HERE'S WHAT WE LEARNED FROM SUNDAY'S WEEK 10 SLATE OF GAMES
DALLAS COWBOYS 27, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 20
1. The Cowboys survived a fourth-quarter scoring onslaught
and last-second red-zone heave to pull even with the defending Super Bowl
champions in the standings on Sunday night, thanks to a heavy dose of Zeke and
clutch defensive play from their youngest stars. Though Dak Prescott had one of
his more efficient games of the season, Dallas moved the ball best when Ezekiel
Elliott was its carrier. Elliott rumbled for a near-season-high 151 rushing
yards and scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns to seal the season-saving
victory. Hurdling over defensive backs and hitting holes with ease, Zeke played
in the spirit of his rookie campaign. On the other side of the ball, Leighton
Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith made Cowboys fans forget for a game who Sean Lee
was, filling in dutifully for the injured Dallas captain. Vander Esch's
game-high 13 tackles and first career interception were the product of
sideline-to-sideline hustle and exceptional speed. The rookie linebacker's best
play of the night -- and there were many -- came on a third-and-2 with Philly
driving to tie the game late in the fourth quarter. Vander Esch beat two Eagles
blockers on a toss right to blow up Corey Clement for a five-yard loss when it
appeared the Eagles back was headed past the sticks. Philly turned the ball
over on downs on the following play, and a last-gasp six-play drive came up
nine yards short.
2. Philadelphia's trade-deadline acquisition of Golden Tate
didn't pay dividends out of the gate. The YAC master caught a ball on the
Eagles' first drive and fielded punts in his debut, but saw just 18 offensive
plays and four targets. Tate's lack of production didn't hinder Carson Wentz's
play down the stretch. The Philly QB was bothered by Dallas' secondary in the
early goings, especially by Chidobe Awuzie and Xavier Woods, but finished with
360 passing yards and two scores. Wentz's connection with Zach Ertz was as
strong as ever. The tight end racked up a season-high 14 receptions for 145
yards and two scores and was Wentz's go-to target as Philly tried to tie this
one up. An unstoppable red-zone threat, Ertz has recorded at least 10
receptions for the fourth time this season. But perhaps there lies the problem.
When the Eagles went searching for a running game on Sunday evening, they
couldn't find one. Save for one long run from Josh Adams, Philly averaged 2.8
yards per carry. The Eagles called just 16 rushing plays to 46 passing plays.
Last season's Super Bowl-bound Birds boasted a compelling one-two punch of Jay
Ajayi and LeGarrette Blount to hammer opponents. This season's Eagles have no
such ground threat, rendering them unable to create manageable third downs or
take pressure off of their injury-prone quarterback and offensive line. Below
.500 with the league's second-toughest schedule remaining, the Eagles are no
longer soaring toward the postseason.
3. Speaking of trade-deadline wideouts, Amari Cooper (75
yards) was just one of many Cowboys receivers to move the chains consistently
against the Eagles. With Philadelphia missing three starters in the secondary
for much of Sunday night (Sidney Jones, Jalen Mills, Ronald Darby), Dallas'
maligned receivers fed on open spaces in the Eagles secondary. Cooper, Allen
Hurns, Cole Beasley, Michael Gallup and Dalton Schultz each recorded two
receptions and at least one of over 10 yards. The Cowboys picked up 14 first
downs through the air and went 8-for-16 on third down. Prescott was sacked four
times and hurried often behind an offensive line that was, for a time, short
its two starting guards after Zack Martin exited briefly with a knee injury.
But Martin returned in the second half, and with solid protection, Prescott
played with confidence not seen since Dallas' mid-October demolition of
Jacksonville. The 4-5 Cowboys will need more of that efficiency in the passing
game if they want to stay in playoff conversation.
LOS ANGELES RAMS 35, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 31
1. Rams running back Todd Gurley rebounded in emphatic
fashion from Week 9's performance where the New Orleans Saints limited him to
79 total yards. Gurley proved once again as he goes, so goes the Rams' offense.
The elite running back ran with authority against the Seahawks, pounding out
120 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries. Gurley ripped off chunks of yards,
averaging 7.5 yards per carry, and produced 40 yards receiving on three catches
for a complete game. Gurley also placed himself among some of the NFL's
all-time greats by scoring a touchdown in his 10th straight game on the season.
