Here's what we've learned from Sunday's Week 8 games, which
kicked off with Eagles versus Jaguars in London:
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 30, MINNESOTA VIKINGS 20
1. Minnesota couldn't muster any miracles this time around. In
their first nationally televised home game since the Minneapolis Miracle
victory over New Orleans in last year's Divisional Round, the Vikings got out
to a first-half lead over the Saints, but were undone by turnovers on either
side of the half and surrendered momentum, the lead and the game in quick
succession to New Orleans. Up 13-10 and driving at the end of the first half,
the sure-handed Adam Thielen fumbled in the red zone, and New Orleans turned
that turnover into seven points within two plays. Minnesota never recovered
from Thielen's fumble and scored just once in the second half. The game was
officially salted away when Kirk Cousins tossed a pick-six in his own
territory, handing the Saints a two-score lead it would not relinquish. Whereas
the Saints, paced by Alvin Kamara and Mark Ingram's ground attack, took
advantage of their second-half opportunities to extend the lead, Cousins'
Vikings didn't rise to the moment as they had nine months ago when Case Keenum
was under center. Whether it was due to poor decision-making, offensive-line
play, balance or all of the above, Minnesota shrunk in prime time, playing not
to lose and eventually doing just that.
2. The Saints didn't need a bravura performance from Brees
to silence Minnesota in the second half. That responsibility fell to Kamara and
Ingram, the recently reunited RB tandem who played keep away from the Vikings
with 168 total yards on 36 touches. Their punishing one-two punch proved
pivotal on a 15-play, eight-minute field-goal drive straddling the third and
fourth quarters on which the duo picked up three of New Orleans' six first
downs. The Saints are a perfect 3-0 since Ingram returned from suspension.
Meanwhile, Brees, in the midst of an MVP season, was forced to throw for just
120 yards, his lowest output as a Saint in a game in which he started and
finished. In fact, the longest pass of the play belonged to Taysom Hill, who
split time under center and at tight end Sunday night. At one point, Brees,
Hill and Teddy Bridgewater were all on the field for a play. The Saints are
playing loose, and they deserve to. New Orleans has won six straight since
losing their home opener and have defeated three consecutive division
contenders (WAS, BAL, MIN). Another playoff hopeful awaits next week. The undefeated
Rams are coming to the Bayou with NFC supremacy on the line.
3. After missing out on Patrick Peterson, New Orleans made a
move for Giants cornerback Eli Apple this week. The Saints slotted him on the
outside across from Marshon Lattimore, kept P.J. Williams into the slot and
sent Ken Crawley to the inactives as a healthy scratch. Upon first glance, the
shakeup in the secondary didn't help matters; Cousins still threw for 359 yards
and two scores. But perhaps it facilitated an improved Saints pass rush. New
Orleans hit Cousins nine times and sacked him on four occasions. Those QB
takedowns were split by 2016 first-rounder Sheldon Rankins and 2018
first-rounder Marcus Davenport.
LOS ANGELES RAMS 29, GREEN BAY PACKERS 27
1. A battle between two NFC heavyweights lived up to the
hype in a back-and-forth affair at the L.A. Coliseum. Characterized by lulls
and explosions by each offense, Aaron Rodgers and Jared Goff matched score for
score in the second half. The Rams got off to a slow start, facing their largest
deficit of the season, trailing 10-0 in the second quarter. L.A. responded with
a 23-3 scoring run to take a 23-13 lead before Rodgers and Packers' offense got
back on track. ARod's 40-yard touchdown shot to Marquez Valdes-Scantling gave
Green Bay the lead 27-26 midway through the fourth quarter. However, a bad
Packers punt gave the Rams great field position to kick a go-ahead field goal
with 2 minutes remaining.
The world was waiting for Rodgers to do what he does and
burn the opponent for leaving too much time on the clock. Instead, a Ty
Montgomery fumble on the kickoff gave the Rams the ball and iced the game.
Rodgers didn't get a shot to produce his magic. And the Rams remained the only
undefeated team in the NFL.
