offer moving forward.
THE BROWNS WON ON SUNDAY
For the first time since December of 2015, the Cleveland
Browns have won a football game on a Sunday. And it was all sorts of amazing.
Having pretty much led the entire way against the division-rival Ravens, it
looked like Cleveland might find itself in a tie for the second time in five
games. That’s until Baker Mayfield led the Browns on a game-winning field goal
drive in overtime, culminating in a field goal from rookie Greg Joseph as time
expired.
Now at 2-2-1 on the season, Cleveland has more wins than
the Green Bay Packers and Atlanta Falcons. Think about that for a second before
we conclude this team isn’t for real. Remember, these Browns could very easily
be 5-0 on the season. Yes, it’s a new era for this long-downtrodden franchise.
Sunday’s win magnified that to a T.
INJURIES AND LACK OF DEPTH DETAIL FALCONS’
SEASON
We’re not sure how good Atlanta’s defense would have been
if Pro Bowlers Deion Jones and Keanu Neal weren’t injured early in the season.
What we do know is that this unit has no chance against decent NFL offenses.
That came out in a big way during Atlanta’s loss to Pittsburgh on Sunday — its
fourth loss in five games to start the season.
By virtue of giving up 41 points in the blowout loss, the
Falcons are now yielding an average of 40-plus points over the past three
games. No matter how good Matt Ryan has played, that’s just not going to cut.
And it has Atlanta’s season on the verge of collapse before Week 6 even comes
calling.
BIG PLAYS HELP JETS END LOSING STREAK
Whether it was Isaiah Crowell or Robby Anderson in the
first half or the combination of Crowell and Bilal Powell dominating after
intermission, the Jets imposed their will in a big way Sunday against the
Denver Broncos. Crowell put up 219 rushing yards, including a brilliant 76-yard
score. He was joined in the backfield by Powell, who gained 99 yards on 20
attempts. Meanwhile, Anderson put up a 76-yard touchdown of his own.
Sam Darnold’s stats might not have been great in the
34-16 win. He completed just 10-of-22 passes for under 200 yards. Though, the
Jets’ big-play ability enabled them to break a three-game losing streak in an
upset win over a suddenly free-falling Broncos squad.
MAYBE, MARIOTA ISN’T SUPER AFTER ALL
The sample size is now long enough to justify calling
Marcus Mariota over-hyped and overrated. Sure he played well in last week’s win
over Philadelphia. But over the course of his past 18 starts, Mariota has been
nothing special. That continued during what was a disastrous loss to the
Buffalo Bills on Sunday. Mariota completed just 14-of-26 passes for 129 yards
with zero touchdowns and one interception. He also took two unnecessary sacks
that set up longer-than-needed field goal attempts in the loss.
Despite his Titans being at 3-2 on the season, Mariota
has regressed a great deal from a breakout sophomore campaign. In that 18-game
span we mentioned above, he’s totaled 16 touchdowns compared to 19
interceptions. That’s bad. Really, really bad.
THINGS TRENDING DOWNWARD FOR THE RAIDERS
Much like their Bay Area counterparts, the Raiders head
into Week 6 with just one win. Unlike San Francisco, it’s a lack of competitiveness
that should concern Jon Gruden and Co. That came out in droves “on the road”
against the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday. In front of pretty much a home
crowd, Oakland simply wasn’t competitive throughout the game.
It started with the Chargers opening up a 17-0 halftime
lead after a dominating first two quarters of action that saw the Chargers
capitalize on a fumble by scoring on the very next possession. From there, the
Raiders’ lack of real effort showed in a big way. In fact, Oakland fell down
26-3 before a garbage time touchdown. It was another disastrous performance
from Derek Carr at quarterback coupled with an uninspired defensive outing that
led to the Raiders’ latest loss in what is quickly becoming a season Gruden
would rather forget.
GIANTS’ SEASON COMES CRASHING DOWN
For a while there on Sunday in Charlotte, it sure looked
like Pat Shurmur’s squad would be able to save his first season as the team’s
head coach. Rallying from a double-digit fourth quarter deficit, New York took
a one-point lead with just over a minute remaining in the final stanza. At that
point, previous criticism of Eli Manning and his turnover proneness would be
muted.
That’s until Panthers kick Graham Gano ghosted the
Giants’ hopes and aspirations, leaving the team as irrelevant as ever heading
into Week 6. With his Panthers down by one, Gano nailed a 63-yard game-winning
field goal as time expired. Said kick moved the Giants to 1-4 on the season and
completely out of the NFC Playoff race. Ouch!
IMPERFECT RAMS GRAB STRANGLEHOLD ON NFC
WEST
It was rather simple for the undefeated Rams heading into
Sunday’s road day with the Seattle Seahawks. If Sean McVay’s squad was able to
come out on top in this one, it would open up a three-game NFC West lead. While
two first half Jared Goff interceptions and struggles against Seattle’s rushing
attack made this game close, the Rams were able to come out on top by the score
of 33-31.
As McVay will tell us, it wasn’t a perfect performance by
any stretch of the imagination. Too many lanes opened up for Chris Carson and
Mike Davis on the ground. Pro Bowler Marcus Peters allowed to touchdowns to an
unknown commodity in David Moore. Despite this, the Rams sit at 5-0 on the
season and are in firm position to earn a first-round playoff bye. That’s
pretty crazy stuff after just five weeks.
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