RAMS EDGE CHIEFS;
COWBOYS STAY HOT
Chiefs. Rams.
Juicy.
Monday
night's game promises to be entertaining, no matter what
happens. Two of the highest-powered offenses in the league will square off,
neither 9-1 team wanting to give an inch. One squad carries talent throughout
its roster, led by the best intermediate thrower going right now. The other is
an offensive juggernaut, spearheaded by a fearless quarterback who trusts his
arm more than any signal-caller since Brett Favre was stacking up MVP trophies.
Andy Reid was on the Packers staff
that saw Favre put Green Bay on his back and win the game's highest individual
honor in three straight seasons. Now he directs Patrick
Mahomes, who has taken the league by storm in his first season as a
starter. And both will watch L.A. quarterback Jared Goff,
who is coached by perhaps the brightest young mind in the NFL. You can't beat
this matchup.
By my count,
those are two of the three premier teams in the league. And then the top-shelf
scotch ironically hosts last year's champs in the Superdome. Yes, Eagles at
Saints is a dandy, as is Cowboys at
Falcons and Vikings at
Bears. Oh, yeah -- don't sleep on Titans at
Colts.
This week's template for football fun, if not nirvana (OK,
that is Wild Card Weekend, which isn't that far away) is
detailed below. So take a gander, as nearly every game on the slate is a tight
matchup. Send your thoughts on any of them.
I went 7-7 on my predictions
for Week 10, bringing my record for the season to 100-46-2.
How will I fare in Week 11? My picks are below.
SUNDAY, NOV. 18
BALTIMORE
RAVENS 29, CINCINNATI
BENGALS 21
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | M&T Bank Stadium (Baltimore)
Quite frankly, this game is the Bengals'
season. Marvin Lewis will be calling the defense following Monday's
firing of coordinator Teryl Austin, which takes Lewis way back to
the beginning. Cincy's head coach was the Ravens'
defensive coordinator from their first year in Baltimore (1996) until 2001,
including that incredible 2000 season, when they allowed 165 points and pushed
a Tony Banks/Trent Dilfer-led team to the Super Bowl. Lewis doesn't have that same
kind of personnel with the Bengals,
and he has watched his defense allow the most yards per game in football this
season. While we're at it, this game is the Ravens'
season, too. They've lost four of five and can ill-afford to fall to 4-6.
Staring at the prospect of watching the playoffs from home and having to answer
even more questions about their losing streak (with memories of Bengals WR Tyler Boyd knocking them
out of the 2017 postseason picture on their mind), they win in
Baltimore.
DALLAS
COWBOYS 23, ATLANTA
FALCONS 20
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta)
Last year, this same
contest devolved into a matchup between then-Cowboys
linemen Chaz Green and Byron Bell and
then-Falcons pass
rusher Adrian
Clayborn, with the former pair being woefully
outmatched. Dak Prescott was
sacked eight times in total, and the Cowboys never
had a chance. Unlike in that game, left tackle Tyron Smith and Ezekiel
Elliott will be playing, fortifying a Dallas offense that
couldn't help its quarterback in the 2017 loss to Atlanta. Can Prescott keep up
with Matt Ryan if
the league's second-ranked passing offense dials it up? Doubt it. That's why
Elliott should get 25 touches, just like he did Sunday night
against the Eagles, forcing Atlanta to play more in the box.
LB Deion Jones can't get back on the field for the Falcons soon
enough.
NEW YORK
GIANTS 28, TAMPA BAY
BUCCANEERS 24
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | MetLife Stadium (East Rutherford, N.J.)
Ryan
Fitzpatrick will get the call again this week, despite three
more giveaways in the loss to
the Redskins. Tampa had no business losing that game, racking up 501
yards of offense, only to put a paltry three points on the board. Even against
one of the weakest teams in the league, the Bucs can ill-afford to commit
turnovers and miss kicks on the road, with the Giants outfit
suddenly feeling itself. Manning was far from prolific in San
Francisco, but he capped a late game-winning drive with an
on-the-money throw to Sterling
Shepard. This week, I like rookie RB Saquon
Barkley to take over against a poor Tampa defense that
misses Kwon
Alexander.
PITTSBURGH
STEELERS 26, JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS 17
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | TIAA Bank Field (Jacksonville, Fla.)
This is precisely the kind of game the Steelers have
generally lost in the Mike Tomlin era: playing down against a struggling
opponent on the road after notching a few big wins. Don't forget that
these Jaguars are still awfully talented, even though they've dropped five
straight games. Doug Marrone finally got Leonard
Fournette back last week, and the Jacksonville RB was used
plenty (29 touches) in a narrow loss to
the Colts.