2. Special teams played a huge role for the Rams as the
offense started slowly and the defense got burned by Rodgers at times. Punter
Johnny Hekker tossed a first-down pass to Sam Shields early in the first half.
Later, with the Rams still down 10-0, Hekker's perfect punt was downed by Shields
on the 1-yard-line leading to a safety. The special teams play jumpstarted the
Rams, who went on an offensive run. After generating just 89 yards on their
first five series, L.A. went for 223 yards on their next four possessions to
open a 10-point lead. Greg Zuerlein, returning from injury, went 2-for-2 on
field goals, including the game-winner. And the kick coverage team forced the
pivotal Montgomery fumble. Throughout the season, Sean McVay's undefeated team
showed it can win with all three phases.
3. The Green Bay defense did its best to slow a Rams offense
that came in averaging 33.6 points per game and 446.4 yards per game. Mike
Pettine brought pressure repeatedly forcing Goff into errant throws and five
sacks. The well-timed blitzes forced the Rams slow start to the game. Led by a
dominant performance by Kenny Clark (2 sacks, 5 tackles) and Blake Martinez (12
tackles, 1 sack), the Packers defense looked like the version fans expected
when Pettine was hired this offseason. Corner Jaire Alexander, returning from
injury, had a fantastic game, looking like the shutdown corner the Packers
needed with their first-round pick. The rookie has the speed to stick with
receivers in space and showed great ball-skills breaking up five passes and
blanketing wideouts. When the young backend of Green Bay's defense plays as
well as it did for most of Sunday's affair against a great offense, it's a good
sign for the future of a unit in which Green Bay invested heavily.
ARIZONA CARDINALS 18, SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS 15
1. From early ugly offenses to a low score, the battle of
1-6 teams produced what could be expected. But somebody had to win this
matchup, and the Cardinals showed grit to overcome a 15-3 deficit early in the
fourth quarter to improve to 2-6 and extend a winning streak over the 49ers to
eight games.
Rookie quarterback Josh Rosen shook off a sluggish three
quarters to lead the comeback, throwing two touchdowns in the final quarter.
Rosen's first touchdown went to veteran wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald for 13
yards. The second scoring pass came on a laser in the back of the end zone to
rookie wide receiver Christian Kirk for a 9-yard touchdown to cap off an
impressive 12-play, 73-yard drive with :39 remaining on the clock. Fitzgerald
caught the 2-point conversion to give the Cardinals a three-point lead.
Rosen finished the game completing 23 of 40 passes for a
career-high 252 yards, while Fitzgerald produced eight catches for 102 yards on
12 targets, all season highs, to go along with his touchdown. Kirk chipped in
with three catches for 42 yards and a touchdown.
2. The change in offensive coordinators in Arizona from Mike
McCoy to Byron Leftwich didn't produce immediate magic. The Cardinals entered
the game ranking last in the league with a 23 percent third-down conversion
rate, but finished making 6 of 14 attempts (42 percent) mostly because of the
fourth quarter.
The Cardinals, however, appeared to make a concerted effort
to get the ball in running back David Johnson's hands as much as possible.
Johnson touched the ball 19 times as a rusher and receiver, totaling 101 yards
to mark the first time he eclipsed the 100 total yards barrier since Week 4.
The Cardinals dodged a scare late in the game when Johnson left to be evaluated
for a concussion, but he returned late on the team's final drive.
