If you like NFL upsets, you probably enjoyed Week 10. Some
big names went down — often in surprising fashion — and some lesser teams lost
in ways that are going to put their coaches firmly on the hottest of hot seats.
One team also suffered a potentially serious injury that could have major
implications in the postseason.
Who disappointed me in Week 10?
HERE’S A LOOK AT 15 TEAMS, PLAYERS AND SITUATIONS.
DEREK CARR, QB,
RAIDERS
The Raiders’ offense remained weak on Sunday with most of
their yardage coming in garbage time. Carr threw for 243 yards, but failed to
find the end zone and did nothing terribly positive of note. One play in the
fourth quarter may serve as the perfect microcosm of Oakland’s 2018 season. On
4th-and-5, Carr seemed to lose track of the game situation and threw
the ball away, not realizing that doing so would cause a turnover on downs.
That’s the Raiders in a nutshell.
ATLANTA FALCONS
The Cleveland Browns aren’t quite the “gimme” win that they
were last year, and the Falcons had to find that out the hard way on Sunday.
Their defense, in particular, fell short of what they needed to do. The Browns
posted 427 total yards against the beleaguered Falcons and had them playing
catch-up all day, with Cleveland carrying a three-score lead into the fourth
quarter. Atlanta still had playoff dreams coming into this one, but their flat
performance may well have killed those.
JAMES WHITE, RB,
PATRIOTS
Sony Michel’s return to action didn’t hurt White that much.
The Titans defense, in fact, had more to do with both of them proving rather
inept on Sunday. White only had one carry for a loss of five yards. He didn’t
demonstrate his utility as a receiver much, either, catching five passes for 31
yards. It was his second-worst yardage total of the season and broke a string
of six consecutive games where he had 50 receiving yards or more.
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES’ FIRST-HALF PERFORMANCE
The Eagles were at home in primetime for a Sunday night game
against a big division rival. They needed a win to stay in the race with
Washington and to avoid having the same record as Dallas. They had just
acquired Golden Tate in a trade and were coming off a bye week with extra time
to prepare for Dallas. Everything seemed to point towards them coming out
smoking in the first half, yet they did the complete opposite. Philly punted
twice, turned the ball over on downs, threw an interception and managed just a
field goal to avoid the goose egg. They were so listless that they got booed
going into halftime. They came alive in the second half, but the 13-3 deficit
proved too large for them to come back.
CINCINNATI
BENGALS’ DEFENSE
Cincinnati’s defense had been a major issue all season, but
they still managed to enter Week 10 with a 5-3 record. What they couldn’t
overcome was the New Orleans Saints. The entire game was a mismatch. New
Orleans went for 509 yards, scored 51 points and left a team with genuine
playoff ambitions unable to explain what exactly had happened. The real
explanation was a simple one: the Saints have an elite offense, and the Bengals
have a terrible defense. The latter will likely cost them.
TAMPA BAY IN THE
RED ZONE
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers posted 501 total yards on Sunday.
That in itself isn’t hugely remarkable; under Ryan Fitzpatrick, the Bucs have
generally been able to gobble up yardage. What is remarkable is the fact that,
after all that, Tampa Bay scored just three points. Their first red zone
attempt ended with an interception, the second a missed field goal from 30, the
third a successful field goal, and the fourth was a sack and fumble on a play
that started at the Washington two-yard line. It was one of the most brutal and
inefficient red zone performances in recent memory.
COOPER
KUPP’S INJURY
Kupp suffered a non-contact knee injury in Sunday’s game against the
Seattle Seahawks — leaving the Rams instantly worried. Before it was derailed
by his initial injury, Kupp was on pace for an excellent season, and it looked
like he still was before Sunday’s devastating injury. The injury will cost
Jared Goff his favorite target and might take a bit of juice out of the Rams’
offense.
DETROIT LIONS
The Lions, to be blunt, looked unprepared to play Sunday.
