HERE'S WHAT I LEARNED FROM SUNDAY'S WEEK 6
SLATE OF GAMES
PITTSBURGH STEELERS 28, CINCINNATI BENGALS
21
1. James Conner and the tight ends carried Pittsburgh's
offense for 59 minutes, but it was star wideouts Antonio Brown and JuJu
Smith-Schuster who turned the AFC North on its ear with a thrilling touchdown
drive to trump Cincinnati's own comeback bid on Sunday. After Andy Dalton led
his second two-minute touchdown drill of the afternoon to stake the Bengals to
a 21-20 lead, Smith-Schuster moved the chains with catches of 8, 10 and 23
yards to move into struggling Chris Boswell's field-goal range. Rather than
settling for a nail-biting kick, Brown got free with an assist from Justin
Hunter's rub route and scampered 31 yards to pay dirt for the game-winning
score with 15 seconds remaining.
2. One week after exploding for 24 fourth-quarter points
to overcome a 17-3 deficit, Cincinnati's "Cardiac Cats" had a prime
opportunity to take a comfortable 2.5-game lead over the Steelers by way of
their fourth comeback victory of the season. While the Queen City's talk radio
community will have a week to obsess over yet another heartbreaking collapse to
their Ohio River rivals, it's worth noting that the Bengals were extremely
fortunate to be in position to win. The Steelers dominated time of possession
and total offense by 10 minutes and 206 yards, respectively. If not for
red-zone woes that included an easy Joe Haden interception drop, Artie Burns
getting lost in coverage and James Conner being ruled down inches shy of the
goal line, the Steelers would have run away with this one. As it is now,
Cincinnati's AFC North lead is down to a half game in the standings.
3. It wouldn't be a Steelers-Bengals clash without the
requisite Vontaze Burfict shenanigans. The trouble-prone linebacker opened the
festivities with a batch of fresh trash talk for Ben Roethlisberger, breaking
up a third-down shovel pass on the opening drive. What Steelers fans will
remember, though, was a forearm shiver delivered to the head of Antonio Brown
in the third quarter. Although Burfict was not penalized, he sent not only
Brown but also Bengals safety Jessie Bates to the sideline with the hit. Should
the league opt to review that play, Burfict could be facing punishment.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 43, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS
40
1. In a clash between quarterbacks of football present
and yet to come, Tom Brady had the ball last, and his Pats had the last laugh.
But not before Patrick Mahomes' Chiefs almost made history. Down 15 points at
halftime, Kansas City came all the way back to take a 33-30 lead early in the
fourth quarter, threatening to break the Patriots' 88-game winning streak when
leading by 14 or more points at the half. New England regained a seven-point
lead after two scoring drives, only for the Chiefs to tie the contest at 40 on
a 75-yard Mahomes-to-Tyreek Hill bomb on the first play of the next drive. But
Kansas City left three minutes on the clock, way too much time for the most
clutch quarterback of all time to march down the field to ice the victory.
Brady, who logged career win No. 200, did just that. In
five plays -- a Julian Edelman sweep, two short Sony Michel runs, a James White
catch-and-run, the elusive Rob Gronkowski chunk play -- New England marched 65
yards down the field to set up Stephen Gostkowski's game-winning 28-yard field
goal. The loss knocked Kansas City for the ranks of the undefeated and
re-cemented New England as a favorite to come out of the AFC. If we're lucky,
these two teams will meet again in January. The way both clubs played Sunday
evening, that's a very real possibility.
2. For just the second time in the Brady-Belichick era,
the Patriots "failed" to attempt a single punt all game. That's a
testament to New England's balanced attack, which ate up 36 minutes of clock en
route to nine scoring drives; Brady (340 yards) dropped back to pass 37 times
while New England attempted 38 carries, including 24 by Sony Michel. After a
sketchy start to his career, the rookie back has rattled off 316 rushing yards
at a 4.7 YPC clip over his last three games, all Patriots victories. Michel and
James White were the beating heart of the Pats' attack Sunday night, averaging
4.8 yards per carry and leading a ground attack that picked up 15 first downs.