3. Holding a 15-3 lead early in the final quarter, the 49ers
played with fire and quarterback C.J. Beathard didn't do enough to hold off the
Cardinals' comeback. Beathard finished the game completing 14 of 28 passes for
190 yards and a touchdown, but he completed just 5 of 10 passes in the final
period, where the 49ers converted 1 of 4 third-down attempts. The 49ers gained
just 55 total yards in the final quarter, while the Cardinals produced 150
total yards. The loss dropped the 49ers to 1-7 on the season.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 42, OAKLAND RAIDERS 28
1. Indianapolis' offense is coming together. With Marlon
Mack, T.Y. Hilton and Jack Doyle returning to the lineup over the last three
weeks, the Colts have developed into a well-oiled, balanced machine, taking
care of the bottom-feeding Bills and Raiders in consecutive games with a
contender's ease. On Sunday, Andrew Luck (239 yards, 3 TDs, zero sacks again)
chose to rely on pass-catchers not named Hilton on Sunday, who recorded a season-low
one reception. Instead, three Colts tight ends (Doyle, Eric Ebron, Mo Alie-Cox)
caught touchdown passes in Oakland, the first time that has occurred in NFL
history. In his first game back from a five-week hip injury, Doyle (6 rec, 70
yards) was Luck's go-to target on Indy's go-ahead fourth-quarter scoring drive.
Even longtime Chargers receiver Dontrelle Inman (6 rec, 52 yards) got in on the
act in just his second game in Indy. On the ground, Mack had a career day,
becoming the first Colts running back since Joseph Addai in 2007 to rush for
100 yards in consecutive games. Sure, the Colts opponents the last three weeks
haven't been world-beaters -- but you could say the same things about the
remainder of Indy's schedule. The 3-5 Colts play just one team (at HOU)
currently with a record over .500 over the next eight weeks.
2. At the tail end of a week during which his star receiver
was traded out of town, his starting running back was placed on injured reserve
and he was unfairly ridiculed for reportedly crying on the sideline, Derek Carr
(four total TDs) bounced back with his most impressive showing of the season.
Without Amari Cooper or Marshawn Lynch, Carr completed 75 percent of his passes
and threw three touchdowns -- at one point, he led four straight TD drives and
completed 17 straight passes -- but Carr's best wasn't enough. After the Colts
tied the game at 28 in the fourth, Oakland's offense went three-and-out and
then on its next possession Doug Martin fumbled away the game. It was a
frustrating end for Martin, who in replacing Lynch was having the best game of
his Raiders career (13 car, 72 yards). The Raiders offense can bounce back from
its recent departures. The defense is a different story. Jon Gruden switched it
up in the secondary, starting Daryl Worley and Gareon Conley at corner and
sitting Reggie Nelson at safety, but the results were the same. Expect more
changes to come in Oakland before Tuesday's trade deadline with everyone save
for the rejuvenated Carr at risk of losing his job.
3. Adam Vinatieri made history Sunday. Again. With a
second-quarter 25-yard field goal, the Colts kicker became the NFL's all-time
leading scorer, surpassing Hall of Fame kicker Morten Andersen (2,544).
Vinatieri entered the game with 2,540 points and tied Anderson's mark with a
first-quarter extra point and field goal. The kicker recorded 10 points on the
day and closed with 2,550 career points. There are few records remaining for
Vinatieri to break. He is unlikely to break Andersen's record for most games
played (382) or George Banda’s record for oldest player to play in an NFL game
(48 years, 109 days). But Vinatieri has not counted out a return next season
and beyond. "I don't ever want to get to a point where it's, 'I should
have hung it up a year ago,'" Vinatieri told NFL Network's Judy Battista
in a feature published this month. "I'm not putting a time on it."
Keep on kickin', old man.
CINCINNATI BENGALS 37, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS 34
1. Jameis Winston's days in Tampa Bay might be numbered. The
quarterback threw four interceptions, including a pair of really ugly ones,
putting the Buccaneers in a deep hole and the worst part of it all was none of
it was surprising. The final blow was enough for Dirk Koetter, feeling the
warmth on his backside, to bench Winston for Ryan Fitzpatrick, who immediately
sparked an 18-point fourth quarter that nearly sent the game to overtime.
The difference in the offense's image was stark with
Fitzpatrick on the field. While their scoring plays are similar on paper
(Winston hit DeSean Jackson for a 60-yard touchdown; Fitzpatrick connected with
Mike Evans for a 72-yard touchdown), the pace was different and most
importantly, so was the self-inflicted damage (or lack thereof). Winston is
under contract in 2019 (the Bucs picked up his fifth-year option in April), but
the money isn't guaranteed until the new league year begins in March. That
leaves a window for the two to part ways, if one side so desires. After
Sunday's display and taking a look at Winston's career turnover total, it's simple
to see: The guy is going to take chances and turn the ball over. It seems as
though the Bucs are finally tiring of it.
