HERE'S WHAT I LEARNED FROM
WEEK 15 SLATE OF GAMES
PITTSBURGH STEELERS 17, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 10
1. The Steelers snapped
a five-game losing streak, including the postseason, against the Patriots with
a hard-fought win and improved to 8-5-1 on the season. The Steelers did
it with a stellar running game anchored by rookie Jaylen
Samuels, who exploded with 142 yards on 19 carries, and a stout
defensive effort, which limited one of the NFL's top offenses to 10 points.
And, of course, Ben
Roethlisberger outdueled Tom Brady when
it mattered most, engineering a scoring drive with less than three minutes
remaining in regulation. The Steelers'
win kept them as the No. 4 seed atop the AFC North, but also affected the AFC playoff
picture. The Patriots fell
out of the No. 2 seed to No. 3 after being leapfrogged by the Houston
Texans, who improved to 10-4 with a win earlier in the afternoon.
2. With the postseason looming on the horizon, would anyone
be surprised if the Steelers seriously
considered going away from kicker Chris Boswell?
Sure, he nailed a 48-yard kick late in the fourth quarter to extend the lead to
17-10, but Boswell also missed a 32-yard field goal attempt, which sailed wide
right in the third quarter. Pittsburgh signaled a vote of confidence in Boswell
after sticking with him despite bringing in kicker Kai Forbath the
past week. But Boswell, who made the Pro Bowl last
year and signed a four-year extension during the offseason, has missed seven
kicks this season, including two in a Week 15 loss. The Steelers would
be playing with fire surrounding Boswell's inconsistency if the team advances
to play in January, where close games typically await in the march to the Super Bowl.
3. With an 8-yard completion to running back Rex Burkhead in
the third quarter, Brady became the fourth quarterback in league history to throw for 70,000
career yards, joining all-time leader Drew Brees(73,908),
Peyton Manning (71,940) and Hall of Famer Brett Favre (71,838). That was the
good to come out of Sunday for the Patriots in
a sea of bad. From dropped passes to a staggering 14 penalties for 106 yards,
the Patriots had
plenty of reasons to bemoan the defeat. Sunday's loss marked the first time
the Patriots have
lost consecutive games in December since 2002.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 30, LOS ANGELES RAMS 23
1. Without Carson Wentz and
with their playoff chances hanging by a thread, Nick Foles and
the Eagles returned
to the L.A. Memorial Coliseum, where their stunning Super Bowl run began last season, and
pulled off one of this year's most stunning results. Philadelphia handed Los
Angeles its first loss at home in 2018 with a balanced effort laden with big
plays and big hits. Alshon
Jeffery worked Aqib Talib en
route to a season-high 160 yards on eight receptions. The Eagles'
maligned offensive line held Defensive Player of the Year favorite Aaron Donald and Dante Fowler in
check. Members of Philly's injury-riddled secondary, led by Rasul Douglas and Avonte Maddox,
played outside themselves against what was one of the league's
most dynamic offenses. The Eagles were
up by 17 points in the fourth quarter before Los Angeles mounted a slow-motion
comeback. Philly nearly blew the three-score lead in the final frame when Jake Elliott missed
what would have been a game-sealing field goal with just over a minute to go.
But the Rams mismanaged
the clock on the ensuing drive, failing to get out of bounds on two plays,
and Jared Goff's
last-gasp 18-yard heave to Josh Reynolds flew
high and out of the end zone with Maddox in coverage. In front of a Coliseum
crowd filled with Eagles supporters,
Philly rediscovered the magic and unpredictability that propelled last year's
run with a familiar face in Foles at the helm. For the underdog Iggles, it
might be déjà vu all over again.