With Gurley commanding attention in the running game,
quarterback Jared Goff completed 28 of 39 passes for 318 yards and two
touchdowns. Goff topped the 300-yard passing mark for the sixth time this
season. Brandin Cooks paced the receiving corps with 10 catches for 100 yards,
while Robert Woods chipped in with four catches for 89 yards. Cooper Kupp
totaled five catches for 39 yards before leaving the game with a knee injury.
The initial concern is that he suffered a torn ACL, NFL Network Insider Ian
Rapoport reported. The Rams improved to 9-1 to setup a heavyweight matchup
against the 9-1 Kansas City Chiefs in Mexico City on Monday Night Football.
With a win over the Chiefs and a Seahawks loss this Thursday, L.A. can clinch a
second consecutive NFC West title.
2. The Rams entered Week 10 with just 45 penalties on the
season, the second-fewest in the league, and averaging five per game. But head
coach Sean McVay's team was plagued with 10 uncharacteristic infractions, including
five personal fouls, for 102 total yards against the Seahawks. Rams defensive
end Dante Fowler, who accounted for a 15-yard facemask penalty and a 15-yard
unsportsmanlike infraction, made up for his mistakes late in the game. Fowler
came up big with a strip-sack on Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson, and
ultimately recovered the loose ball at Seattle's 9-yard line after it careened
off players in the backfield. The Rams took advantage of the turnover on the
very next play when Cooks sprinted into the end zone on a sweep to give the
Rams a 36-24 cushion before holding on for the win. While the penalties didn't
cost the Rams in what was a close game, the lack of discipline kept two Seattle
drives alive and led to touchdowns. Los Angeles is well-coached, though, so
Sunday could be anomaly and not cause for alarm.
3. Despite the loss, the Seahawks continue to send a message
to the rest of the league to pack a lunch pail to face their offense. Seattle
basically shrugged off a stout Rams defense en route to pounding out an
eye-popping 273 yards rushing on the game, marking the sixth straight week the
offense had 150 yards or more on the ground. Rookie Rashaad Penny led the way
with a breakout game, totaling a career-high 108 yards rushing, adding a touchdown
on 12 carries. Quarterback Russell Wilson, who completed 17 of 26 passes for
176 yards and three touchdowns, also had an exception contest on the ground,
rushing nine times for 92 yards. Nevertheless, the loss dropped the Seahawks to
4-5 on the season, including two losses to the Rams in the NFC West.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS 20, OAKLAND RAIDERS 6
1. While the football world remains fixated on that other
Los Angeles team -- you know, the one with the dynamic offense, dual-threat
running back and souped-up defense -- the Chargers are taking care of business
and staking a legitimate claim as the most complete team in the Southland. The
Bolts won their sixth game in a row Sunday afternoon, handling the Raiders with
lethal patience. After Oakland held them to their first scoreless first quarter
of the season, the Chargers stayed the course, feeding their beast (running
back Melvin Gordon) and pulling away from the Raiders with two touchdowns on
either side of halftime. The networks might gush over that Todd fellow from
Thousand Oaks, but Gordon proved Sunday that he deserves as much if not more
adulation. Gordon totaled 165 yards on 23 touches and made multiple Raiders
miss on a game-sealing 66-yard TD catch-and-run. But his most impressive play
of the day was a two-yard gain in the second quarter, when Gordon broke at
least three tackles on a fourth-and-1 sweep left to extend what would be L.A.'s
first scoring drive. As elusive as he is powerful, Gordon is the perfect avatar
from this Chargers team.
2. Ten days of rest and self-reflection paid off for
Oakland's defense, which put together its most complete, competent performance
of the season against one of the league's most dangerous offenses. The Raiders
held Los Angeles to its lowest point total this year and allowed a season-low
335 total yards, thanks to an improved pass rush and interior line play and
less disastrous pass coverage. This was a marked improvement for Paul
Guenther's guys after the Raiders lay down for Nick Mullens' 49ers on Thursday
night and in the ensuing days released veteran pass rusher Bruce Irvin. Oakland
sacked Philip Rivers just once but saw good pressure from Maurice Hurst,
Shilique Calhoun and Clinton McDonald. The Raiders defense might be made up of
spare parts, but they're making it work. Now if only Derek Carr and Oakland's
sluggish offense had picked up the slack. The Raiders weren't so bad between
the 20s, but shrunk when they entered L.A. territory. Oakland made five trips
inside the Chargers' 30-yard line on Sunday and came away with just six points.
