HERE'S
WHAT I LEARNED FROM WEEK 12 SLATE OF GAMES
MINNESOTA VIKINGS 24, GREEN BAY PACKERS 17
1. It's fitting that on a
night when Randy Moss received his Hall of Fame ring,
it was a Vikings wide
receiver who stole the show. Adam Thielen rebounded
from a quiet two weeks to abuse the young Green Bay secondary en route to eight
catches for 125 yards and one touchdown. Thielen's quick burst and cuts off the
line of scrimmage routinely allowed him to find space in the Packers'
defense. The mind-meld between Thielen and Kirk Cousins (29
of 38 for 342 yards and 3 scores) was on full display on their third-quarter TD
connection when Thielen found a soft spot in the Green Bay zone as Cousins
rolled to his right, corralled a dart, turned up field and powered his way into
the end zone. Thielen's 125 receiving yards also broke a franchise record -
held by Moss - with his ninth 100-yard game of the season.
Minnesota (6-4-1) doesn't
boast the most balanced offense in the league as the ground game was largely a
non-factor, but when Cousins is on the same page with Thielen and Stefon Diggs (8
catches, 77 yards), good luck stopping them in December and beyond.
2. When one writes the obit on
the 2018 Packers,
tonight's game will embody many of the ills that caused Green Bay (4-6-1) to
squander another season of Aaron Rodgers'
prime. For a second consecutive prime-time game, the Packers were
undone by an inconsistent offense, injuries and questionable decision making.
It seemed things had clicked as Rodgers leaned on his playmakers at receiver (Davonte
Adams) and running back (Aaron Jones) for back-to-back TD drives in the second
quarter, but just like in their loss to the Seahawks,
the Packers soon
could not get out of their own way in the second half. The Packers'
first four drives after halftime went as follows: punt, turnover on downs, punt
and punt. Two pivotal miscues (Jones failed to convert on a fourth-and-inches
and backup left tackle Jason Spriggs gave
up a sack on third down) lead to 10 consecutive points for Minnesota that was
more than enough to salt away the win.
Random Packers factoid:
Green Bay is now 0-6 on the road this season.
3. As we enter the final month
of the regular season, the NFC wild card race is crystalizing. The Vikings
hold the No. 5 seed and own a half-game lead on a trio of 6-5 teams (the Redskins, Seahawks and
Panthers) with games at New England and Seattle looming in back-to-back weeks.
For the Packers,
it's tough to see a road to the postseason. Green Bay currently would have to
leap frog three teams just to claim the six spot. While four of their final
five games are against teams with winning records, it's tough to imagine Mike
McCarthy and co. climbing out of this hole.
DENVER BRONCOS 24, PITTSBURGH STEELERS 17
1. The Denver
Broncos continue to create their own luck. With the Pittsburgh
Steelers on the doorstep of a potential game-tying touchdown in
the waning moments, Denver defensive lineman Harris intercepted Ben
Roethlisberger in the end zone to seal a second-straight
victory. Despite giving up 527 yards to Pittsburgh, Vance Joseph's team made
game-changing plays all afternoon. Denver safety Justin
Simmons blocked a field goal on the opening drive. A smashing
hit by safety Will Parks forced
a fumble by tight end Xavier
Grimble that went through the end zone for a touchback. Chris Harris picked
off Big Ben leading
to a game-tying touchdown in the third quarter. A forced fumble on running
back James Conner wiped
out another Steelers scoring
opportunity. And Harris wrapped up the effort with the fourth turnover of the
game.
It wasn't pretty, but
the Broncos stepped
up to make plays whenever backed against the wall. The victory pushes Denver
(5-6) within a game of an AFC wild card spot. In the final five weeks,
the Broncos play
just one team with a winning record. It's not the last we've heard from the
Mile High team this season.
2. Undrafted running
back Phillip
Lindsay doesn't garner the national attention he deserves. The
bruising 5-foot-8 running back did the heavy lifting for the Broncos offense
against a stout Steelers defense. Combining superior vision, big burst
through the line, and power beyond his 190-pound frame, Lindsay churned out 110
rushing yards on just 14 attempts and the game-winning touchdown. Averaging 7.9
yards per attempt against Pittsburgh's run defense deserves to be highlighted.