2. The Rams team
that went shot for shot with the Chiefs in
mid-November and inspired writers worldwide to muse that the NFL would never be
the same and that Sean McVay had remade the game in his own image, hasn't shown
up for three weeks. Post-bye, Los Angeles has been a shadow of its former self
on offense, averaging just 324 yards per game against Detroit, Chicago and
Philadelphia. Jared Goff
was an inaccurate turnover machine again on Sunday night, throwing two picks
and regularly missing wide-open receivers. The Eagles swarmed
the quarterback like the Bears did
one week prior, sacking Goff just once but hitting him seven times and forcing
a silly game-changing interception. L.A. targeted Todd Gurley (124
yards) way more out of the gate than it did in Chicago (10 touches in the first
quarter), but went away from him after he suffered a knee injury in the third
quarter. Los Angeles finished with an unhealthy 56:18 pass-run balance. By the
time the Rams were
able to string together a few scoring drives, time was running out and players
weren't sharp. JoJo Natson fumbled
a punt that nearly killed Los Angeles' comeback chances. Gerald
Everett and Gurley both made crushing decisions on the final
drive to stay in-bounds to gain negligible yardage. As McVay told reporters,
"We've got to figure this out and figure it out fast." The playoffs
are but four or, if L.A. isn't careful, three weeks away.
3. Philly saved its playoff chances with Sunday's shocking
win. The 7-7 Eagles kept
pace with the Vikings (7-6-1)
and Redskins (7-7)
in pursuit of the sixth seed; the 6-7 Panthers play
host to New Orleans on Monday night. Philadelphia closes with Houston at home
and Washington on the road, but needs Minnesota to lose one of its final games
(at DET, CHI) to sneak into the dance. Meanwhile, the 11-3 Rams lost
ground in pursuit of home-field advantage in the NFC. Already behind New
Orleans due to a head-to-head tiebreaker, Sunday's loss puts L.A. at risk of
not only losing the No. 1 seed, but falling out of a first-round bye. Chicago
is just one game behind the Rams at
10-4 and also holds the tiebreaker. But Los Angeles finishes with the cellar-dwelling Cardinals and 49ers and
is unlikely to lose another game, save for another shocker like that on Sunday
evening.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS 26, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 23 (OT)
1. Just two weeks after throttling the 49ers in
Seattle, the Seahawks blew
an opportunity to clinch a playoff berth by falling to their division rivals in
Santa Clara. After scoring a touchdown on their opening drive, the Seahawks spent
the rest of the game playing from behind because of a missed Sebastian
Janikowski extra point and ensuing Niners kick return TD.
Behind Chris Carson (148
total yards) and Doug Baldwin (77
yards, 2 TDs), the Seahawks eventually
pulled back when Janikowski kicked a game-tying field goal with five minutes
left to lock things at 23. In overtime, Seattle got the ball first and nearly
broke through with a deep pass to J.D. McKissic.
But the play was called back thanks to a holding penalty by Ethan Pocic.
A pass interference foul on third down on San Francisco's next possession led
directly to Robbie Gould's
game-winning 36-yard field goal. Those game-changing flags were two of 14
penalties committed by Seattle for a franchise-record 148 yards. After looking
so assuredly in the postseason picture, the Seahawks (8-6)
now find themselves just a half-game ahead of Minnesota and one game ahead of
Washington in the wild-card race. Up next: "Sunday Night Football" in
Seattle against the 11-3 Chiefs,
who could potentially clinch the AFC West with a win.
2. The 49ers'
upset victory was their first win over Seattle since December of 2013, when Jim
Harbaugh was roaming the sidelines, Colin Kaepernick was under center and fans
were perched up high at the Stick. But enough about the past. The future looked
bright in rainy Santa Clara. San Francisco saw impressive afternoons from its
young studs in the front seven. Buckner reached 11 sacks on the season
with a dynamic two-sack, 10-tackle performance. Fred Warner was
special again in the middle of Robert Saleh's defense. Unfortunately for
general manager John Lynch and Niners brass, San Francisco did lose a lot of
ground in the race for the draft's No. 1 overall pick. After entering Sunday
with the top slot, the 49ers (4-10)
fell to fourth in line for the first selection with the win, behind the Cardinals (3-11), Raiders (3-11)
and Jets (4-10).
One step forward, one step back, I suppose.