Their consistency in the running game was needed on a night when Brady
struggled to connect with his receivers downfield and was often bothered by
Kansas City's eight-man coverage. That is, until the fourth quarter when Chris
Hogan and Gronkowski each secured long gainers to set up go-ahead scores. Brady
had his senior moment -- his third-quarter fumble in Patriots territory after
spending 10 seconds in and around the pocket was a rookie mistake -- but on the
whole, the Patriots offense has not looked better than what we saw on Sunday
night.
3. Patrick Mahomes went shot for shot with Brady, and it
wasn't enough. Thanks to two early interceptions from Mahomes, including a
reckless red-zone throw in the direction of a triple-covered Travis Kelce at
the end of the first half, Kansas City entered the final frames with the
aforementioned 15-point deficit. The Chiefs rode back into contention on
Mahomes' laser arm and the speed of Tyreek Hill (142 yards, 3 TDs) and Kareem
Hunt (185 total yards, TD), scoring 24 points on their first four drives of the
second half. But Kansas City mismanaged the final two drives, going
three-and-out and punting down four (the only punt of the game) and then
scoring too quickly, if there is such a thing, to tie the game at 40 with three
minutes to go. The Chiefs' porous and injury-riddled defense was no match for
New England down the stretch, failing to make the necessary third-down and
red-zone stops when needed. Breeland Speaks will have nightmares about his
missed tackle on Brady's go-ahead touchdown run. Kansas City had survived its
previous shootout with the Steelers by playing from ahead in the fourth
quarter. When the roles were reversed in Week 6, the Chiefs couldn't finish.
LOS ANGELES RAMS 23, DENVER BRONCOS 20
1. Ripped to shreds by Isaiah Crowell last week, Denver's
porous run defense had no shot against the reigning Offensive Player of the
Year. Rams running back Todd Gurley rushed for a career-high 208 yards against
the Broncos, scored two touchdowns and picked up 10 first downs on the ground
by himself. That's five touchdowns in two weeks for Gurley and 11 this season,
the most through six games since Shaun Alexander in 2005 (12). With Cooper Kupp
(knee) sidelined and Brandin Cooks coming off a concussion, Gurley and Robert
Woods (100-plus yards for the third time in four weeks) stepped up. This is a
weekly phenomenon with the still-undefeated Rams, who are stockpiled with so
much talent that when one facet of the offense doesn't work (on Sunday, it was
the chunk play), they can lean on another without missing a beat. A note of
concern: Rodger Saffold and Andrew Whitworth were both sidelined with injuries
at points during Sunday's win.
2. Denver's positive second-half showing against the
league's top team likely won't do much to quell calls for Case Keenum's and
Vance Joseph's heads. Both the quarterback and coach inspired boos at times
from the Mile High faithful; Keenum for his decision-making, Joseph for the
number of unforced errors committed via penalty and just general
dissatisfaction. Keenum's stat line was fine once again, but patience has run
out on the inconsistent gunslinger. Broncos fans pining for Chad Kelly to take
Keenum's place under center were teased at the end of the first half, when
Kelly was brought in for one play, a kneel down, while Keenum was being
evaluated for a concussion. Case returned to start the second half and led two
touchdown drives (one with a short field).
Sunday's loss, though close, doesn't help the case of
Joseph, who is reportedly in a "crucial stretch" to save his job. If
Denver's losing streak extends to five against a bottom-tier Cardinals squad
next week, then Joseph and Co. could be gone by November.
3. Rookie defensive end Bradley Chubb had his breakout
game, recording three of Denver's five sacks of Jared Goff. Lined up against
Andrew Whitworth, Chubb took advantage of strong coverage from Denver's
secondary, who bounced back after allowing multiple big plays in New York last
week. His edge rushing partner Von Miller also tallied 1.5 sacks, boosting his
season total to 5.5. While the Broncos' run defense still resembles a sieve,
Denver's pass rush is picking up steam with a rookie quarterback in Arizona
waiting on deck.