Lindsay became the first back to rush for 100-plus yards against the Steelers in
14 games dating back to last season. The rookie's ability to squeeze through
tiny holes and fall forward kept the Denver offense in positive down-and-distance
all game. It's an understatement to say that Lindsay deserves more than 14
touches a game down the stretch.
3. This time the Steelers couldn't
overcome their own blunders. Big Ben &
Co. left about 20 points on the field. Despite a monster game statistically
from Roethlisberger (41/56, 462 yards, 1 TD, 2 INTs), it's the mistakes that
will sting in Pittsburgh. The Steelers compiled
527 yards and 25 first downs and scored just 17 points. That's hard to do. Two
turnovers at the goal line tell the tale. The Steelers wasted
a magnificent game from JuJu
Smith-Schuster. With the Broncos doubling Antonio Brown,
JuJu gobbled up 13 catches on 17 targets for 189 yards and a 97-yard touchdown
score. After Smith-Schuster's long TD score, the game felt like Pittsburgh's
for the taking. Alas, Denver stepped up in the fourth quarter, and the Steelers fizzled.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 27, MIAMI DOLPHINS 24
1. The Colts'
greatest strength during their win streak has been the play of their offensive
line, bringing extra attention to the group this week with center Ryan Kelly sitting
out. The sack streak is over, yet the Colts'
front five did a good job of protecting their quarterback. Evan Boehm was
solid in the running and passing games, and Luck had time to work, especially
in the second half. But it took three quarters of general mistakes for
the Colts to
sort out what didn't work, and along the way picked up a 10-point deficit.
Indianapolis has Andrew Luck,
though, and a defense that stepped up after falling behind as the Colts wrested
away momentum and rode it to victory.
Luck's ability to avoid the
rush claimed the biggest moment of the game. Luck ducked beneath two rushers,
avoiding what appeared to be a sure sack, stepped up and launched a pass
to Chester
Rogers for a gain of 34. The completion set up the Colts'
game-winning field goal, just five minutes after Luck drove the Colts down
the field to tie the contest. It also extended their win streak to five and put
them above .500.
2. We've known this Dolphins team
was a .500 or worse team masquerading as a playoff contender, and while Adam
Gase deserves credit for getting them to 5-5 despite being forced to play Brock
Osweiler for multiple games, this result wasn't all that surprising.
For a moment early in the fourth, a Kenyan Drake touchdown
had them in position to score a road win, but they couldn't hold on. And when
tied, their offense was limp, presenting very little of a challenge to
the Colts.
Miami is without its best weapons in its receiving corps -- Leonte Carroo was
responsible for one of their scores, and Drake scored the other two -- so we'll
give them that. But a team that aspires to be in the playoffs can't win with an
offense like this in close games like these.
3. I didn't want to be this
guy, but I'm going to be this guy. Stop throwing the football to Andrew Luck.
Indianapolis has done this in consecutive weeks and it's produced a line of 1
for 2 for a short gain on fourth down. He got blasted by a defender thanks
to Jacoby
Brissett, cold off the bench, threw it high to Luck. He's playing
with a surgically repaired shoulder that caused him to miss all of last season.
He is your most valuable commodity, Colts.
Stop lining him up to get hit.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 30, CAROLINA PANTHERS 27
1. For the second straight
week, the Seahawks snatched
victory from the jaws of defeat against an opponent that failed to capitalize
on multiple scoring opportunities. With the exception of an early overthrow to
an open Doug Baldwin in
the end zone, Russell
Wilson was a wizard, escaping pressure to hit big throws in key
situations. Facing fourth-and-3 in the middle of the fourth quarter, Wilson
dropped a 35-yard rainbow into the hand of David Moore for
the brilliant game-tying touchdown against backup cornerback Corn Elder,
who never turned around to make a play on the ball. After suddenly
slumping Panthers kicker Graham Gano missed
a 52-yard field goal that would have given Carolina the lead, Wilson climbed
the pocket to find a wide open Tyler Lockett in
the red zone, setting up Sebastian
Janikowski's game-winner.
2. Cam Newton and Christian
McCaffrey moved the ball seemingly at will between the
twenties, recording more yards (478) than any Seattle opponent this season.