They were outplayed and outcoached across the board by the Chicago Bears. Their
injury-hit secondary was exposed over and over, particularly in the first half
when Mitchell Trubisky basically feasted. The offensive line can no longer
protect Matthew Stafford, who has taken 16 sacks in the last two games. The
coaching often appears indecisive. After a brief upswing, they look like a
hopeless team, and it’s fair to wonder if trade sent a very bad message to
the players, even if it might have been right for the franchise.
CODY PARKEY, K,
BEARS
What are the odds of attempting four kicks and missing by
hitting the upright on all four of them? They’re probably quite low, but Parkey
managed it on Sunday against the Detroit Lions. Parkey missed field goals of 34
and 41, but more alarmingly, he also banged two extra points off the uprights.
It was bad enough that one has to wonder if Parkey’s job is endangered at this
point, and the only good news for him is that he didn’t cost Chicago the game
with his misses.
JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS’ PASS RUSH
It wasn’t that long ago that the Jaguars had dubbed
themselves “Sacksonville” and boasted one of the most feared pass rushes in the
league. On Sunday against the Indianapolis Colts, they came up with zero sacks
— the fourth straight game Indy has not allowed a sack. Andrew Luck was
comfortable all day as he threw for 285 yards and three touchdowns, and
Jacksonville simply couldn’t lay a finger on him. The deterioration of that
pass rush is a major reason that the Jaguar defense has regressed this season —
and why they suddenly find themselves dead last in the AFC South.
NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS
It looked like the Patriots had addressed their road woes,
but they were brutal on Sunday against the resurgent Tennessee Titans. Tom Brady
didn’t find the end zone once. They were out-gained by 101 yards. The offense
struggled to move the ball. They ended up looking rather foolish on a trick play. The bye is coming
at a good time for Bill Belichick’s team as these performances raises a lot of
questions going forward, especially with the amount of pressure Brady took from
the Tennessee defense.
NEW YORK JETS
The Jets did not have Sam Darnold under center on Sunday.
That said, Josh McCown has plenty of NFL experience, and they were up against
one of the league’s worst teams in the Buffalo Bills. What’s more, the Bills
were starting Matt Barkley — making his first start since the end of the 2016
season. Barkley managed to become the best quarterback on the field, the Bills
scored 41 points, and the Jets were held to 199 yards of offense. No wonder
Todd Bowles’ job security was a hot topic after the game.
LOS ANGELES RAMS’
RUN DEFENSE
Run defense has been one of the Rams’ few weaknesses this
season, and it showed once again on Sunday. L.A. allowed 273 rushing yards to
Seattle on an average of eight yards per carry. Even without Chris Carson,
Seattle did well, with rookie Rashaad Penny rushing for 108 yards on just 12
carries. This was even worse of a showing than the first meeting in which they
allowed 190 rushing yards to Seattle. The rush defense has been an ongoing
problem for Los Angeles, and one of their players has slammed their work as “terrible.” That feeling will
likely be pervasive after Sunday, even with a win.
CALVIN RIDLEY, WR,
FALCONS
Ridley couldn’t stop finding the end zone for much of the
early part of the season, generally at the expense of the more established
Julio Jones. On Sunday, Jones was back in the end zone, but Ridley could barely
get a look. Despite Matt Ryan’s 52 pass attempts, Ridley was only targeted five
times — catching three of them for 37 yards. If anyone had known before the
game that Ryan would throw that many passes and Ridley would only catch three
of them, it would definitely be viewed as an underwhelming day for the Atlanta
rookie receiver.
CAROLINA PANTHERS
The Panthers came into Pittsburgh 6-2 and looking to make a
Thursday night statement. It was the Steelers who had the last word, putting up
52 points as the Panthers were unable to do much of anything or even stay
competitive. The offense only managed 242 yards, while Pittsburgh’s put up 457.
Carolina remains on track, but losing by such a large margin to a potential
playoff opponent is worrisome. Also alarming: they’re 5-0 at home but just 1-3
on the road.
No comments:
Post a Comment