The last venture toward L.A.'s end zone ended when Carr threw an attempted
screen pass into the turf on fourth-and-5 with five minutes left in the fourth
quarter and Oakland down two scores. This is a team, or at least a unit, resigned
to its fate, which with seven games remaining in the season is a disservice to
its supporters. Making matters worse, Martavis Bryant suffered what looked to
be a season-ending knee injury, limiting Carr's options going forward to Jared
Cook, Jordy Nelson and a sock puppet.
3. Chargers special teams update. Back on the roster after a
questionable hiatus, rookie kicker Michael Badgley made all four of his kicks
in Oakland (two FGs, two XPs). He remains perfect on the season. The bad news?
L.A. was schooled on a first-quarter fake punt run from Raiders rookie Johnny
Townsend who scampered 42 yards down the left sideline at RB1 speed (20.48 mph,
per Next Gen Stats) to extend an early drive. L.A. was thankfully bailed out by
the Raiders' unimaginative red-zone play-calling later in the march.
TENNESSEE TITANS 34, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 10
1. The student took down the teacher Sunday in stunning
fashion. In a game the Titans likely saw as a test of who and where they are,
they passed with flying colors -- and left New England reevaluating things
heading into the bye week. Mike Vrabel's defense harassed Tom Brady early and
often, pressuring him almost relentlessly, getting a few breaks with some early
miscues (Josh Gordon dropped passes, for example) and taking advantage of early
stops. Tennessee came out of its corner swinging and landed a wallop of a punch
on the Patriots, taking a 17-3 lead into the second quarter and slowly building
on it from there. In the end, it was the classic turn-to-Derrick-Henry approach
that helped the Titans ice things, riding the big back to chew clock and score
a couple game-sealing touchdowns. It truly was a "team" win for the
Titans, who outplayed the Patriots on both sides of the ball, throwing Tom
Brady out of rhythm and attacking with unseen aggression on offense. It
produced Tennessee's most emphatic win of 2018.
2. Marcus Mariota was night-and-day better than he'd been
for much of October, throwing with confidence and precision and scrambling for
yards when needed. Mariota found Corey Davis for a beautiful early touchdown
took shots down the sidelines and made decisions with conviction. Gone was the
hesitant Mariota of October, and in his place was a quarterback acting as a
maestro, a master at the controls utilizing all of his weapons in an efficient
manner that kept the Titans' offense moving and the ball out of the Patriots'
hands. He and Davis linked up seven times for 125 yards and the aforementioned
score, and he also found Jonnu Smith for a touchdown pass before the Titans shifted
to the run to ice things. It was extremely refreshing to see from a team that
looked lost offensively in recent weeks.
3. This is not an excuse, but injuries did hold the Patriots
back. At one point, New England was without both of its starting tackles,
forcing LaAdrian Waddle to play on each side at separate points of this game.
Josh Gordon's finger injury contributed to a handful of drops early and took
away his effectiveness later. Julian Edelman left for the locker room with the
Patriots trailing late and the game essentially out of hand. But above all, the
Patriots were simply outplayed by a team that clearly came into the game
hungrier than a starved junkyard dog. Titans threw a strong early punch and
maintained the lead built by such a start. They harassed Brady so much; he
simply didn't look like himself at all. If these two meet again, though, I'm
not sure we'd see a similar result, meaning while it's a great win for Vrabel,
I'm not going all in on the Titans after Sunday. It's a good start, though.
GREEN BAY PACKERS 31, MIAMI DOLPHINS 12
1. The Green Bay Packers finally leaned on Aaron Jones. The
bruising, explosive running back rewarded Mike McCarthy with a career-high 145
rushing yard day on 15 carries, for 9.7 yards per tote, with two scores. The
versatile back chipped in 27 yards on three receptions. In the first half,
Jones accounted for 128 of the Packers 207 total yards. A barbwire cannonball,
Jones owns a quick first step that allowed him to zoom through big holes of a
porous Dolphins defense. His blastoff 67-yard run set up the Packers second
touchdown of the day -- a drive in which Jones accounted for all 71 yards and
the score. After splitting reps most of the season, Jones saw 72.2 percent of
snaps and out-carried Jamaal Williams 15 to three. With Jones rolling, Aaron
Rodgers didn't have to shoulder the load, throwing for just 199 yards and two
TD tosses to Devante Adams (4/57/2) Packers fans have been begging McCarthy to
give Jones the lion's share of snaps for an up-and-down offense. Hopefully,
Sunday's workload is an indication of how the Packers will handle the rotation
for the stretch run.