Credit the Seahawks defense,
however, for stiffening in the red zone, particularly in short-yardage
situations. The Panthers should
have been ahead by multiple scores in the fourth quarter. Instead, they find
themselves mired in a three-game losing streak, wasting yet another career day
from McCaffrey. The elusive dual-purpose back finished with the bizarre stat
line of 239 yards from scrimmage with three fumbles and two
touchdowns. McCaffrey became the first player this season -- and the first in
franchise history -- to reach the century mark in both receiving and rushing in
the same game.
3. We've come to expect
exciting back-and-forth matchups between these two perennial playoff contenders
over the past half-decade. This contest was no exception. Today's outcome will
have major repercussions in the NFC wild-card hunt, with both teams settling in
at 6-5 after 12 weeks. Whereas the Seahawks face
the punchless 49ers and Cardinals in
three of their final five games, the Panthers draw
the powerhouse Saints in
two of the last three weeks of the season. Advantage: Seattle.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 25, NEW YORK GIANTS 22
1. The game certainly wasn't
pretty for the Eagles,
as the team allowed 300-plus yards of total offense in the first half to an
opponent. The Eagles,
however, showed character by battling back from a 19-3 deficit when it appeared
the Giants would
steamroll to a win midway through the second quarter. Defensive coordinator Jim
Schwartz made adjustments and his unit limited the Giants to
56 total yards and a field goal in the second half. Kicker Jake Elliott sealed
the game by booting a 43-yard field goal with 25 seconds on the clock to give
the Eagles (5-6)
a much-needed win to stay within one game out of first place in the NFC East
behind the Dallas
Cowboys (6-5) and Washington
Redskins (6-5).
2. While Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz completed
an efficient 20 of 28 passes for 236 yards and a touchdown, the Eagles'
running game deserves all the credit for catapulting the comeback win. After
generating just 39 yards on the ground as a team in the first half, the Eagles totaled
88 yards rushing and a touchdown in the final two periods. Rookie running
back Josh Adams paced
the ground assault with 84 yards and a touchdown on 22 carries, 80 of the yards
and the score coming in the second half. Adams also converted a 2-point
conversion attempt early in the fourth quarter to give the Giants a
22-19 lead. The Eagles finished
with 127 yards rushing on 29 carries, marking the first time since Week 8 the
team topped 100 yards rushing in a game. If the Eagles want
to make up ground in the division, going with a balanced attack on offense
should work well when considering their next two games are against Washington
in Week 13 and Dallas in Week 14.
3. The disappearance of Giants rookie
running back Saquon
Barkley proved one of the biggest head-scratching moments in
the second half. After totaling 131 yards (94 rushing) and two touchdowns in
the first half, Barkley managed just 8 total yards in the final two quarters
and touched the ball an inexplicable five times (four carries, one catch). If
the Giants are
looking for a reason for blowing a 19-3 lead, the coaching staff should start
by explaining why Barkley wasn't utilized more after halftime to grind out
yards and control time of possession.
Sunday's loss dropped
the Giants to
3-8 on the season and three games out of first place in the division with five
games remaining.
CLEVELAND BROWNS 35, CINCINNATI BENGALS 20
1. If it was awkward to see
their ex-coach, Hue Jackson, roaming the Bengals sideline,
Cleveland's young roster showed no ill effects. Baker
Mayfield continued where he left off before the bye, finishing
with 258 yards and four scores for an attack that fired off touchdowns on their
first four drives. Going 36-of-46 passing for 474 yards and seven scores over
his past two games, Mayfield's progress centers around on a lightning-quick
release, faster decision-making and a knack for spreading the ball to every
possible weapon. Give credit to Freddie Kitchens, the team's new play-caller
who used run-heavy wishbone sets to foil the Falcons before
riddling the Bengals on
Sunday through the air with a rash of empty backfield looks. The Browns (4-6-1)
went quiet in the second half, but Mayfield suddenly seems at the helm of a
talented attack with far better protection up front -- and zero sacks over the
past two games -- since Jackson bolted stage right.
2. Say goodbye to the
listless Bengals (5-6).