BALTIMORE RAVENS 21, TENNESSEE TITANS 0
1. Sack party! The Baltimore Ravens defense manhandled
the Tennessee Titans to the tune of 11 sacks, setting a franchise record. Don
"Wink" Martindale's unit discombobulated Marcus Mariota and a Titans
offensive line that had allowed nine sacks combined through the first five
games. Contract-year rusher Za'Darius Smith led the way with three QB takedowns
and a forced fumble. Terrell Suggs pestered Mariota all game, Patrick Onwuasor
(2 sacks), Matt Judon, Tony Jefferson, Kenny Young, Anthony Levine Sr., and
Chris Wormley all got in on the sack fiesta. On the Titans first 17 snaps,
Baltimore generated five sacks. They didn't let up all game. The Ravens
swallowed the run game, holding Tennessee to 55 rushing yards. Mariota had just
117 yards passing while losing 66 yards on sacks. No receiver for the Titans
generated more than two receptions or 35 yards. It was about as dominant a road
win as a defense could hope to conceive.
2. Baltimore mauled the Titans in the trenches on both
sides of the ball. Joe Flacco had all day to pick apart the Tennessee
secondary, and the Ravens run game moved the chains, gobbling up 123 yards on
the ground. Baltimore started the game with a 17-play, 94-yard drive for a
score, taking up more than nine minutes off the clock. Leading 14-0 at halftime,
Flacco guided a 78-yard, 12-play score to go up 21-zip. The Ravens had former
DC Dean Pees' number all game and didn't give up a single sack on 37 passes to
a good Titans front. Michael Crabtree bounced back from his struggles last
week. As Flacco's go-to target, Crabtree compiled six receptions for 93 yards
and a TD. The only negative for Baltimore was seeing guard Alex Lewis being
strapped to a stretcher and carted off. He was taken to a local hospital with a
neck injury.
3. Marcus Mariota was a mess from the start. With no run
game, Mariota dropped back to pass 28 times but got off just 15 passes. The
offensive line was overwhelmed, but more concerning for Tennessee was Mariota's
inability to diagnose the defense. The quarterback had no idea where the
pressure was coming from play to play. Baltimore's bevy of secondary blitzers
befuddled Mariota, leaving free rushers all game. With Mariota discombobulated,
and his receivers not earning separation, there was no chance for Tennessee to
move the ball. The Titans generated just seven first downs and didn't have a
single drive more than seven plays. After scheming around Mariota's elbow
injury early this season, it's back to the drawing board for Matt Lafleur's
offense after producing a measly 12 points with zero touchdowns the past two
weeks.
DALLAS COWBOYS 40, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 7
1. Sunday's matchup was basically over after the first
half, as the Cowboys dominated the Jaguars en route to a 24-0 halftime lead.
Through the first two quarters, the Cowboys produced 17 first downs compared to
the Jaguars' three. The Cowboys also totaled 251 net yards of offense, while
the Jaguars managed just 64 total yards.
When the dust settled, the Cowboys produced head-turning
numbers against the vaunted Jaguars defense. The Cowboys entered Week 6 ranked
30th in the league in scoring, averaging 16.6 points per game, but scored a
season-high 40 points. The Jaguars ranked first in total defense (292.2 yards
per game), but allowed the Cowboys to amass 378 yards. Dallas also ran a
season-high 72 offensive plays, converted 7 of 17 third down attempts, produced
23 first downs and commanded time of possession, holding the ball 38:55 to
Jacksonville's 21:05.
2. The Cowboys threw it back to 2016 by allowing
quarterback Dak Prescott to work his magic through the air and on the ground.
Prescott was efficient throwing the football, connecting with 10 different
players en route to completing 17 of 27 passes for 183 yards and two
touchdowns. But Prescott really hurt the Jaguars with his legs, rushing for a
touchdown and setting career-highs in yards (82) and carries (11) in a single
game.
When Prescott dropped back to pass, wide receiver Cole
Beasley proved his favorite target, especially on third down. Beasley made the
most of the opportunities, hauling in nine catches for 101 yards and two
touchdowns on 11 targets. Beasley's 100-yard receiving effort marked the first
time this season a Cowboys receiver hit the mark.
Running back Ezekiel Elliott rounded out the Cowboys'
attack by rushing for 106 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries. With his 15-yard
touchdown run in the fourth quarter, Elliott reached 25 career rushing
touchdowns in fewer games (31) than any player in Cowboys history, passing the
NFL's all-time leading rusher, Hall of Famer Emmitt Smith, who needed 34 games
to set the previous mark.
The Cowboys improved to 3-3 on the season with their best
offensive output and an eye-popping 206 total yards rushing. Whether the
Cowboys stick with this approach going forward remains to be seen, but at least
for one week, they showed it could be unstoppable.