2. Winners score touchdowns. Losers settle for field goals.
The Dolphins moved the ball early against the Packers but settled for four
field goals before Green Bay broke the score open. Miami's red zone offense was
disastrous. A botched snap fumble on the opening drive killed a promising
start. The Dolphins then settled for field goals any time they got within
scoring position. The drive that epitomized the Dolphins day was a 14-play
possession that took 7:34 off the clock, in which Miami drove inside the
30-yard-line. A sack, however, led to a punt. Waste. Behind an offensive line
missing three starters, Brock Osweiler had little chance to stretch the field
(six sacks taken). The dink-and-dunk quarterback then tossed a backbreaking
interception on a deep out route -- he doesn't have the arm to make that
difficult throw. Frank Gore was the lone bright spot for the injury-ravaged
Dolphins offense, generating 90 yards on 13 carries (6.9 YPC). The day allowed
Gore to break an NFL record with 14 straight seasons with 500-plus rushing
yards. The ageless wonder is the best thing going for the Dolphins.
3. The victory kept the Packers in the postseason hunt at
4-4-1 with upcoming games at Seattle and Minnesota, which will go a long way in
determining how the NFC playoff positioning shakes out. With three division
games left, Green Bay needs to go on a run to keep pace with the Bears, who
currently lead the NFC North. The Dolphins head into the bye week desperately
needing to get healthy after watching a bevy of players exit with injury --
including receivers Jakeem Grant (leg) and DeVante Parker (shoulder). The
Dolphins sits at 5-5 and still in the thick of a muddled AFC playoff race.
Depressing days like Sunday, however, don't shine positive rays on Miami's
outlook.
CLEVELAND BROWNS 28, ATLANTA FALCONS 16
1. This was the on-field drama Browns fans have waited eons
for. Sunday marked a day of definitive growth for Baker Mayfield, who showed
off his arm with some of the craftiest throws we've seen yet from the
first-overall pick. The rookie authored a perfect first half, completing all 12
of his passes to nine separate targets for 165 yards with two touchdown strikes.
He was helped by another rousing performance from fellow rookie Nick Chubb, the
ultra-rugged runner who lashed the Falcons for 176 yards and repeatedly dragged
defenders for extra real estate. Absolutely the real deal, Chubb brought the
house down in the second half with a franchise-record 92-yard touchdown blast.
Meanwhile, who would have guessed the most creative play-caller on Cleveland's
staff wasn't the exiled Hue Jackson or Todd Haley -- but Freddie Kitchens? The
fill-in coordinator kept the Falcons on their toes with unusual three-back
formations with Mayfield under center, tight ends lined up behind the
quarterback and a fluid mixture of clock-chewing runs and rapid-strike passes.
Kitchens has reworked the playbook to give Mayfield quick looks in the flats to
offset the team's problematic left tackle situation. On the whole, the most
complete game yet from these young Browns -- on both sides of the ball.
2. The Falcons took advantage of Cleveland's lone mistake in
the first half, an ill-fated option pass from Dontrell Hilliard that missed its
target -- Baker Mayfield -- and fell into the arms of safety Damontae Kazee,
who rumbled 33 yards to set up a quick Atlanta scoring toss from Matt Ryan to
Julio Jones to build a 10-7 lead. Tight end Austin Hooper caught four passes
before Ryan (38-of-52 passing for 330 yards and two scores) connected with a
wideout, the result of a Browns zone defense that gave Atlanta's quarterback
nowhere to go with the ball. Julio Jones piled up 107 yards, but big plays were
kept to a minimum by the Browns (3-6-1). The Falcons made a killer mistake of
their own at the start of the third quarter when Mohamed Sanu lost the ball
stretching for extra yardage after a catch, a gaffe that set up Mayfield's
third touchdown of the day off an 11-yard strike to Duke Johnson for the 21-10
lead. It was concerning to see Atlanta fail to punch it in on three straight
plays from the Cleveland 1-yard line in the final quarter.