Missing wideout A.J. Green,
cover man Dre
Kirkpatrick, left tackle Cordy Glenn and
linebacker Nick Vigil;
this simply isn't the squad that showed such promise out of the gate in
September. Today they're a club trying to move the ball without their All-Pro
wideout and a deep-threat in John Ross who
doesn't look like the same player due to a groin injury. Joe Mixon (14/89)
unfurled a handful of pretty gains, but the injury bug bit again when Andy Dalton was
ruled out with a concerning right thumb injury. Down 35-7, frisky backup Jeff Driskel fought
hard to bring Cincy back with two long scoring drives, but it was too much to
ask anyone to make up for one of the worst defenses in the league.
3. How could Jackson -- the
newly minted Bengals defensive
assistant -- have felt as his former offensive charges lit up their Ohio rival
with ease? Players like David Njoku (5/63/1), Antonio
Callaway(4/62/1) and Nick Chubb (128
total yards with two scores) were in full bloom as the club erased an
outrageous string of 25 straight road losses -- a whopping 1,141 days --
without a win. So many of those hideous defeats came under Jackson, who could
only stand there as Cleveland's Damarious
Randall flitted over to hand his
former coach a picked-off pass in front of the entire Bengals bench.
BUFFALO BILLS 24, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 21
1. The wheels completely fell
off this game for the Jaguars at
exactly the moment Donte
Moncrief found himself clutching the football after making a
big play for his team. Moncrief's extended tie-up with Buffalo defensive
back Levi Wallace resulted
in his teammates coming to his aid, which included pushing and shoving, and
then a full-blown fight highlighted by Leonard
Fournette trading blows with Bills defensive
end Shaq Lawson.
The skirmish got both of them ejected; cost Jacksonville its star power back
with the ball on the 1-yard line. Thanks to a sack and a pair of penalties, the
Jags ended up outside the 20 on fourth-and-goal, and Josh Lambo capped
the disaster by missing a 42-yard field goal.
Jacksonville, which relied
heavily on Fournette leading up to that moment (he finished with 95 yards on 18
carries despite being ejected late in the third), lost its best threat to a
Buffalo defense that hasn't been kind to most all season. Losing by three
points only added to the sting of defeat in Doug Marrone's return to Buffalo.
2. No matter your concerns
with his details (I have long held at least a couple); Josh Allen's
return was a major boost for Buffalo. With no offense intended for Matt Barkley,
Allen brought a new life to the Bills with a beautiful long pass that took
advantage of the rookie's big arm and ended in a 75-yard touchdown reception
for Robert Foster,
a fairly well-paced offense and even his own running plays. In fact, it was his
running that did the most damage, with the quarterback carrying the ball 13
times for 99 yards. Allen's 14-yard touchdown run right up the middle of the
field -- which came immediately after the aforementioned meltdown and on the
first play of the fourth quarter -- would've blown the roof off New Era Field
if it had one. That score capped a euphoric day for Bills fans
in a game that seemed destined to grind to a three-point difference, which it did,
but it wasn't as ugly as it appeared it would be.
3. At 3-8, one has to wonder
where the Jaguars go
from here. Blake Bortles wasn't
the lone offender, but Jacksonville's offense is downright abysmal in the
passing game, no matter the depth. It's clear the Jaguars'
best approach is to pound the football, but in-season acquisition Carlos Hyde didn't
do much (10 carries, 33 yards) to help in between Fournette carries, and this
team's receiving corps is just a group of glorified No. 2 or No. 3 receivers
running routes for a quarterback who definitely misses his left tackle. Keelan Cole dropped
a pass that resulted in a Buffalo interception. James
O'Shaughnessy was part of a blown screen play on a pass that
either arrived too early, or O'Shaughnessy turned around too late. Ereck Flowers got
his first start for the Jaguars at
left tackle and was predictably bad, and an injury to Andrew
Norwell only made things worse up front. This was once the
exception, but it's starting to become the norm, and with the Jags' defense not
holding up their end of the bargain (Church was caught in concrete on Foster's
touchdown reception), it's turned into a losing formula.
This game was a rematch of
last year's AFC Wild Card meeting, and the two participants are far from such a
return now. But one team at least feels better about itself after this contest.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 27, NEW YORK JETS 13
1. The Patriots (8-3)
started sloppy coming off their bye week, but turned it on in the second half,
scoring on its first three possessions to run away with a double-digit victory.