2. Had the Buccaneers turned to Fitzpatrick earlier, this
might have been a different story and we might have been burying the Bengals
after what would have been three straight losses. Instead, Cincinnati salvaged
a game that quickly became a meltdown -- so much that Marvin Lewis afterward
twice emphasized how disappointed he was to see his team allow the opponent
back in the game -- by doing just enough to get into range for Randy Bullock's
game-winning field goal. The Bengals allowed 45 points to the Chiefs last week,
and the Steelers to go down the field for a game-winning touchdown within the
final two minutes the week before that. This time around, they surrendered 576
yards to a team that benched its quarterback late in the third. Defensive
concerns are justified for these Bengals, even with their six sacks and four
interceptions.
3. Lost in this wacky game was the offensive production of
three key Bengals: Joe Mixon, Tyler Boyd and A.J. Green. The latter made a good
portion of his living on the final drive to set up the game-winning field goal,
while the other two paced the Cincinnati offense for much of the day. Boyd
caught his first five targets and finished with nine receptions (on 10 targets)
for 138 yards and a touchdown (and was painfully close to another), while Mixon
racked up 123 yards and two touchdowns on 21 carries. Cincinnati's offense was
humming -- until it wasn't. The Bengals twice went three and out in the fourth,
then punted after an eight-play possession. That allowed Tampa Bay to make up
ground and necessitated the game-winning kick. There are reasons to continue to
be encouraged, but the Bengals right now seem like a puzzle with a piece or two
missing.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS 33, CLEVELAND BROWNS 18
1. Baker Mayfield took his lumps in a rough-and-tumble
outing that saw the Browns rookie passer constantly on the run as Cleveland
amassed just five yards in the third quarter. Unable to close drives, the
Browns squeezed out 10 marches that went for fewer than 30 yards (including
four for negative real estate) and finished at just 4.0 yards per play.
Mayfield threw a deep shot that was picked off by ex-Browns corner Joe Haden, a
turnover that set up a long Steelers touchdown drive before the half. The
first-overall pick returned in the third quarter to unfurl a pretty scoring
strike to Antonio Callaway and a garbage-time touchdown to Seth DeValve, but
those were the lone bright spots on a day hurt by kicker Greg Joseph missing a
41-yard field goal and an extra point. Embattled left tackle Desmond Harrison
also killed the team with a hold in the end zone for a Steelers safety.
2. The Steelers started slow until Antonio Brown (6/74/2)
caught fire during a second-quarter drive that saw him pile up three grabs
capped by a beautiful 43-yard touchdown strike from Ben Roethlisberger. I
thought Cleveland's defense looked gassed at the end of the first half as James
Conner moved the sticks and Big Ben completed nine straight lobs during a
16-play, 87-yard series capped by the Brown's second score to build a 14-6 lead
at the break. Tight end Vance McDonald made a handful of tough catches, while
Conner -- a special player on Sunday -- devastated the Browns with 212 yards
off 30 touches. The versatile back put this contest away with long,
leg-churning runs; yards after the catch; and two second-half touchdown bursts
that buried Cleveland for good.
3. Losers of 15 straight in Pittsburgh, the Browns must earn
our trust. Sunday didn't help. Cover man Denzel Ward continues to highlight
Cleveland's talented rookie class, jumping on a second-half fumble and giving
this Browns defense some bite. The Steelers, though, house established stars, guys
like Brown who always get well when these teams clash. Cleveland is coming off
a week tainted by in-house tension between the coaching staff and whispers
about the job security of play-caller Todd Haley. The Steelers, meanwhile,
overcame their on-field ups and downs to do what they've done for endless eons
against the Browns: Wait for Cleveland to unravel. Sitting at 4-2-1, Pittsburgh
now has the chance to create separation in the North with next week's encounter
against the suddenly spiraling 4-4 Ravens.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS 20, NEW YORK GIANTS 13
1. The gulf between first and last place in the NFC East
seems remarkably shallow, with a top-tier defense proving to be the
difference-maker over a team that might be just as focused on harvesting draft
picks as it is winning games. Washington's stifling pass rush caused a
multitude of problems for Eli Manning, limiting the Giants to 273 total yards.