3. Sunday served as an ultra-effective recruiting
advertisement as general manager John Dorsey searches for Cleveland's next
coach. The talent is there, just waiting for the right leader to step in and
tug this team toward the promised land. The Falcons, meanwhile, can barely
afford another misstep after sinking to 4-5 on the year with a rugged,
road-heavy remaining slate featuring tilts against the Cowboys, Saints, Packers
and Panthers. In a stocked NFC South, the Falcons realistically need to go 6-1
down the stretch.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 29, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 26
1. It was a tale of two halves for Indianapolis' scorching
offense and Jacksonville's reeling defense. The Colts' 29 first-half points
were their most since 2014, with Andrew Luck joining Tom Brady and Peyton
Manning as the only quarterbacks to toss at least three touchdown passes in six
consecutive games. We've always wondered how Luck would fare with reasonable
pass protection, a solid supporting cast and an offensive guru dialing up
creative play calls. The results have been beautiful, with the offensive line pitching
a sack shutout for a fourth straight game. While Blake Bortles played keep away
with an effective ball-control attack in the second half, the Colts hung on to
win thanks to a forced fumble by cornerback Kenny Moore just as the Jags had
reached easy range for the game-tying field goal.
2. Released by the Lions in March, Eric Ebron has been one
of the league's most productive free-agent acquisitions. Luck's red-zone
security blanket scored three first-half touchdowns, including a 53-yard
catch-and-run with an athletic pylon dive as the finishing move. Through nine
games, Ebron has amassed 10 touchdowns and 463 yards on 39 receptions compared
to three touchdowns and 217 yards on 23 catches for all of Detroit's tight ends
combined. To be fair to the Lions' decision-makers, Ebron had lost his
confidence, needed a fresh start and was due more than $8 million in his option
year. Now he's on pace to threaten Rob Gronkowski's tight-end record of 18
total touchdowns, set in 2011.
3. Bortles can't be blamed for the latest setback in
Jacksonville's five-game funk. He played a clean game Sunday, unfurling a
pretty touch pass to Donte Moncrief for an 80-yard score and otherwise checking
down to safe receptions in a chain-moving attack led by Leonard Fournette. The
power back returned from a hamstring injury to average just 2.2 yards on 24
carries, but was a factor in the passing game with 56 yards on five receptions.
Fournette finished with 109 yards and a pair of touchdowns on a whopping 29
touches. The defense, on the other hand, was as soft as room-temperature butter
for the bulk of the afternoon, falling prey to blown coverages, pre-snap
confusion and undisciplined penalties. It's hard to believe this Jaguars
defense is the same one that finished No. 1 in Football Outsiders' advanced
metrics a year ago.
CHICAGO BEARS 34, DETROIT LIONS 22
1. Matt Nagy's offseason plan coalesced in an explosive,
entertaining touchdown fiesta in the demolition of a division rival. Mitchell
Trubisky enjoyed the best game of his career, repeatedly finding receivers wide
open for big plays. Protected well against a limp Lions pass rush, Trubisky did
a phenomenal job getting through his progression and tossing pinpoint darts in
stride to streaking receivers. The second-year quarterback came out of the gate
on fire, completing 14 of 16 passes for 208 yards, two TD passes and a scoring
run on four first-half touchdown drives. The Bears offense was on such a roll,
they experienced just three third downs the entire first two quarters. Tru finished
with a career-high 355 yards passing, three TD tosses, and a 148.6 QB rating.
It's no coincidence that Allen Robinson's return from injury coincided with
Trubisky's bombardment. The receiver was no match for the Darius Slay-less
Lions secondary. A Rob burned corners off the line and frequently galloped
through open space, generating receptions of 36 yards (TD), 35 yards, 27 yards
and 26 yards (TD). With a healthy Robinson, thriving rookie Anthony Miller
(5/122/1), Swiss Army Knife weapon Tarik Cohen and Trubisky's weekly
improvement, Nagy's offense is surging into the second half of the season.
Sunday, it was no contest versus a weak Lions defense.