The Pats committed a season-high 11 penalties for 105 yards on the day, most
coming in a messy first half that stymied the offense. The Patriots moved
the ball with ease most of the day, and if not for the penalties and some early
red-zone struggles, the blowout would have been bigger. Rob
Gronkowski returned after missing the past two weeks and
immediately proved his worth with a 34-yard touchdown spike down the seam.
After getting battered in Week 10, Tom Brady was
kept clean and threw darts over the middle, spreading the ball around. TB12
played similarly to how he has all season, missing some deep shots and sideline
throws, but feasting on strikes over the middle. The Brady-Gronk connection
wasn't in perfect form, with the QB missing the TE three times in the red zone.
Gronk's availability, however, completely opens the Pats offense. With
the Jets focusing
on the tight end, Brady found Julian
Edelman for a 21-yard touchdown catch and run to begin the
second-half rout. Gronk (3 catches on 7 targets, 56 yards) looked healthy
throughout the game, even as he was sucking on oxygen on the sideline. His
continued health the rest of the season would be huge for New England down the
stretch.
2. With Brady getting dinged
on the hand in the first half, the Patriots rode Sony Michel hard
in the second two quarters. The rookie blasted through big holes in a
Swiss-cheese Jets defense
for 133 yards and a TD on 21 totes, including 87 yards in the second half. The
rookie runner suffered a back injury but returned looking none the worse for
wear, displaying good vision and burst in the hole as he blasted off for dashes
of 33 and 31 yards. Michel's day would have been even bigger if not for several
penalties that negated long gallops. With Michel and Gronk healthy, the Patriots offense
is a much bigger beast to handle than we'd see from New England in recent
weeks.
3. Josh McCown started
for the injured Sam Darnold,
and threw the ball a whopping 45 times, completing 26 for 267 yards, a TD and
an interception. With zero run game, the feeble Jets relied
on short passes to move the ball. McCown was efficient early finding receivers
for yards after the catch, but off-target on everything deep. Once the Patriots defense
adjusted, the Jets offered
no response. The 39-year-old signal-caller isn't going to carry this ragtag
cast of characters. Falling to 3-8, there is little to be optimistic about for
the Darnold-less Jets.
The defense can't generate pressure (zero sacks) or stop the run (215 rushing
yards allowed). The offense is a stale hodgepodge of dinks. Todd Bowles' days
in New York appeared to be numbered, much to the pleasure of Jets fans
donning brown paper bag headwear at MetLife Stadium.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS 27, SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS 9
1. Jameis
Winston cemented his place as the Buccaneers'
starter -- at least for another week. Winston put in a solid performance
against the 49ers,
avoiding some of the mid-field stalls that have plagued Tampa Bay (4-7) in
recent games to pick up a much-needed win. For the first time this season,
Winston didn't throw an interception in completing 29 of 38 passes for 312
yards and two touchdowns for a 117.4 passer rating. It was Winston's best
performance of the season, coming against a San Francisco defense that entered
the game ranked 10th overall. While it's easy to imagine Ryan
Fitzpatrick putting up a winning effort against a 49ers defense
that was dealing with former first-round pick Reuben Foster's abrupt departure from the team, Winston did everything he
needed to in keeping Tampa Bay's faint flicker of a playoff hope alive.
2. While the quarterback
carousel in Tampa Bay appears to have stopped, the one in San Francisco might
be getting started. The promise Nick Mullens showed
in the 49ers'
dominant prime-time win over the Oakland
Raiders three weeks ago seemed like a distant memory against
the Bucs. Mullens struggled to piece drives together for the 49ers (2-9)
and was shaky in pressure situations as he connected on 18 for 32 passes for
221 yards, a touchdown and two picks. With Marquise
Goodwin and Pierre Garcon out,
Mullens hardly had any reliable receiving options outside of tight end George Kittle. Matt Breida's
impressive 106 yards rushing on 14 carries was the only real positive for
the 49ers on
offense. Coach Kyle Shanahan will have to figure out if having C.J. Beathard under
center for next week's game against the Seattle
Seahawks will serve the 49ers better
as they continue to trudge through the post-Jimmy
Garoppolo injury fog.
3. Mike Evans has
been a model of consistency for the Buccaneers.