Matt Ioannidis, Ryan Kerrigan and Da'Ron Payne played key roles in dominating
the line of scrimmage. Ioannidis finished with 2.5 sacks as Washington tallied
seven sacks and 10 hits on Manning. The secondary did their part, too. When
Manning did have time to throw and venture beyond 10 yards, the Redskins
usually made him pay. D.J. Swearinger picked off Manning twice, with his first
interception coming in the red zone to dissolve what was the Giants' best
chance at a touchdown early in the game. Barring two pass interference
penalties that helped fuel a late Giants field-goal drive, it was another
impressive performance for an underrated defensive unit that has been the
driving force behind the team's 5-2 start.
2. With the trade deadline less than 48 hours away, are the
Giants (1-7) going to keep avoiding the elephant in the room and not address
their dismal quarterback situation? Eli Manning was almost completely
ineffective, limited to mostly short-yardage passes that produced points only
when paired with good field position off Redskins turnovers. It wasn't all his
fault -- the O-line couldn't give him consistent protection and there were
several dropped passes. The Giants left potential points on the field following
a 43-yard fumble return by Olivier Vernon when Evan Engram let a very catchable
fourth-down pass through his fingers in the fourth quarter. Still, Manning
struggled to piece together drives as the Giants went 2 for 14 on third downs
and were 1 for 4 in the red zone. Manning finished with a garbage-time padded
30-of-47 passing for 316 yards, with his touchdown coming in the final seconds
of a 2-yard pass to Engram. Had it not been for the game's final drive and some
incredible catches by Odell Beckham, the numbers would have been a more
accurate reflection of what was a bland performance. Manning is once again
wading into the subpar malaise that spurred the franchise's old brain trust to
bench him last year. It's difficult to fathom the Giants faring much better
with Alex Tanney or Kyle Lauletta at QB, but the Giants could be a lock for the
No. 1 overall pick in 2019 if something doesn't change. After the game, Giants
coach Pat Shurmur didn't want to discuss the possibility of benching Manning.
"I don't want to go there. I don't want to tease that. I'm going to look
at everything."
3. Adrian Peterson continues to showcase the ageless skills
that have made him one of the steals of this year's afterthought free-agent
market. His spectacular 64-yard touchdown run late in the fourth quarter put
the game away. The 33-year-old churned out 149 yards on 26 carries and, in the
process, passed Hall of Famer Tony Dorsett for ninth on the all-time rushing
list. He offers the Redskins a strong one-two punch in combination with Alex
Smith, especially when the quarterback doesn't have his best game. Smith
completed 20 of 32 passes for 178 yards and a TD in the win.
CHICAGO BEARS 24, NEW YORK JETS 10
1. No Khalil Mack, no problem for the Bears. With the pass
rusher inactive for the first game of his career, the rest of Chicago's defense
stepped up to ground the New York Jets. Vic Fangio's crew dominated the first
three quarters, holding the Jets to 98 total yards and four first downs heading
into the final frame. On the day, the Bears allowed Gang Green to cross
midfield just twice, while holding the Jets to 207 total yards, with six
three-and-outs and 3-of-14 on third downs. Lead by the perennial underrated
defensive lineman Akiem Hicks, the Bears smothered New York's ground game,
allowing 1.8 yards per carry to running backs. With a secondary that blanketed
the receivers, the Bears more than made up for Mack's absence and a lack of
consistent pass rush against a limp Gang Green offense.
