Where we look at
the best (and worst) of NFL Week 10, all in one place.
BEST GAME - DALLAS
COWBOYS VS. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES
While the Seahawks-Rams matchup was very entertaining once again, the Sunday
action in Week 10 saved the best for last. The Cowboys and Eagles played a
somewhat sleeper first half, but then things opened up in the third and fourth
quarters. The two NFC East rivals combined to score 31 of their 47 points in
the second half. However, it wasn’t all that much of a surprise to
see these two foes play a close game. But it was surprising to see the Cowboys
knock off the defending Super Bowl champions on the road in a game they had to
have. Ezekiel Elliott had a huge night, rushing for 151 yards, averaging
7.9 yards per carry, and a touchdown. The Cowboys ran for 171 yards against the
No. 2 rush defense in the league coming into Week 10. Dak Prescott made
just enough plays as well to help the Cowboys beat the Eagles, 27-20. With
this result, both Philadelphia and Dallas hold 4-5 records, which puts them two
games behind the 6-4 Washington Redskins.
Ezekiel
Elliott once had the 7th best 110m Hurdle time in the Country at 13.77s
Others in the top 20 that year:
1. Marlon Humphrey (13.24s)
2. Tony Brown (13.38s)
3. Devon Allen (13.48s)
6. Ishmael Zamora (13.70s)
17. Todd Gurley (13.86s)
BEST TEAM
CELEBRATION - PHILADELPHIA EAGLES
We’ll have a category for individual celebrations later, but
the Eagles take home the team award. With Sunday being Veterans Day, it
was awesome to see the league commemorating American veterans all day long. The
Eagles did it best with one of their celebration after Zach Ertz’s first
touchdown. By the way, Ertz had
a monster night, posting 14 catches for 145 yards and two touchdowns. That likely
swayed a lot of fantasy matchups late Sunday night.
BIGGEST STATEMENT
- TENNESSEE TITANS
Some billed Tennessee’s win last week’s on the road against
the Cowboys as a season saver. If that’s true, the Titans victory against the
Patriots might send seismic waves through the AFC. Tennessee didn’t just
win; the Titans outgained the Patriots by 100 yards and outrushed them 150 to
40 on their way to a 34-10 victory. Marcus Mariota had his best game since the
Week 3 comeback against the Eagles, throwing for an average of 9.5 yards per
attempt and two touchdowns. With the victory, Tennessee improved to 5-4
and pulled within a game of idle Houston, who the Titans have already beaten
this season. The Titans and Texans will meet again in Houston three days after Thanksgiving. For
the Patriots, they aren’t in danger of losing their grip on the AFC East, but
the loss could have implications on the AFC playoff picture. If the playoffs
started today, New England would be the No. 3 seed, meaning Bill Belichick’s
club wouldn’t have a bye for the first time since 2009.
BEST PLAY - NICK
CHUBB, CLEVELAND BROWNS
Cleveland traded Carlos Hyde to open the door for rookie
running back Nick Chubb. It’s one of the best decisions the Browns have made in
recent history. Chubb has been great this season, and he finally gets to
fully shine without having to share the backfield (although he still does a bit
with Duke Johnson Jr.). On Sunday, Chubb experienced his best day as a pro,
rushing for a Sunday-best 176 yards. More than half of those yards came on
a 92-yard touchdown in the third quarter, which is the longest run in Browns
history. Cleveland won its first game under interim head coach Greg Williams,
beating the Atlanta Falcons, 28-16.
BEST ROOKIE
PERFORMANCE - LEIGHTON VANDER ESCH, DALLAS COWBOYS
There are so many rookies playing well around the league,
including the Browns running back we just finished discussing. But let’s give
some love to the Cowboys middle linebacker. Vander Esch appears to be a
star in the making. He’s been starting in place of the often-injured Sean Lee
the last few weeks, and on Sunday night, the first-round pick had a huge coming
out party. Vander Esch recorded 13 tackles, including one for loss and
intercepted a pass. One of those 13 tackles was a key play late in the
fourth quarter. On third-and-2 at the Cowboys 30-yard line, Vander Esch worked
through a sea of blockers to bring down running back Corey Clement for a
five-yard loss. Trailing by seven, the Eagles then went for fourth-and-7 and
came up just short. Philadelphia did eventually get the ball back but not
with enough time to orchestrate another touchdown drive. Vander Esch’s tackle
on that third down may have saved the game and season for Dallas.