On Sunday, he joined Randy Moss and A.J. Green as
the only wide receivers in NFL history to post five consecutive 1,000-yard
seasons to start their careers. Evans caught six passes on eight targets for
116 yards. He wasn't the only standout for the Bucs. Pass rusher Jason
Pierre-Paul became the first Tampa Bay player since Simeon Rice
in 2005 to record at least 10 sacks in a season when he smothered Mullens in
the second quarter.
BALTIMORE RAVENS 34, OAKLAND RAIDERS 17
1. The Ravens (6-5)
weren't armed with the element of surprise this time around, but they still
relied heavily on the ground game. It worked again, with the upstart Gus Edwards rushing
23 times for 118 yards and Lamar Jackson again
ripping up yardage, running 11 times for 71 and a touchdown. It wasn't the
emphatic effort of Week 11 against Cincinnati, but it was more than enough to
keep Baltimore's offense moving. That was important, too, because Jackson
didn't have the best day at the office when it came to throwing the ball. At
one point, he owned a line of 9 for 18 for 140 yards and two interceptions,
including an untimely and completely avoidable interception off a tipped pass
(a nice play by Oakland's Gareon Conley) that was lofted to the end zone as a
50-50 ball inside two minutes. Jackson ended up rebounding, finishing with a
final line of 14 for 25 for 178 yards, a touchdown and the two interceptions,
and it might have been even better had a long completion to John Brown not
been negated by a hold on fellow rookie Orlando Brown.
Jackson has a ways to go as a passer but is an undeniable weapon for the Ravens and
a main reason for their (and Edwards') success in the last two games.
2. For all the goodwill built
up by Oakland's decent start, Baltimore's Cyrus Jones wiped
it away with a 70-yard punt return to take a 10-7 lead. That remained the theme
for the rest of the game, that is, until the Raiders fell
apart late in an all-too-familiar fashion. This time, it was a Derek Carr sack
fumble, caused by Matt Judon (who
celebrated that and two sacks on the immediate prior plays by running into the
tunnel), recovered and returned for a touchdown by Terrell Suggs.
The Raiders (2-9)
show promise in small slivers of time, but they look much like the team they
are: One that has traded away two of its best players for draft picks.
Incremental improvement is all Oakland fans can hope for this season -- that,
and more fun plays made by Jared Cook.
Having said all of that, the
development of the Carr-Jon Gruden relationship remains something to watch. It
can produce long completions at times and maddening mistakes at others, but
their dynamic is vitally important to the team's future for obvious reasons.
Sunday was a decent example of how it can be fairly tumultuous at times.
3. Matt Judon is
a guy I've enjoyed watching play since he came into the league in 2016, yet
Sunday felt like it might have been his coming out party. He's been Baltimore's
best-kept secret for a year or so now, but recording three straight sacks will
get him plenty of national highlight-reel play and might make him a name
recalled by more than just Ravens fans
(or football nerds like us). These types of players are what makes Baltimore's
defense resilient enough to keep the team in most games, and sometimes,
effective enough to cause turnovers that decide them.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS 45, ARIZONA CARDINALS 10
1. The Cardinals jumped
out to a 10-0 lead, and then a scorching hot Philip Rivers stepped
on the gas pedal and never let up. Rivers established a single-game record
with 25
consecutive completions to start a game, as the Chargers scored
28 straight points in the second quarter and never looked back.
Rivers dissected the Cardinals with
well-placed passes, including two touchdown passes to wide receiver Mike Williams in
the end zone. Williams' first score came on a back shoulder throw where he
leaped and reached back to secure the ball and the second touchdown came as
Williams used his 6-foot-4 frame to snatch a pass close to the boundary line.
The Chargers pulled
Rivers from the game early in the fourth quarter and he finished his record
performance completing 28 of 29 passes for 259 yards and three touchdowns for a
138.4 passer rating. Rivers is a dark horse candidate for the league's MVP
award and deserves to be in the conversation.
2. The Chargers improved
to 8-3 on the season, but Sunday produced bad news. Running back Melvin Gordon suffered
a knee injury early in the third quarter and didn't finish the game. Television
replay showed a visibly upset Gordon on the trainer's table, and the broadcast
booth pointed out teammates came over to console the running back. Gordon, who
rushed for 61 yards and two touchdowns on the game, was shown walking to the
locker room with a towel over his head and the Chargers now
await results Monday's exams.