2. Mitch Trubisky's in-game roller-coaster season continued.
The Bears quarterback had a rickety first half. A perfectly timed screen call
by Matt Nagy against a Jets blitz went for a 70-yard first-quarter touchdown by
Tarik Cohen -- the call was so good that center Cody Whitehair released to
block, but he didn't have anyone to hit. Outside of that big play, Trubisky
completed just four of 12 passes in the first half for 46 yards. The
second-year signal-caller bounced back in the second half, looking calmer in
the pocket. Behind great protection, Trubisky went through his progressions and
used his legs with aplomb in the final two quarters as the Bears pulled away.
Despite continued struggles with inaccuracy, the QB finished 16-of-29 passing
for 220 yards and two touchdowns. After generating 174 yards of offense in the
first half, Chicago ended the day with 395 total yards. Sunday's win was
another example of the ups-and-downs Trubisky will experience as he continues
to learn Nagy's system. Credit the coach with working through the struggles and
putting his quarterback in a position to overcome bouts of inconsistency to
produce wins.
3. A banged-up Jets receiver corps missing Robby Anderson
and Quincy Enunwa provided Sam Darnold little chance to make plays. New York
receivers rarely gained separation, and offensive coordinator Jeremy Bates
couldn't creatively scheme open shots for his rookie quarterback. Too often the
Jets' OC slammed his running backs into a brick wall on first down. If New York
doesn't at least threaten with play-action on first downs early in the game,
the run game will continue to struggle against good defenses. With no ground
game to speak of and receivers who don't get open, it's impossible to properly
judge Darnold's progress. The rookie has moments of clairvoyance, especially
his sublime pocket excitability. There just isn't enough help around the
first-round pick right now.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 30, DENVER BRONCOS 23
1. Denver was faced with a tall task of attempting to keep
pace with Kansas City's well-oiled machine, and for a half, it did a bang-up
job. Phillip Lindsay led the way on the ground, rushing 18 times for 95 yards
and bringing much-needed balance to the Broncos. Devontae Booker spelled him
nicely, carrying the ball nine times for 78 yards, and Case Keenum spread the
ball among eight different targets. Courtland Sutton made another high-ball
grab, Emmanuel Sanders found spaces to make catches and move the chains and Demaryius
Thomas did his part. Even Jeff Heuerman and Tim Patrick got involved with
touchdown grabs. But the prevailing lesson from watching the Broncos' offense
in Week 8: The offensive line is still struggling to block as a cohesive unit.
That's to be expected from a team replacing a starting guard and starting
tackle (playing Max Garcia in place of Ron Leary and Billy Turner in place of
Jared Veldheer), but needs to be shored up for this team to reach its full
potential.
2. Credit is due to Denver's defense for finding a way to
frazzle Patrick Mahomes. The Chiefs still couldn't be completely contained --
they scored 30 points, after all -- but the Broncos at least made Mahomes work
for it, forcing him to scramble like mad at times and intercepting him once. Unfortunately,
it wasn't nearly enough, especially with an offense that has struggled to keep
pace. The play of the day best summarized how the afternoon went for both
teams. Running an option to the right, Mahomes saw the toss to Tyreek Hill was
going to be covered, so he shoveled it forward to Kareem Hunt, who sliced
through the defense, hurdled a defender and stumbled into the end zone for a
touchdown. It was a highlight-reel play that encapsulated how Denver did some,
but not enough to take down a Chiefs team that keeps on rolling.
3. The mid-season catch-up to Andy Reid's offense has
arrived, but these Chiefs are different. They're simply talented enough with
their surplus of weapons to overcome most good defensive gameplans. On Sunday,
it was the Chiefs taking advantage of mismatches over the middle with Sammy
Watkins, either against soft zone coverage or linebacker-on-receiver matchups.