2. Entering a vital three-game stretch, the Bears put a
stamp on their claim for the NFC North crown with a dominant performance on
both sides of the ball. Chicago's defense stuck to Lions receivers, who
couldn't generate an iota of separation against a stingy Bears secondary. Vic
Fangio's league-leading defense in turnovers forced three more (2 INTs, fumble)
and sacked Matthew Stafford six times. Khalil Mack returned from injury and
took down the quarterback twice. Rookie linebacker Roquan Smith continues to
play impressively, gobbling up 10 tackles, one tackle for loss, a sack, and a
PBU. With Smith's improved coverage the Bears defense doesn't have a glaring
weakness. Against the Bears D, Stafford continued his head-scratching season,
continually being forced to hold the ball and throw into tight windows. In
what's becoming a weekly occurrence, inability to generate early scores puts
the Lions in a deep hole they are unable to dig out of. Outside of some
impressive downfield catches by receiver Kenny Golladay, mostly in garbage
time, Detroit's offense didn't display the capability of sustaining drives.
Sans the chain-moving Golden Tate, the Lions don't have an identity.
3. While the Lions (3-6) dimming hopes essentially died on
the Soldier Field grass, the Bears put the division on notice with Sunday's
domination. With four more NFC North games down the stretch -- including a
rematch with Detroit on Thanksgiving -- Nagy's squad will need to stack similar
performances. The biggest negative for the Bears in Week 10 was kicker Cody
Parkey. The veteran booter clanged four attempts off the upright -- two PATs
and two field goals (41 yards, 34 yards). After a third-quarter touchdown, the
Bears opted to keep Parkey on the sideline, instead, converting a two-point
try. The misses didn't bite the Bears this week, but against opponents with an
actual pulse, they are mistakes that could be costly.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS 16, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS 3
1. The two-face character of the Redskins' defense showed
its stingy side even if the Bucs were their own worst enemy. After getting sent
to the woodshed last week against the Falcons, Washington (6-3) found success
in capitalizing off the Buccaneers' mistakes in what was a bend-but-don't-break
effort in repelling Fitzmagic. An incredible diving interception on the edge of
the end zone by Josh Norman on Tampa Bay's first possession foreshadowed the
Sisyphus-like effort that plagued Tampa Bay the entire game. Incredibly, Tampa
Bay (3-6) was held to a single field goal despite 501 total yards of offense --
the most ever for a team limited to just three points. Two interceptions, two
lost fumbles and a pair of missed field goals in conjunction with five
pointless treks into the red zone all led to a 1,000-horsepower offensive wheel
spin that stymied Tampa Bay's effectiveness beyond the 50-yard line. The
Redskins' front seven augmented Tampa's woes, but it was merely just another
player in what was a world of frustration for the Buccaneers.
2. Alex Smith, unsurprisingly, put in another measured
performance that was accentuated by brief moments of awesome. He finished the
game with a ho-hum line of 19-of-27 passing for 178 yards and a touchdown. He
zipped a few impressive passes while helping the Redskins steadily pull away on
the scoreboard, including a nice 6-yard laser to a stretching Josh Doctson in
the fourth quarter to put the game away. It was a fairly strong effort
considering the Redskins were working with some new faces on the offensive line
after last week's injuries. Adrian Peterson had a more subdued game than
previous weeks, finishing with 68 yards on 19 carries. While Smith and Peterson
provided a steady offensive heartbeat for the Redskins, Dustin Hopkins provided
the bulk of the scoring. He kicked a pair of 43-yard field goals and added a
26-yarder. It wasn't the most spectacular of wins, but with Jamison Crowder and
Paul Richardson out because of injuries and a fresh-faced O-line tasked with
making it all work, the Redskins offense found a way to combat a stingy
defensive effort by the Bucs.
3. Ryan Fitzpatrick has made a habit out of passing for more
than 400 yards and still finding himself in the loss category. He completed 29
of 41 passes for 406 yards in the loss. After the game, Bucs coach Dirk Koetter
told reporters he called plays Sunday for the first time all year. It worked
for the most part until the team got onto the Redskins' side of the field. It
was another frustrating performance for a Buccaneers team that can't generate
any consistency on offense. Koetter said he was mulling over whether or not to
start Jameis Winston next week, but that probably won't fix what ails the Bucs.
Fitzpatrick's two interceptions stung, but the lack of a running game in
combination with two lost fumbles and Chandler Catanzaro missing two of three
field-goal attempts (30 and 48 yards) are game-breakers in close contests.