Gordon leads the Chargers in
rushing with 802 yards and nine touchdowns on 153 carries, adding 44 catches
for 453 yards and four touchdowns. Any potential lost time would deal a blow to
a team in the hunt for the postseason.
The Chargers have
a capable fill with Austin Ekeler,
who totaled 103 yards (68 receiving) and a rushing touchdown against the Cardinals.
While the second-year pro lacks Gordon's size and power, the 5-foot-10,
200-pound Ekeler is a capable, evidenced Sunday by a team-high 10 catches.
3. The Cardinals dropped
a third consecutive game and sit on a 2-9 record in what is a clear rebuild
process with first-year head coach Steve Wilks. Rookie quarterback Josh Rosen's
development ran into a buzz saw, though, as the Chargers limited
him to 105 yards passing on the game. If there was a bright spot to take away
from Arizona's game, it would be defensive tackle Robert
Nkemdiche, who totaled 2.5 sacks and eight tackles on the game.
CHICAGO BEARS 23, DETROIT LIONS 16
1. No Mitchell
Trubisky proved no problem for the Bears in
the second matchup against the Lions in
11 days. Backup quarterback Chase Daniel stepped
in for his third career start and completed an efficient 27 of 37 passes for
230 yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions.
Daniel's familiarity with head
coach Matt Nagy's offensive scheme allowed the signal-caller to quickly settle
in and connect with eight different receivers. And for the most part, Daniel
made good decisions and managed the game well by taking what the defense gave
him and picking his spots to throw it deep. His best pass came on a 14-yard
touchdown to running back Tarik Cohen out
of the backfield. Cohen easily beat cornerback Nevin Lawson and
Daniel dropped the ball inside with touch where Cohen could haul it in as he
crossed the goal line. Daniel even caught an 8-yard pass.
Should Trubisky's right
shoulder injury keep him out of Week 13's game against the New York
Giants, the Bears are
in a good place if Daniel needs to start again.
Thursday's victory extended
the Bears'
winning streak to five games and the team improved to 8-3 on the season
following the two-game sweep against their divisional foe.
2. With Daniel playing clean
football, the Bears defense
complemented him well by holding the Lions offense
in check for most of the game. The Lions actually outgained the Bears in
total net yards of offense (333-264), but Detroit couldn't overcome costly
mistakes against one of the league's best defensive units.
As a team, the Bears totaled
two sacks and four quarterback hits. The Bears then flexed their muscles
by securing two game-changing turnovers in a 4:53 span late in the fourth
quarter. The first came with the game tied at 16 and the Lions lining
up for a first-down play. At the snap, safety Eddie Jackson read
the play perfectly and jumped Lions quarterback Matthew
Stafford's pass to pick it off and return it 41 yards for a
touchdown. The second interception occurred late in the fourth quarter with
the Lions driving
for a potential game-tying scenario. Bears cornerback Kyle Fuller,
however, picked off Stafford in the end zone.
3. The Lions were
without two big weapons on offense in rookie running back Kerryon
Johnson (knee) and wide receiver Marvin Jones Jr.
(knee), and it appeared to affect the play calling. The Lions played
conservatively through the first half, and Stafford completed 17 of 23 passes
for 92 yards, averaging a paltry 4 yards per pass, through the team's first
seven possessions of the game.
With the Lions trailing
9-7 midway through the third quarter, Stafford began to push down the field and
connected with wide receiver Kenny
Golladay for 43 yards to set up running back LeGarrette
Blount's second touchdown run.
Stafford finished the game
completing 28 of 38 passes for 236 yards, but made mistakes at the worst times
with the pick-six and the game-sealing interception. The loss dropped the Lions to
4-7 on the season and entrenched in last place in the NFC North.
DALLAS COWBOYS 31, WASHINGTON
REDSKINS 23
1. This game highlighted the
big play. Early on, it was the back-and-forth nature of big plays that kept it interesting;
with Trey Quinn setting
the table for his own touchdown reception with a long punt return. Another long
run put Washington in position to add more points when down by multiple scores.
And of course, there was Amari Cooper's
second-half explosion, first on a 40-yard touchdown reception created by a
well-run route, and later on a 91-yard catch in which he made a pair of
defenders miss and outran fellow former Alabama star Ha Ha
Clinton-Dix to the end zone. It was a pleasant surprise from
two teams that haven't really won with the big play for much of the season.