Outside of that, Week 8 was more of the same excellence from a Kansas City team
that keeps rolling and did a good job of beating back a feisty Broncos squad
bent on scoring an upset a week after dominating the lowly Cardinals.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 24, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 18
1. Laughing in the face of one of the NFL's most ferocious
pass rushes, Carson Wentz's talent and resiliency radiated brightly in a game
the Eagles (4-4) desperately needed to win to remain out of the abyss of the
NFL's also-rans. Following a rough first quarter that saw Wentz fumble away the
ball and throw an interception, the quarterback refocused and put in one of his
finer performances of the season. Taking advantage of a Keelan Cole fumble
recovery that was picked up by Malcolm Jenkins, Wentz jump-started the Eagles'
comeback in earnest when he connected on a beautiful 32-yard touchdown pass to
Dallas Goedert in the closing seconds of the first half. Philly's steady
scoring output continued in the second half thanks to a 36-yard touchdown dump
off to Wendell Smallwood and a 5-yard touchdown pass to tight end Zach Ertz to
cap off a six-play, 75-yard drive. Wentz finished the game completing 21 of 30
passes for 286 yards and three TDs. Wentz was his usual Houdini self when it
came to ducking and twirling around Sacksonville's top-ranked pass-rushing
unit, but he had plenty of help from his offensive line. The unit performed
very well without Lane Johnson, who was carted off early in the first quarter
after suffering a sprained MCL. Jason Peters also sat out most of the first
half while undergoing evaluation for a head injury. With the O-line helping Josh
Adams and Smallwood establish a run-game to complement the passing attack, the
defending Super Bowl champions once again showed the world why no one can
underestimate them despite their middle-of-the-road record.
2. Blake Bortles performed much better following his
benching last week against the Houston Texans, but the quarterback was
ineffective in the fourth quarter when the Jaguars (3-5) needed their starting
QB to spearhead a comeback. Some of it wasn't his fault. A dropped pass by
rookie D.J. Chark in the end zone with seven minutes left in regulation forced
the Jaguars to settle for a 24-yard field goal. After the Jaguars' defense
forced the Eagles to go three-and-out on the ensuing possession, Bortles
couldn't figure out how to beat the Philly secondary despite having plenty of
time in the pocket. He completed two passes on the Jaguars' final possession
before the drive fizzled out at mid-field. Although Bortles converted on some
critical first downs and made some nice passes en route to completing 24 of 41
passes for 286 yards and a touchdown, he was inconsistent at junctures for an
offense that continues to sorely miss Leonard Fournette's production. Carlos
Hyde, who the team acquired via trade last week had fewer rushing yards (11)
than Bortles (43).
3. Josh Lambo's smashing performance kept the Jaguars in the
game. He became the first Jags kicker to hit 21 consecutive field goals when he
kicked a 57-yarder in the second quarter -- the longest field goal in
International Series history at Wembley. He also hit a 50-yarder earlier in the
game. He ended up kicking four field goals, but it wasn't enough to extend the
Jaguars' Wembley winning streak to four games.
CAROLINA PANTHERS 36, BALTIMORE RAVENS 21
1. Chiefs coach Andy Reid isn't the only old dog willing to
learn new tricks. Panthers coordinator Norv Turner, who has been calling plays
since the Cowboys dynasty of the early 1990s, is helping Cam Newton reach the
next level as a passer through creative play designs and pre-snap acumen.
Newton's accuracy and decision-making have been markedly improved, particularly
in his willingness to settle for underneath routes rather than rifling
scattershot throws downfield. Against a defense that entered the week ranked
No. 1 overall and No. 2 against the pass, Newton started with an array of
impressive tight-window throws, took advantage of a few lucky bounces and broke
Baltimore's back with a 12-yard bootleg touchdown run in the fourth quarter.
Carolina's brass has long envisioned a Ben Roethlisberger-like transition for
Newton. It's finally here. Leading a quick-tossing attack with an arsenal of
playmakers, Newton is completing a career-high 66.4 percent of his passes at
just 6.9 yards per attempt for a rating of 97.4.
2. There's an old football maxim that suggests a decent team
is only an injury or two away from reaching its true potential, allowing
younger, more talented players to replace veteran progress-stoppers. Limited to
the Cordarrelle Patterson package of end-arounds, sweeps and slants early in
his rookie season, D.J. Moore was thrust into a starring role with Torrey Smith
nursing a knee injury. Showcasing a Percy Harvin-like elusiveness with the ball
in his hands, Moore dominated a 99-yard scoring drive with chunk plays of 33
and 37 yards in addition to an 11-yard end-around in the red zone. It's going
to be hard to keep him out of the lineup going forward. Throw in a healthier
Greg Olsen, steadily improving dual-threat tailback Christian McCaffrey and
promising second-year playmaker Curtis Samuel, and this offense has plenty of
room to grow in the second half of the season.