3. Seattle's defense took a minor step backward after an
elite evening against the Vikings on
Monday. The Seahawks struggled
to stop Nick Mullens for
the second time in three weeks; the rookie QB completed 65 percent of his
passes for 689 yards in two games against Seattle. Poor coverage and a slip
by Tedric
Thompson led to San Francisco's first offensive
touchdown. Jarran Reed and Clark
got to Mullens three times in the second half, but the pressure was too little,
too late. Oh, and the aforementioned penalties. On one San Francisco scoring
drive, Seattle committed three straight 15-yard penalties. If Seattle had this
much trouble against Mullens and company, how will the unit fare against MVP
favorite Patrick
Mahomes and a desperate Chiefs offense?
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 23, DALLAS COWBOYS 0
1. Overseeing a steadily improving defense that has played
lights out for three consecutive weeks, Colts coordinator
Matt Eberflus should start garnering serious consideration for NFL Assistant
Coach of the Year honors. Calling the shots against former mentor Rod
Marinelli, Eberflus authored the first shutout of the Cowboys since
Bill Parcells was running the show in 2003. Darius
Leonard was the decisive winner in his Defensive Rookie of the
Year clash with Dallas' Leighton
Vander Esch, racking up 11 tackles to go with a pair of well-timed
pass deflections in coverage. Reigning AFC Defensive Player of the Week Denico Autry remained
white hot, blocking a field goal, forcing a key holding penalty and adding his
sixth sack in the past three games. Indianapolis' no-name secondary deserves
credit as well, with the cornerback trio of Pierre Desir, Kenny Moore and Quincy Wilson making
wide receivers vanish for the fifth straight week.
2. All of the Cowboys'
losses this season have come against mobile quarterbacks, and this game was no
exception. Andrew Luck danced
out of trouble in the pocket and extended plays with his scrambling ability in
an up-tempo attack that kept Vander Esch & Co. off balance. Marlon Mack was
the star of the show, gashing Dallas' third-ranked run defense for 149 yards
and a pair of touchdowns on 28 touches. Mack is the first Indianapolis running
back with three 100-yard rushing performances in the same season since Joseph
Addai in 2007. Credit a physical Colts offensive
line, which raised its level of play with star center Ryan Kelly back
in the lineup for the first time in a month. The division-rival Titans also
pitched a shutout on Sunday, which means the Indianapolis-Tennessee matchup in
the season finale has a chance to be flexed to Sunday Night Football with
the AFC's No. 6 seed potentially on the line.
3. The Cowboys dominated
time of possession before falling behind 17-0 early in the third quarter. Ezekiel
Elliott's chain-moving attack churned out drives of 10, 15 and 14
plays to start the game, with nothing to show for the effort. Brett Maher's
field goal was blocked on the opening drive. Fullback Jamize
Olawale botched an easy touchdown catch on the second series,
giving Margus Hunt a
chance to stuff Elliott in the backfield on fourth down. Tyquan Lewis,
one of four second-round rookies for the Colts,
sacked Dak Prescott to
end the third possession, pushing Dallas out of field-goal territory. An
offensive line already playing without All-Pro left guard Zack Martin (knee)
lost starting right guard Xavier
Su'a-Filo to an eye contusion in the first quarter. The Cowboys remain
heavy favorites to capture the NFC East title, but will continue to have
trouble finishing drives until the offensive line coalesces.
CHICAGO BEARS 24, GREEN BAY PACKERS 17
1. From the cellar to the penthouse. The Bears clinched
the NFC North division title for the first time since 2010 by silencing Aaron Rodgers and
the division-rival Packers at
Soldier Field. In 14 of the past 15 years, at least one team has finished in
first place in its division the season after finishing in last or tied for last
place. Chicago finished last in the division each of the last four seasons.
These aren't those Bears.
Matt Nagy's team beat the Packers at
Soldier Field for first since 2010 season. It didn't come easy. A questionable
Chicago fake punt was stuffed to help the Packers erase
an 11-point halftime lead. With reminders of their Week 1 collapse to Rodgers
floating in the Windy City air, the Bears didn't
wilt this time around. Mitchell
Trubisky, who performed well all day extending plays and finding targets
downfield, helped lead two fourth-quarter scoring drives as the Bears stiff-arm
their way to the division crown. One of the most balanced teams in the NFL,
Chicago will be a tough out in January.