3. The Jaguars (3-3) are on a two-game slide with issues
on offense and defense. When it comes to the latter, the Jaguars once-feared
defense has sprung a leak, allowing 70 total points in the past two games. Week
5's performance against the Kansas City Chiefs could be considered a fluke, but
in a world where twice or more is a habit, Sunday's defensive showing against
the Cowboys raises major alarms.
Meanwhile, the offense truly misses running back Leonard
Fournette, who missed a second straight game with a hamstring injury. The
Jaguars thrive when they are able to establish the running game as a complement
to the defense, but the inability to sustain drives has put the defense on the
field too much, evidenced by two straight weeks of blowout losses and the
disparity in the time of possession category. Quarterback Blake Bortles
struggled against the swarming Dallas defense, which pinned its ears back with
a big lead and went after the signal-caller. Bortles finished the game
completing 15 of 26 passes for 149 yards and a touchdown with an interception,
while getting sacked three times and hit seven times.
MIAMI DOLPHINS 31, CHICAGO BEARS 28 (OT)
1. Jason Sanders nailed a 47-yard field goal as time
expired in overtime to give the Miami Dolphins a magical victory in a game it
felt they'd lost multiple times. Adam Gase's team gave up three straight
touchdowns to open the second half, putting Miami down by double-digits in the
blink of an eye. After battling back to tie the game, the Dolphins drove to the
1-yard-line on the opening possession of OT (after a wacky long completion to
Kenny Stills that went off the back of a Bears defender, and big runs from
Frank Gore). Running back Kenyan Drake then lost the ball diving into the end
zone for a turnover. Chicago, however, missed a subsequent 53-yard field goal
after Matt Nagy played for a long attempt, setting up the Dolphins last-second
win. The Dolphins got outplayed for long stretches, but made their own luck,
forcing a goal-line fumble, a red zone interception, and enough YAC to feed a
third-world country. It wasn't pretty, but with a backup quarterback, Gase will
cherish a home win to move to 4-2 in the AFC East.
2. Brock Osweiler loves beating the Chicago Bears.
Playing in place of injured Ryan Tannehill (shoulder), the quarterback moved to
3-0 versus the Bears in his career. It was an OK day for Osweiler, who finished
with 380 yards on 28-of-44 passing with three touchdowns and two interceptions.
Brock's first pick could be blamed on DeVante Parker not playing the ball, but
his second was a telegraphed pass right to Bears corner Kyle Fuller, which set
up Chicago's go-ahead score early in the 3rd quarter. Gase didn't ask Osweiler
to do much. Just eight of Brock's 44 pass attempts went for more than 10 air
yards, per Next Gen Stats. Brock cleverly avoided sacks, getting the ball out
quickly, specifically targeting tight end Nick O'Leary and Danny Amendola. The
Dolphins, however, took advantage of a gassed Bears defense that tackled
poorly. The star of the comeback was receiver Albert Wilson, who took two short
tosses to the house. According to Next Gen Stats, Wilson's two touchdowns had
an expected yards after catch of nine yards and one yards. The wideout took
them to pay dirt for 43 yards and 75 yards, respectively. For the game, the
Dolphins compiled 268 yards after catch. With Frank Gore earning his 46th
career 100-yard game, Gase game-planned around his limited quarterback and took
advantage of a defense that has been burned by YAC this season.
3. A slow start and red-zone turnovers will haunt Matt
Nagy's team. After a sleepy opening, the Bears (3-2) offense turned on the
turbo jets, blasting past the Dolphins defense to score touchdowns on four of
their first five second-half possessions. Chicago turned a 7-0 first-half
deficit into a 21-10 lead with three straight TDs to open the third quarter
that took a mere 3:32 off the game clock. Mitch Trubisky looked rusty to open
the game after the team's bye, missing high and long in the first half. In the
third quarter, Trubisky looked worlds more confident and took advantage of
Taylor Gabriel's matchup with Miami corner Torry McTyer. The wideout earned 110
receiving yards, including catches of 54 and 47 yards. Trubisky made solid
throws and reads after halftime, hitting receivers in stride and taking
advantage of Tarik Cohen's mismatch in space. Putting a bad beginning behind
him is a positive for Trubisky. It's the mistakes that will be remembered,
however. After a questionable OPI that wiped out a TD early in the fourth
quarter, Trubisky forced a pass into coverage and was picked. The second-year
QB also got away with several other questionable decisions that could have been
picked. The Bears left at least 14 points on the field before overtime.