Koetter keeping his job was one of the biggest post-Christmas surprises of the
2017 season. His future in Tampa Bay looks decidedly bleak unless the
Buccaneers can cut down on the mistakes and start winning games over the last
six weeks of the season.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 51, CINCINNATI BENGALS 14
1. On a day used to celebrate the nation's veterans, the
Saints channeled a little bit of the armed forces and executed flawlessly with
military precision en route to their eighth consecutive win, the longest such
streak in the league. Everything the Saints did seemed to work against an
overmatched Bengals defense. The Saints produced points on their first nine
possessions, totaling 509 yards and 33 first downs on the game. New Orleans
also averaged a healthy 6.9 yards per play while holding a massive 39:46 mark
in time of possession compared to the Bengals' 20:14. Quarterback Drew Brees
led the charge, completing 22 of 25 passes for 265 yards and three touchdowns,
adding a 1-yard touchdown run. Wide receiver Michael Thomas paced the receiving
game with eight catches for 70 yards and two touchdowns. Brees and Thomas made
a mark on the NFL record book, too. Brees moved into second place on the
all-time touchdown passes list ahead of Hall of Famer Brett Favre. Thomas set
the record for most career catches through his first 40 games, a mark
previously held by New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham (266). Meanwhile,
Sunday also saw running back Mark Ingram total 162 yards (104 rushing) and a
touchdown. When the Saints have Ingram and Alvin Kamara, who totaled 102 yards
(56 rushing) and two touchdowns, going like they were against the Bengals, this
offense presents a major headache for defensive coordinators. As a team, the
Saints totaled 244 yards rushing and three touchdowns on 47 carries. The Saints
improved to 8-1 on the season and opened a two-game lead over the Carolina
Panthers in the NFC South.
2. On a team full of offensive stars, one of the more
underrated storyline on the Saints offense continues to be backup quarterback
Taysom Hill. The Saints continue to utilize Hill all over the field as a
weapon, but his ability to be utilized as a blocker was on full display against
the Bengals. One play in the first half stood out. Hill split wide of the line
of scrimmage, and at the snap, Brees connected with Kamara on a screen pass.
Hill, who is listed at 6-foot-2, 221 pounds, locked up with a Bengals defender
and helped seal the edge for Kamara to gain positive yards. The backup
quarterback, who also contributes on special teams, simply can't be viewed as a
gadget when he consistently makes football plays. Give credit to Saints head
coach Sean Payton for finding ways to get playmakers on the field because how
many NFL coaches would utilize their backup signal-caller like the Saints do?
3. The Bengals entered the game ranked at or near the bottom
of the league in numerous defensive statistical categories, a recipe for
disaster against one of the league's top offenses. Bengals head coach Marvin
Lewis' defensive unit simply had no answer to stop the high-powered Saints. And
the defense, which allowed an opponent to top 500 total yards for a second
consecutive game, got no help from the offense. Quarterback Andy Dalton
completed 12 of 20 passes for 153 yards and a touchdown, but the Saints picked
off Dalton twice and sacked him four times. Dalton finished the game with a 61
passer rating. Sunday's loss dropped the Bengals to 5-4 on the season.
BUFFALO BILLS 41, NEW YORK JETS 10
1. The Bills (3-7) unleashed an offensive onslaught on the
Jets only the Minnesota Vikings could have ever seen coming. With Matt Barkley
making his first NFL start since the 2016 season for a Buffalo team mired in a comatose
state since rookie Josh Allen suffered an elbow sprain nearly a month ago,
Sunday's performance by the Bills looked like something ripped from the NFL's Bizarro
world dimension. As strange as it is to fathom, the Bills did indeed jump out
to a 31-3 halftime lead. Barkley made a ghost town out of "New Jack
City" and LeSean McCoy looked like his 2011 self. It was the kind of
gridiron beatdown that left the Jets' secondary throwing up their arms in
frequent frustration while reminding the Buffalo faithful that Week 3's
impressive performance against the Vikings wasn't necessarily a fluke. Barkley
wasn't on the roster for the Bills' first win of the season, but he looked as
comfortable in Buffalo as a Niagara Falls tour guide despite signing on just 13
days ago. Barkley made an immediate impact, connecting on a 47-yard pass to
Robert Foster on the first play from scrimmage before McCoy scampered in for
his first touchdown of the season on the next play. From there, Barkley
completed 15 of 25 passes for 232 yards and two TDs in an impressive
performance that even featured a big-boy touchdown on a 7-yard pass to offensive
tackle Dion Dawkins. Pretty impressive for a QB who didn't even manage a snap
during his time with the Cardinals last year before losing the Cincinnati
Bengals' backup QB job to Jeff Driskel over the summer. All things considered,
there's no need to rush Allen back onto the field now that the Bills have a
better option than Nathan Peterman at the ready.