Expect Fournette to see the football at least 25 times again, to limit
Pittsburgh's possessions in this game. Jacksonville swept both meetings between
these two clubs last year, with the first win (in
the regular season) coming on the strength of the secondary, which had five
picks, and the second (in
the playoffs) because of strong play from Blake Bortles and
the offense. The Jags will need all of those elements working this weekend to
halt the streaking Steelers.
HOUSTON
TEXANS 22, WASHINGTON
REDSKINS 16
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | FedExField (Landover, Md.)
Can the Texans extend
their winning streak to seven? On paper, it looks like they should, given that
Washington is missing key
parts on the assembly line up front, while big-time Houston
pass rushers J.J. Watt and Jadeveon
Clowney will be hitting FedExField this Sunday with 14.5 sacks
between them and fresh legs coming off their bye. Washington survived on
the road last week by clamping down in the red zone, which is
precisely the Texans'
weakness ... on both sides of the ball. They are 27th in red-zone scoring and
29th at stopping teams inside their own 20. Important for the 'Skins: how much
they get from Alex Smith,
who hasn't led the offense to more than 23 points in a game since September.
INDIANAPOLIS
COLTS 24, TENNESSEE
TITANS 20
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis)
Tough game to pick here, but I'll go with the home team.
Both of these AFC South combatants come into this important matchup hot, with
the Titans winning two in a row and the Colts on
a three-game streak. At the heart of Tennessee's recent success: a ferocious
defense that is allowing the fewest points per game in the NFL. Last week,
the Titans got
after Tom Brady in
a win over the Patriots,
adding three sacks to their season total (now 23, a middle-of-the-pack figure).
However, Tennessee defensive coordinator Dean Pees will be seeing an offensive
line that hasn't allowed Andrew Luck to
be sacked since Week 5. Indy is also averaging 401 yards per game during this
win streak, with a turnover differential of plus-six. The Colts will be
difficult to topple at home.
CAROLINA
PANTHERS 30, DETROIT LIONS 21
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Ford Field (Detroit)
One team will come into this matchup after sitting on a blowout
loss for nine days, while the other hasn't won a game since Week 7.
The Panthers'
defense will dictate who wins this game. Carolina allowed 52 points versus
the Steelers --
tied for the most in franchise history with a loss to Jon Gruden's Raiders
back in 2000, when Oakland was actually good. The Panthers were
allowing 22.5 points per game prior to the loss to the Steelers.
If the D can get back to playing like that in Detroit, it should be enough.
That said, Matthew
Stafford could enjoy a field day against those Carolina
corners. Ben
Roethlisberger went 10-for-10 against them for 174 passing
yards and two touchdowns. Yeesh. Another key matchup: Run-CMC vs.
the NFL's No. 28 run defense.
LOS ANGELES
CHARGERS 27, DENVER
BRONCOS 17
4:05 p.m. ET (CBS) | Rokit Field at StubHub Center (Carson,
Calif.)
The Chargers are
on a roll, as winners of six straight. The Broncos should
be better than their 3-6 record would indicate, though. This could be a fun AFC
West matchup. Perhaps it would be tighter if played in the mile-high air, but
the soccer pitch at StubHub Center (home to the L.A. Galaxy) will just have to
do. Including their Week 7 game
in London, the Bolts have gone 4-1 on soccer fields this season.
They also fare well in the ground game, the precise area where the Broncos have
floundered on defense for much of this season. Vance Joseph's group has
buttoned up that weakness over the last three games, however, allowing only 72
rushing yards per game. Houston did run for 98 yards on them last time out, but
the Texans'
running backs only gained 60 of those yards at 2.2 yards per carry. Philip Rivers < Deshaun
Watson, at least in that department. Melvin Gordon and Austin Ekeler are
averaging a robust 5.4 and 5.8 yards per tote. Give the Bolts' offensive line a
ton of credit, as Rivers is only being sacked 1.3 times per game. Think
the Chargers'
pass protection will be the difference.
ARIZONA
CARDINALS 28, OAKLAND
RAIDERS 14
4:05 p.m. ET (CBS) | State Farm Stadium (Glendale, Ariz.)