Nagy's decision to play for a 53-yard field goal instead
of trying to get closer in OT will also be a talking point this week. Coaches
playing for long field goals too often comes back to burn a team, as it did
Chicago on Sunday.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS 23, CAROLINA PANTHERS
17
1. The one-two offensive punch of Alex Smith and Vernon
Davis performed so well in the first half for the Redskins (3-2) you could
almost swear this game was being played at Candlestick Park in 2009. Smith
connected on three passes for 48 yards and a touchdown with his old Bay Area
cohort to set the tone early in what was a strong first-half offensive effort
for Washington as it jumped out to a 17-0 lead. Taking advantage of Carolina
turnovers that kept the ball out of Cam Newton's hands for a big chunk of the
opening two quarters, Smith methodically cut his way through the Panthers'
defense with long, time-consuming drives. While his 22-yard TD pass to Davis
came one play after Panthers rookie DJ Moore lost the ball on a fumbled punt
return, Washington's other scoring drives in the first half lasted 12 and 10
plays. Augmented by a solid 97-yard performance on 17 carries by Adrian
Peterson, Smith finished the game connecting on 21 of 36 passes for 163 yards
and two touchdowns. Smith hardly accomplished anything in the second half with
Carolina's front seven finally turning on the pressure, but his steady
performance in the opening half was enough for the Redskins to eke out a win.
2. Cam Newton and the Panthers (3-2) certainly know how
to put on a suspenseful show. Following an inconsistent first-half effort, the
Panthers found their groove in the passing game in the second half as they
tried to tie the record for the biggest comeback in franchise history. Carolina
got a critical touchdown late in the second quarter when Devin Funchess made an
amazing leaping catch in the end zone to put the Panthers on the scoreboard.
Down 20-9, Newton then pieced together his best drive of the game in the fourth
quarter on a nine-play, 75-yard drive that featured another jaw-dropping catch
by Funchess before Torrey Smith scored on a 3-yard pass. Carolina looked poised
to continue its march to history on the final drive before it sputtered out at
midfield in the final minute. Newton connected on 27 of 46 passes for 275 yards
and two touchdowns while Funchess had five catches for 74 yards.
3. Two costly Carolina turnovers and a fourth-quarter
stroke of luck for the Redskins played big roles in helping the Redskins bounce
back after last week's Big Easy breakdown. Moore's fumble on the first-quarter
punt return gave Washington prime field position to score its first TD of the
game, and Josh Norman's interception against his former team dissolved what was
-- at that point -- the Panthers' best offensive possession of the game. The
Panthers suffered more misfortune in the fourth quarter when Smith fumbled the
ball into the hands of offensive tackle Trent Williams as he was sacked by
Julius Peppers. Williams managed to run about five yards and get the Redskins
onto the edge of field-goal range. Kicker Dustin Hopkins then sent a
career-best 56-yard field goal just over the crossbar in what proved to be the
winning score.
HOUSTON TEXANS 20, BUFFALO BILLS 13
1. Sunday was a battle of bad offensive lines. Deshaun
Watson and Josh Allen were pressured relentlessly, and the results weren't
pretty: Watson threw two interceptions and fumbled three times (losing one),
and Josh Allen suffered an elbow injury that knocked him out for the rest of
the game. On one possession that ended in Buffalo's first points of the
afternoon (three, by way of kicker Stephen Hauschka), Allen had to scramble
them into field goal range. None of the runs were designed. All of the shoddy protection
led to an ugly day for offenses, save for the occasional Watson or Allen ad-lib
that led to short completions. Oh, and that fantastic touchdown grab by DeAndre
Hopkins.
There were a couple positive notes for the Bills, though:
Zay Jones' touchdown catch was a nice example of a receiver winning a matchup
with a well-run route. Allen continued on his slow climb toward looking more
comfortable as a starting NFL quarterback (though emphasis should be placed on
"slow"). The Bills defense was good, getting multiple key stops and
holding Houston to a field goal when it had the ball at first-and-goal on the
Buffalo 1. In the end, a familiar face did the Bills in, though.