2. It's anyone's guess as to whether the Jets (3-7) will
retain head coach Todd Bowles beyond this season, but Sunday's performance
could be exhibit 1A in the argument for new leadership. The Jets' passing
defense, which entered the game ranked 13th in the league, looked completely
lost in the first half against a Bills team that ranks dead last in passing.
Trumaine Johnson and Morris Claiborne were almost helpless in preventing Zay
Jones from enacting some sort of second coming of Andre Reed. Jones and Foster
caused chaos throughout the game with Jones finishing with eight catches for 93
yards and a touchdown and Foster adding 105 yards on three catches. New York
also gave up a total of 212 yards on the ground with its defensive line giving
up big runs to McCoy throughout the game. Offensively, the Jets were a dud.
Josh McCown, who was filling in for injured starter Sam Darnold, couldn't
string drives together for a team that went a forehead-slapping 1 for 12 on
third downs. McCown completed a very backup-like 17 of 34 passes for 135 yards
and two interceptions. While Bowles' future is tied closely to Darnold's future
development, the other 52 matter, too. Surrendering 41 points to a Bills team
that had only scored 96 points through the first nine weeks certainly won't
help the claim that Bowles deserves a fifth season in Florham Park.
3. LeSean McCoy told reporters this week he knows time is
running out on his chance to expand on his "legacy," and the running
back responded with his best game of the season. McCoy churned out 113 yards
and two touchdowns on 26 carries. The Jets struggled throughout the afternoon
to contain the 30-year-old running back, who added instant balance to the
Bills' attack. McCoy is still on pace to post the lowest numbers of his career,
and the Bills sorely needed to find a way to get him to produce more. Sunday's
performance goes a long way in helping McCoy and the Bills begin their claw
back to respectability.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 26, ARIZONA CARDINALS 14
1. Arizona produced one drive that served as proof that we
all aren't insane. It was early, a 12-play, 75-yard march, and it ended in a
touchdown pass from Josh Rosen to David Johnson. It was well-balanced,
efficient and included attainable down-and-distance situations throughout.
Finally, the Cardinals (2-7) were looking like we all thought they should. But
then, the usual issues crept back into focus. Rosen was harassed on nearly
every play. The Chiefs (9-1) sacked him five times, with four coming as a
result of just a four-man rush. Kansas City logged a pressure on 54.5 percent
of pass drops. That's not good for the Cardinals, and a tired tale in Arizona
for a team that has a promising young quarterback but needs to protect him much
better. Lost in this was the play of Johnson, who rushed 21 times for 98 yards
and a touchdown, and also led the Cardinals in receiving with seven grabs for
85 yards and another score. He didn't quite look like a game breaker Sunday,
but he was the clear focal point of the offense for the first time in a long
time.
2. Credit the Cardinals defense for being the first opposing
unit to play as if it had studied each of Kansas City's games from this season.
Arizona blew up a few staples of the Chiefs' offense throughout the game (a
shovel pass to Travis Kelce ran into a brick wall of defenders), and even a
hurdle attempt by Kareem Hunt that looked all too familiar was stopped dead in
its tracks by Budda Baker, who wouldn't be fooled by another highlight attempt.
That helps explain the stat line that was much more pedestrian from the Chiefs
than we're used to this season. It's encouraging for the Cardinals, but the
offense didn't do enough (per usual) and a chance at a massive upset fell
short.
3. We'll spend just one point on the Chiefs this week
because they're just doing more of the same. Arizona had small blips that
showed a defense that's better than average, but much like last week against
Cleveland, or every week for that matter it was just too much for an opponent to
handle. Arizona cut Kansas City's lead to 20-14 in the fourth, but Justin
Houston then rushed, read a screen drop, deftly slid back and intercepted
Rosen's pass that was intended for Johnson. The Chiefs quickly turned the
ensuing possession into six points and it was over from there. This was one of
Kansas City's least impressive wins, but even then, it still came rather
comfortably.
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