The Raiders put
up more of a fight last week
against the Chargers than they did against the
Niners 10 days prior. The Cardinals gave the
Chiefs plenty, and then some, before ultimately being done in by an errant
screen pass. Tough miscue from Josh Rosen,
but even Hall of Fame quarterbacks
get picked by savvy linebackers like Justin
Houston reading a screen every so often. The kid is showing
flashes, even if he's not generating the kind of fawning praise surrounding his
opponent in Kansas City, Patrick
Mahomes. Remember, Mahomes sat on the bench and learned from an
erudite player in Alex Smith for
16 weeks before playing as a rookie. Ugly parts for Rosen: He has suffered too
many giveaways, and Arizona still isn't getting the ball down the field enough
(only 12 percent of his pass attempts travel 20-plus yards), where his
completion percentage is low, resulting in sub-mediocre 6.2 yards per attempt.
Bright side: The Cards got David Johnson heavily
involved, successfully, last week. Smelling a Jared Cook fantasy
bonanza.
NEW ORLEANS
SAINTS 38, PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES 26
4:25 p.m. ET (FOX) | Mercedes-Benz Superdome (New
Orleans)
This Eagles'
offense, as compared to what it was during their Bowl season, is ... shall
we say ... less than stellar. The run defense seems to have declined, as well.
Philadelphia couldn't stop Ezekiel Elliott,
even with a depleted Cowboys offensive
line. That Dallas unit was without All-Pro center Travis
Frederick and rookie OG Connor
Williams, while All-Pro OG Martinas playing hurt. Still,
Philly couldn't thwart Zeke. That means it's going to be tough sledding against Mark Ingram and Alvin Kamara.
The Eagles'
secondary is depleted, and it looked that way versus the Cowboys.
Going from Dak Prescott to Drew Brees,
with Ronald Darby out
and Jalen Mills still
hobbled by a foot injury ... oh, boy. Facing Brees is not timely at
best, disastrous at worst. If the Eagles find
themselves in the game in the fourth quarter, Doug Pederson and Jim Schwartz
will deserve much credit.
CHICAGO BEARS 24, MINNESOTA
VIKINGS 20
8:20 p.m. ET (NBC) | Soldier Field (Chicago)
Dove into this game on the set of "The Power Rankings
Show" (shameless plug: Tuesdays at 6 p.m. ET on NFL Network), with my
colleague James Jones explaining why we haven't seen more from Jordan Howard in
the Bears'
offense. Jones feels that Matt Nagy's primary focus is to show the defense
something different every play, starting with formations, which can negate
consistently running the ball downhill. Save for some truly special running
backs, most ball carriers need the consistency of touches to get into a rhythm.
Which brings us to the other side of this equation: How much balance can Dalvin Cook provide
the Vikings'
offense? Khalil Mack got
after Matthew
Stafford last week. He looks fully healthy after missing a
couple games. If there is a weak link to this Minnesota team, the offensive
line is it. Kirk Cousins has
been sacked 24 times this season (ninth-most in the league). By the way, the
Vikes have secured 31 sacks of their own (tied for the league lead), so Mitch
Trubisky's mobility will be paramount in this game.
MONDAY, NOV. 19
LOS ANGELES
RAMS 42, KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS 38
Well, what was once an international game has become a home affair
for the Rams. A lot of folks watching this game will be concerned
about the Chiefs'
defense facing perhaps the most dynamic offense in the league. The Rams rank
first in net yards per pass attempt (8.6), first-down efficiency (percent of
plays gaining four or more yards), 10-yard plays (183), lowest percentage of
drives going three-and-out (8.2) and pass plays going for 20 or more yards
(50). They are so effective on first down that the success makes the whole
operation manageable for Jared Goff.
The Chiefs also
rank 31st in stopping offenses from gaining 4-plus yards on first down. Thus,
at least in this game, first down will be more important than third down. That
is a pro football rarity. The Chiefs will
be asking a lot of Patrick
Mahomes. Look for Andy Reid to call for several designed roll-outs
and misdirection plays to neutralize, or at least tame, Aaron Donald's
impact.
THURSDAY, NOV. 15
GREEN BAY
PACKERS 27, SEATTLE
SEAHAWKS 23
8:20 p.m. ET (FOX/NFL Network/Prime Video) | CenturyLink
Field (Seattle)
The Packers head
into Seattle, where they've played a few humongous games over the years. The 2014 NFC
Championship Game immediately springs to mind. Then there was
the 2012 "Fail
Mary" game, when Golden Tate shoved his
way into NFL history. If Green Bay is to flip the script and win
this time around, then repeating last week's successful performance on the
ground -- when they racked up 195 yards versus the
Dolphins -- is the ticket. If not, that Seattle crowd will have
more of an impact, while the league's seventh-ranked pass defense will be able
to employ more personnel on the back end. And the Seahawks'
top-rated ground game will win the day. Aaron Jones went
an average of 6 yards before inducing contact against Miami, per Pro Football
Focus. How about that Packers offensive
line?
No comments:
Post a Comment