2. For what I believe is the first time, television
announcers openly questioned Nathan Peterman's future with the Bills after he
threw a crushing, decisive pick-six with less than two minutes to play in a
tight game. It fit right into the Peterman narrative of interceptions, but came
at a horrible time in a game in which Peterman was finally showing (at least
small glimpses) why Buffalo has maintained this odd infatuation with his
potential. After the game, Peterman went on about not finding his identity in
football. Perhaps that's how this should go.
It doesn't help that things don't seem entirely right for
Buffalo's offense. Kelvin Benjamin finished with two catches for 43 yards on
six targets, hours after reportedly telling Allen in warmups he didn't want to
work on routes with the rookie. That's not a good look for an offense that only
had 83 total yards through 39 minutes of action (but finished with 229) Sunday.
3. Someone get a gold ribbon for Houston's special teams.
The Texans took advantage of a punt muffed by rookie Ray-Ray McCloud,
recovering it and setting the Texans up for their first touchdown of the day
(the aforementioned strike to Hopkins). Far from finished, the punt return team
managed to block a Corey Bojorquez punt, which deflected toward the sideline
before it was recovered by Houston. That ended up producing a field goal and a
10-0 halftime lead. It was the first time in franchise history (dates back to
2002) that the Texans strung together those two accomplishments in a game. It
also gave a cushion they needed once Buffalo's offense gained a heartbeat, and
helped Houston to its third straight win after starting 0-3.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 27, OAKLAND RAIDERS 3
1. It's not fair. The loyal fans of London seem to get
these drama-free wipeouts one year after the next. The Seattle faithful had
plenty to smile over, though, as the Seahawks set the tone early at Wembley,
unleashing a string of powerful runs and money lobs from Russell Wilson to etch
a 14-play, 82-yard scoring drive that ate seven-plus minutes off the clock.
That march included signs of life from rookie runner Rashaad Penny, who hauled
in a 24-yard catch-and-run and finished with 70 yards off 11 touches.
Second-year wideout David Moore also helped out, hauling in a 28-yard catch
from Wilson and logging a 19-yard touchdown. Wilson threw a bad pick in the
second half, but largely had his way with 222 yards and three touchdowns
through the air.
2. A brutal, forgettable day for the Raiders. Derek Carr
took an outrageous six sacks and appeared to hurt his non-throwing arm in the
final quarter of this gruesome affair. There's simply no flow to this Oakland
attack, which finished the game at 3.3 yards per play with just 79 yards
rushing. The Raiders weren't helped by Amari Cooper leaving early with a
concussion, but the wideout wasn't about to alter Sunday's destiny for the
Silver and Black. Derek Carr managed just 142 yards passing with no wideout accounting
for more than 31 yards. Martavis Bryant and Jordy Nelson were essentially
invisible.
3. Give credit to a Seahawks defense that continues to
play well despite the loss of Earl Thomas. Frank Clark dominated from wire to
wire, piling up 2.5 sacks and generating a game-changing fumble that set up a
Seattle field goal for the 20-0 lead. Oakland's tackles doubled as open barn
doors all Sunday. The Raiders must find a way to better protect Carr, but part
of this boils down to play-calling and an overall scheme that is, frankly, dull
to watch.
ATLANTA FALCONS 34, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS 29
1. The Falcons' offense showed grit in the second half
without wide receivers Calvin Ridley (ankle) and Mohamed Sanu (hip), and came
through when it mattered the most in the fourth quarter. Nursing a slim 24-22
lead early in the final period, the Falcons put together a 10-play, 75-yard
drive capped off by quarterback Matt Ryan's scoring pass to running back Tevin
Coleman. The Buccaneers had plenty of momentum, having scored a touchdown to
pull within two points, but the Falcons' drive took 6:28 off the clock to push
the lead to 31-22 before holding on to win a wildly entertaining matchup.
Ryan played exceptionally well, completing 31 of 41
passes for 354 yards and three touchdowns for a 125.4 passer rating. With
Ridley and Sanu down for the final two quarters, Ryan's often connected with
Julio Jones, who totaled 10 catches for 143 yards on the game, marking the 42nd
time on Jones' career he's had a 100-yard receiving game.