WORST LOSS -
ATLANTA FALCONS
Although it came on the road, this one really hurts the
Falcons. Atlanta came into Week 10 having won three straight to move back
to the .500 mark. This setback, though, drops the Falcons to 4-5, and they
still have road games coming up against the Saints, Packers and Panthers. Those
three teams are a combined 12-1-1 at home. In order to finish 9-7, the
Falcons must now steal one of those tough road games and run the rest of the
table. And even then, Atlanta also has to hope 9-7 will be good enough to make
the playoffs in ta tough NFC.
WORST INJURY -
COOPER KUPP, LOS ANGELES RAMS
It’s been a memorable day of football when it takes this
long to get to such a great and pivotal division matchup. The Rams returned to
the win column Sunday, holding off the Seahawks, 36-31. Todd Gurley and Jared
Goff both had huge days, adding to their arguments in the MVP race. But in
the process, the Rams may have lost wide receiver Cooper Kupp again. This time,
he may not return again in 2018. He left after a non-contact injury, which
is never a good sign, and he was holding his knee. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport
reports the Rams’ “initial concern” is Kupp has torn an ACL. Let’s hope
it’s not that. Kupp has 35 catches, 527 receiving yards and six touchdowns this
season.
BEST HISTORY -
DREW BREES, NEW ORLEANS SAINTS
Don’t we do this every week? Brees and the Saints played as
though the Panthers embarrassed their NFC South pride in Pittsburgh on
Thursday, so they redeemed their division against the second-best AFC North
squad. And really, they did more than redeem the NFC South, as the Saints
destroyed the Bengals, 51-14. New Orleans moved the ball at will with Brees
averaging 10.6 yards per pass and the running game racking up 244
yards. Meanwhile, the defense picked off Andy Dalton twice and held the
Bengals to 284 yards. But anyway, back to Brees, his three touchdowns
moved him into second place on the NFL’s all-time passing touchdowns list. On
Sunday, he passed Brett Favre and sits just 30 touchdown tosses behind Peyton
Manning for most ever.
SECOND BEST
HISTORY - LARRY FITZGERALD, ARIZONA CARDINALS
Brees has been hogging this superlative, and rightfully so,
but Fitzgerald should be receive some accolades as well. With six receptions
and 50 yards, Fitzgerald passed Terrell Owens and moved into second place on
the all-time receiving list. However, Fitzgerald has a lot more work to do
in order to take over the No. 1 spot on the list. His 15,952 yards is still
about 7,000 yards behind Jerry Rice. Despite the history, Fitzgerald
couldn’t lead the Cardinals to victory Sunday. Kansas City defeated Arizona,
26-14.
WORST PENALTY -
COREY MOORE, INDIANAPOLIS COLTS
This proved to be one of the closer games of the early slate
on Sunday, and one of the most notable plays of the game was an extra point
midway through the second quarter. After a Jacksonville touchdown,
Indianapolis blocked the extra point and Colts linebacker Anthony Walker was in
the clear to return the blocked kick back for a Colts two-point conversion. The
game was about to experience a three-point swing. But Moore stupidly
decided to block Jaguars lineman Abry Jones in the back and below the waist. It
didn’t appear Jones had an angle to track down Walker before he reached the end
zone, but regardless, Moore’s actions resulted in a penalty that negated the
two-point conversion. Luckily for him, the Colts still held on to win,
29-26, but had he not illegally blocked Jones, the game would have been
completely different.
BIGGEST STREAK
SNAPPED - CHICAGO BEARS RECORD AGAINST DIVISION OPPONENTS
Heading into Week 10, the Bears were sitting in first place
of the NFC North, but Chicago had to know that wouldn’t last much longer if the
team’s losing streak against division opponents continued. Before this weekend,
Chicago had lost 10 straight against the NFC North and nine of 10 against the
Detroit Lions. That all ended Sunday, as the Bears thumped the Lions,
34-22. Quarterback Mitch Trubisky had another fantastic day, throwing for 355
yards and three touchdowns. He averaged 11.8 yards per attempt, and the Bears
defense forced three turnovers.