2. Cooper is such a massive
addition for this Cowboys team,
which has turned almost completely around since his arrival at the trading
deadline. His inclusion has allowed Dallas to spread the offense out more,
resulting in an increase in usage of 11 personnel (more on that
here), more space for Ezekiel
Elliott to work and more places for Prescott to go with the
ball. Cooper's aforementioned pair of big plays were the clear difference
Thursday, but his impact goes beyond the big play -- and has the Cowboys
looking night-and-day better in both production and capability moving forward.
Look no further than the play of Prescott for proof.
3. This game was billed as one
that could have been decisive in the way the NFC East shakes out, and it feels
even more like a fork in the road for two teams after the fact. What was a
close game quickly became a blowout, and with it went the Redskins'
reputation as a threatening opponent. Without Alex Smith,
Washington becomes a team that needs to grab an early lead and pound it out on
the ground with Adrian
Peterson, or else run the risk of placing the ball in the hands
of Colt McCoy.
Pro tip: You don't want to do that. We still have more than a month of football
left, but this sure felt like Washington's first-place swan song.
Dallas, meanwhile, is rolling.
I won't venture to say I have them making a deep run in the playoffs, but they
look like the clear favorite to win the division at this point, with none of
the other three members figuring out enough to move beyond a trot. The Cowboys,
though, are galloping and seem to be getting more comfortable with their own
identity with each week.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 31, ATLANTA
FALCONS 17
1. Saints cornerback Marshon
Lattimore pointed out Tuesday in the locker room that the first
game between these two team was a long time ago. The message? This Saints defense
isn't the same unit that allowed 37 points to the Falcons in
Week 2.
The Saints defense
set the tone in the first half; limiting Atlanta's ground game to 12 yards
rushing on eight carries and making the Falcons one
dimensional by jumping out to 17-3 halftime lead. The Saints
totaled a season-high six sacks in a single game, garnered 13 quarterback hits,
recovered three fumbles and notched an interception.
Defensive tackle Sheldon
Rankins led the defensive charge by recording his seventh sack
of the season. He has a three-game streak with at least one sack. Saints free
safety Marcus
Williams arguably came up with the defensive play of the game when
he recovered the fumble off his own strip-sack to turn back the Falcons deep
in Saints territory.
In a modern NFL era where
offenses shine, such as the Saints,
the team in The Big Easy is showing they can play complementary football on
both sides of the ball. The Saints have
allowed 38 points over the past three games, an average of 12.6 per game,
behind their defense and extended a winning streak to league-best 10 games.
2. Saints quarterback Drew Brees
showed for a second straight game he doesn't have to rely heavily on wide receiver Michael
Thomas in the passing game. Sure, Thomas is the clear No. 1
threat and he had his moments, including a circus catch between three
defenders, but Brees made sure to get others involved.
With Brandon
Marshall and rookie Tre'Quan
Smith (foot) inactive, opportunities were there for second-year
pro Austin Carr, Tommylee
Lewis, rookie Keith
Kirkwood and tight end Dan Arnold.
Carr recorded a touchdown, his second in as many weeks; Lewis, fresh off
injured receiver, hauled in a 28-yard score; and Arnold, whom the Saints
converted from wide receiver to tight end during the offseason, came up with a
highlight-reel worthy diving 25-yard grab; and Kirkwood snagged a 5-yard
touchdown.
Know what really makes their
productions unique? All four entered the league as undrafted free agents.
3. For all the attention from
a wild game between the Los Angeles
Rams and Kansas City
Chiefs in Week 11, make no mistake the Saints are
hands down the best team in the league and they don't need to do it with
explosive production every week.
Against the Falcons,
Brees threw for a modest 174 yards to go along with four touchdowns, and threw
to eight different players. The running game gashed the Falcons with
150 yards on 31 carries. Second-year running back Alvin Kamara paced
the attack on the ground with 89 yards on 14 attempts, while Mark Ingram chipped
in with 48 yards rushing.
And as pointed out earlier,
the defense played exceptional. When the Saints are
firing on all cylinders like they were Thursday night, this is an extremely
tough team to beat.
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