2. Atlanta improved to 2-4 on the season, but the Falcons
pulled off a much-needed win Sunday despite allowing the Buccaneers to total
512 yards of offense on the game. For a team that started the season with
postseason goals, the Falcons' defense is simply undermanned minus linebacker
Deion Jones (foot) and starting safeties Keanu Neal (knee) and Ricardo Allen
(Achilles), all of whom are on injured reserve.
While the Falcons stated after Week 5's loss they believe
they can turn it around and Sunday is a good start, the inability to stop an
offense places too much pressure on the offense. Ryan leads an elite unit when
it is fully healthy, of course, but the absence of running back Devonta Freeman
(foot, groin) compounded by Ridley's and Sanu's injuries means the offense
isn't functioning with a full deck. Additionally, reliable kicker Matt Bryant
appeared to hurt his upper right leg after kicking a 57-yard field goal late in
the game and was taken straight to the locker room.
3. Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston did his best to
lead a comeback attempt, completing 30 of 41 passes to nine different receivers
for 395 yards and four touchdowns against two interceptions on the game.
Winston also received help in the running game with Peyton Barber gaining 82
yards on 13 carries. Barber also scored on a 5-yard catch. Winston's two
turnovers, however, proved costly. One came in the first half on a deep pass
intended for wide receiver DeSean Jackson inside the 5-yard line, while the
other turnover occurred in the third quarter on a pass to wide receiver Chris
Godwin in the end zone.
Meanwhile, the Buccaneers much-maligned defense displayed
heart by clamping down on the potent Falcons offense in the second half.
Atlanta had their way to start the game, scoring on the first three
possessions, and produced 275 total in the first half. But the Buccaneers held
the Falcons scoreless in the third quarter, allowing 141 total yards of offense
in the final two periods, before surrendering the game-deciding 10 points in the
fourth quarter.
NEW YORK JETS 42, INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 34
1. Sam Darnold played the best game of his young career,
completing 80 percent of his passes at over 9.0 yards per attempt against an
undermanned, overmatched Colts secondary that couldn't keep up with Terrelle
Pryor, Jermaine Kearse and rookie tight end Chris Herndon. Darnold showed
impressive touch and decision-making, keeping Andrew Luck's comeback bid at bay
with four field-goal drives in the game's final 20 minutes. After experiencing
his fair share of rookie jitters in September, Darnold has found his footing of
late. The Jets have broken the 30-point mark in back-to-back games for the
first time since the 2011 season. Just a half-game behind the first place
Dolphins, the Jets are right back in the postseason hunt with imposing matchups
looming versus the Vikings and Bears the next two weeks.
2. If he didn't have bad luck, the only luck the Colts
quarterback would have is his own name. Whether he's throwing them open with
precision passes on their hands or waiting until they're wide open before
pulling the trigger, Luck is getting killed by the plague of drops that has
overtaken the injury-ravaged Colts' running backs and wide receivers. Back in
the starting lineup after a three-game absence, Marlon Mack dropped a screen
pass into the hands of Morris Claiborne for an easy pick-six on the game's
opening possession. After Luck bounced right back with a scoring drive of his
own, he lost a gimme touchdown when rookie Nyheim Hines needlessly jumped at
the goal line, leading to a brutal drop. Already without No. 1 receiver T.Y.
Hilton, Luck lost No. 2 receiver Ryan Grant and backup wideout Marcus Johnson
to lower-leg injuries in the game's second half. While Luck's arm strength,
ball placement and pocket movement seem to be improving by the week, the
inverse may be true of his surrounding talent.
3. Six games into the season, the Colts finally unearthed
a semblance of a ground attack. Bottled up and embarrassed in the first half,
Mack reeled off 72 yards on seven second half-carries, setting up a pair of
Colts touchdowns. While Mack compensated for his early gaffe, power back Robert
Turbin never returned to the game after sustaining a shoulder injury on a
crucial play in which he lost a fumble in the middle of the second quarter.