WORST KICKING DAY
- CODY PARKEY, CHICAGO BEARS
It wasn’t all great for the Bears, though, as their kicker
really struggled. Parkey missed two extra-points and two field-goal
attempts. If he had made every kick, the Bears would have won by 20
instead of 12. The Lions never really became a threat to come back in the
second half, but leaving eight points on the field certainly made the game a
lot closer. Most impressively, though, all four of Parkey’s misses hit the
posts. He couldn’t do that if he tried.
BEST CELEBRATION -
TYREEK HILL, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS
There has been plenty of celebrating this season for the
Chiefs, but Hill had their best celebration performance after scoring his
second touchdown. Maybe he has a career in television after his NFL
playing days.
BIGGEST
EMBARRASSMENT - NEW YORK JETS
By no means are the Jets a good team. Rookie quarterback Sam
Darnold has struggled in recent weeks, and with his injury, veteran Josh McCown
started in his place Sunday. But they aren’t 31-points worse than the
Buffalo Bills. Somehow, though, the Jets lost to the Matt Barkley-led Bills,
41-10, at home. Not only was the 41 points a season high for the Bills,
Buffalo scored just 46 points combined in its last six games. Barkley went
15-of-25 for 232 passing yards and two touchdowns while LeSean McCoy rushed for
113 yards and also scored twice. Say what you will about the Jets
quarterback situation, but Darnold doesn’t play defense.
BIGGEST
STATISTICAL ANOMALY - TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS
The Jets have plenty of reason to be embarrassed, but the
Buccaneers are not far behind this week. Somehow Tampa Bay racked up 501
offensive yards and yet only scored three points. That’s right - just a
field goal in a 16-3 loss to Washington. It is reportedly the most yards for a
team that only scored three points during the Super Bowl era. Red zone
blues is the most obvious reason for this ridiculous honor. Tampa Bay advanced
the ball inside the Washington 25-yard line five times. On those possessions,
the Buccaneers recorded three giveaways and a missed field goal.
TOP FANTASY WAIVER
WIRE ADDITION - ANTHONY MILLER, CHICAGO BEARS
Allen Robinson back healthy was a big reason for the Bears
success through the air against the Lions, but Miller also played extremely
well opposite him. Miller finished with five catches for 122 yards and a
touchdown versus Detroit. The rookie has caught touchdowns in three of the last
five games. With that in mind and his first 100-yard receiving day, owners
will have to scurry to the waiver wire quickly to claim Miller.
MOST FRUSTRATING
FANTASY TOUCHDOWN - JAMES DEVELIN, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS
It was a frustrating day all around for the Patriots, who
tied a season low with 10 points. But their lone touchdown in the loss didn’t
go to Tom Brady, Sony Michel, Julian Edelman, or Josh Gordon. It didn’t even go
to James White or Cordarrelle Patterson either. Yep, the Patriots only
score was a 1-yard touchdown run for fullback James Develin. The Patriots fullback
hadn’t recorded a rushing attempt since 2014. Develin is owned in a
whopping 0.1 percent of ESPN leagues.
WORST FOURTH-DOWN
ATTEMPT - DEREK CARR, OAKLAND RAIDERS
The Oakland Raiders are the punching bag of the league at
the moment. While they did keep things relatively close against a surging
Chargers team, the Raiders were again the butts of the NFL on one of the
poorest fourth-down tries any fan will see. Trailing by 13 and with 4:10
left, the Raiders went for fourth-and-five. But the play didn’t have a chance,
as on the first sign of pressure, quarterback Derek Carr just threw the ball
straight into the ground. At 1-7, the Raiders don’t have anything to play
for, and the fourth-down try wasn’t likely to lead to a comeback. But with
nothing to lose, why not give yourself at least a chance? The Chargers
won, 20-6.
IT’S ABOUT TIME
THIS HAPPENED - AARON JONES, GREEN BAY PACKERS
Mike McCarthy is a smart guy. With the Packers’ 31-12
victory against the Dolphins on Sunday, he’s won 125 games in the NFL. But he
refuse to make Aaron Jones his offense’s primary back is, at best,
puzzling. After Jones’ costly fumble last Sunday night against the
Patriots, it wouldn’t have been surprising to see McCarthy turn back to Jamaal
Williams. But thankfully, that didn’t happen. Instead, Green Bay finally
featured Jones, and he shined. Jones rushed 15 times for 145 yards and two
touchdowns. He also added 27 receiving yards.
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