3. After jumping out to a 7-0 lead on the game's opening
drive, the Ravens unraveled for the rest of a lopsided first half, drowning in
a sea of ill-timed penalties, mental errors, poor field position and just plain
bad luck. A blown blocking assignment led to Kyle Love's forced fumble on Alex
Collins, setting up a quick Newton touchdown to Panthers tight end Greg Olsen.
A bold fake-punt conversion from Baltimore's own 10-yard line was negated by an
illegal shift penalty. Willie Snead lost a key first down due to his own pass
interference, forcing a third-and-long situation that resulted in an egregious
Joe Flacco interception just before halftime. It didn't help matters that the
ball bounced Carolina's way on the 99-yard scoring drive, highlighted by an
errant backfield pitch that ended up in Moore's hands for a big gain which
paved the way for a leaping Christian McCaffrey touchdown off a pass deflected
by safety Eric Weddle.
Unable to stop Newton's offense in the second half, the
Ravens had no chance to mount a serious comeback bid. On this day, at least,
the Panthers were the superior, luckier, more-physical, better-coached team.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 28, DETROIT LIONS 14
1. Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson started off hot,
connecting on his first 10 passes to finish the first half completing 11 of 12
passes for 151 yards and two touchdowns for a perfect 158.3 passer rating.
Wilson didn't cool off coming out of halftime and kept the pressure on in the
second half, picking apart a Lions pass defense that entered the game ranked a
respectable seventh in the league. Outside of Wilson finishing the game by
completing 14 of 17 passes (82.4 percent) for 248 yards and three touchdowns,
another statistic proved just how good he was through four quarters: The
seventh-year pro finished Sunday's matchup with a perfect 158.3 passer rating,
easily surpassing his previous single-game high rating of 151.1 set on Nov. 17,
2013 against the Minnesota Vikings.
2. The Seahawks entered the game ranked seventh in the
league in rushing, and found a perfect matchup to add to the totals against a
Lions run defense that ranked 29th (139.3 yards allowed per game) in the
league. In the first half, running back Chris Carson paced the Seahawks with 61
yards rushing, as the team totaled 95 yards on 19 carries entering halftime.
The Seahawks' offensive line also deserves some kudos here, as Carson found
some open running lanes throughout the game because of the front five. Carson
finished with 105 yards rushing and a touchdown on 25 carries, as the Seahawks
totaled 176 yards on the ground on 42 carries.
he Seahawks' dominance on the ground translated to success
in other areas. Wilson thrived on play-action calls with Detroit defenders
frozen at the line of scrimmage out of respect for the run game. Additionally,
the Seahawks easily won the time of possession by a wide margin of 34:55 to the
Lions' 25:05 en route to improving to 4-3 on the season.
3. The Lions looked great on the opening possession,
marching down the field on a 13-play, 91-yard drive capped off by quarterback
Matthew Stafford's 39-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Marvin Jones.
And then the wheels came off, as Detroit quickly fell behind
21-7 before losing 28-14.
While a lot of the credit should go to the Seahawks' ability
to control the game on offense, the Lions failed to gain any semblance of
momentum even when they had the ball after the opening possession. Detroit had
a favorable matchup against a Seattle run defense that ranked 24th in the
league, but couldn't get rookie Kerryon Johnson going. Johnson, who exploded
for 158 yards in Week 7, managed just 22 yards rushing on eight carries as
Detroit totaled a season-low 34 yards on the ground as a team.
And despite a 310-yard passing and two-touchdown
performance, Stafford didn't help the cause with a brutal red-zone interception
with the Lions down 14 in the fourth quarter. Sunday's loss dropped the Lions
to 3-4.
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