Expect Mack to be the featured back going forward, with Hines taking over in
obvious passing situations.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS 27, ARIZONA CARDINALS 17
1. Cardinals fans are struggling through an unforgiving
autumn, but I still see positive signs from Josh Rosen. Arizona's rookie
quarterback showed chemistry with Christian Kirk (6/77), pegging the first-year
receiver on a 35-yard connection to set up an Arizona field goal. Rosen later
unfurled a 40-yard rope to tight end Ricky Seals-Jones (5/69) to the Vikings
10, but that drive ended with David Johnson getting stuffed on fourth-and-goal
at Minnesota's 1-yard line. Rosen struggled for much of the second half, taking
a killer sack at his own 2-yard line -- one of four on the day -- to end one
third-quarter series before flinging a bad pick one march later. He returned,
though, to put together one of his better drives of the year with a seven-play,
69-yard touchdown march midway through the fourth. Too little, too late for the
Cardinals, but Rosen -- throwing for 240 yards at 7.7 per pass -- has a bright
future.
2. This Vikings offense flexed its muscles on Sunday. It
was encouraging to see Minnesota finally pound a team on the ground, with
Latavius Murray (24/155/1) gashing the Cardinals for runs of 34 and 26 yards to
go with his 21-yard scoring burst -- the team's first rushing touchdown of the
year. Cousins caught fire in the second half, throwing for 233 total yards,
spreading the ball to six different targets and getting another big day from
Adam Thielen (11/123), who notched his sixth straight 100-plus-yard performance
and added a 13-yard scoring snag. Cousins returned one drive later to pile on
the points with a seven-yard scoring dash.
3. The Cardinals leaned on a handful of Vikings errors to
hang around early before the game morphed into an ugly wipeout. Minnesota
botched a fourth-and-2 attempt from Arizona's 42-yard line out of the gate
before a strip-sack of Kirk Cousins set up a 36-yard fumble recovery score by
Budda Baker that tied the game at 10-10. Cousins also tossed a first-half pick
and saw six passes batted down by an Arizona defensive front that piled up four
sacks on the day before the floor fell out in the second half.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS 38, CLEVELAND BROWNS
14
1. Philip Rivers is still very good. He twice exploited
small openings in Cleveland's secondary to complete huge passes to Tyrell
Williams, moving Los Angeles down the field quickly for an important early
touchdown. He kept doing so later as the Chargers built a nice lead and started
to run away with things. As his draft classmate Eli Manning struggles and shows
signs that his road may be nearing its end, Rivers is aging like a fine wine
and leading a Chargers offense that is more talented than people give them
credit for.
The true story of the Chargers' offense, though, is the
continued success of Melvin Gordon, who had his best game of the year against a
Browns defense that ranks well statistically but has struggled to stop the run
all season long. Gordon racked up 132 yards and three touchdowns on just 18
attempts, gashing Cleveland's defense and rarely going down on first contact.
Per Next Gen Stats, Gordon tied for second-most yards gained after close (yards
gained after the first defender closes the gap between them to less than a
single yard) with an average of 6.5 per carry, and a third of his carries went
for 10-plus yards. Gordon's production opened up chances for Los Angeles'
talented receiving corps, and they did not waste them. The result was a blowout
road win (in a place in which they've struggled in recent years) a week before
going overseas.
2. The Chargers' defense started to take expected shape,
pressuring Baker Mayfield relentlessly and playing tight coverage against
Cleveland's depleted receiving corps. Even without Joey Bosa, Los Angeles
squeezed the pocket and limited Mayfield's ability to extend plays with his
feet. When he did, he almost never found an open receiver. Mayfield faced a
well-balanced Chargers defense that was good enough with just four rushers to
be able to drop seven into coverage and fill the field with defenders waiting
to bat down or intercept Mayfield attempts. They recorded two of the latter
Sunday and slowly squeezed Cleveland's offense into submission.
3. For yet another week, Cleveland's defense played well
enough to win (at least in the first half), but the offense did less than usual
and didn't take advantage of multiple early three-and-outs that produced
excellent field position. It didn't help that Mayfield appeared to injure his
leg after slipping on the first down marker mat. After that play, Mayfield
appeared much less mobile and decisive in his pass attempts, significantly
limiting the Browns' potential offensively. Losing Rod Streater to a stinger
and being forced to play with just three active receivers also didn't help, and
Cleveland going away from the run due to an early deficit wasn't of assistance,
either. That's the way this season will go at times for this young Browns team:
They'll show plenty of promise, eke out a close win or two, and inevitably
suffer setbacks typical of a team trying to learn how to win consistently. In
Week 6, they ran into a Chargers team that is a serious postseason contender
and it produced such a result.
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