2. Aaron Rodgers'
NFL record streak of 402 passing attempts without an interception was snapped
late in the fourth quarter. Bears safety Eddie Jackson swiped
a tipped pass in the end zone as the Packers were threatening to cut into
a double-digit lead. It's fitting that Rodgers' streak ended on the day Green
Bay's season was squashed. There will be no R-E-L-A-X, magical run this time
around. With Aaron Jones leaving
early with a knee injury, the Packers ground
game did little, forcing Rodgers to throw into the teeth of one of the best
defenses in the NFL. The signal-caller, who appeared to tweak his leg on a Hail
Mary attempt at the end of the first half, was off-target most of the day,
completing just 59.5 percent of 42 attempts for 274 yards and no touchdowns.
Rodgers couldn't find the range deep at all, missing several open wideouts that
could have changed the tenor of the contest. Officially eliminated from the
postseason, Green Bay can now look toward the rest of the offseason changes
that are coming.
3. Credit Vic Fangio's defense with discombobulating
Rodgers. The Bears gobbled
up five sacks, taking advantage of an injured Green Bay offensive line. Khalil Mack continued
his dominant ways, compiling 2.5 sacks -- including half of one that he earned
with his back (seriously) -- two tackles for loss and three QB hits. Leonard Floyd,
who has become a perfect complement to Mack, also generated two sacks. Rookie
linebacker Roquan Smith was
all over the field, snatching 10 tackles. Kyle Fuller smothered Davante Adams much
of the game, earning two PBUs. And Jackson earned the pick to go with two pass
breakups. At every level, the Bears dominated
the Packers.
Defenses travel in the playoffs, even in today's high-flying NFL, and the Bears boast
one that will make noise when the tournament starts.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS 41, MIAMI DOLPHINS 17
1. What does a Kevin Stefanski offense look like? The sample
size is limited, but Minnesota's newly anointed play-caller gave coach Mike
Zimmer what he asked for right away, as the backfield pairing of Dalvin Cook and Latavius
Murray rotated touches on a super-crisp opening drive capped by
a 13-yard scoring strike from Kirk Cousins to Stefon Diggs.
That doubled as an effective tone-setter as the run-happy Vikings gashed
Miami for 220 rushing yards while Cook piled up 88 total yards in the first
quarter alone en route to a brilliant 20-touch, 163-yard, two-score afternoon
in a must-win affair for the Vikings.
A killer mistake by Cousins -- we'll get to that below -- helped the Dolphins chip
away at a 21-0 Minnesota lead, but the Vikings worked
through their issues to steamroll Miami for 418 total yards in a must-win
affair.
2. The glow of the "Miami Miracle" failed to
follow the 'Fins to Minnesota as this AFC hopeful looked utterly lost out of
the gate before losing Frank Gore to an ankle injury. Miami at one stage had 15 total plays to
Minnesota's 15 first downs, but the game shifted when rookie safety Minkah
Fitzpatrick took a Cousins pick 50 yards for a score.
First-year runner Kalen Ballage spun
hope and masked the loss of Gore with a stunning 75-yard scoring gallop to open
the third quarter, but too many drives went nowhere as Ryan
Tannehill was tossed about like Raggedy Ann for an outrageous
nine sacks against a dazed-and-confused Miami line. Going a putrid 2 for 12 on
third down with just 193 total yards and no pass catcher topping 30 yards
through the air, Sunday was another reminder these Dolphins just
aren't the same team on the road.
3. The win leaves the Vikings (7-6-1)
locked in as the NFC's sixth seed with a road bout in Detroit before closing
the year at home against the Bears.
The loss for Miami (7-7) leaves this hot-and-cold operation backed into a
corner with a home tilt next week against Jacksonville before a road finale
with the Bills.
BUFFALO BILLS 14, DETROIT LIONS 13
1. Josh Allen hit
a streaking Robert Foster for
a 42-yard touchdown that gave the Buffalo Bills a
14-13 lead early in the fourth quarter, and the Bills would
hold on too late to earn their fifth win of the season. Given the expectations
for Buffalo entering the season, Sean McDermott should warrant some Coach of
the Year consideration. It's not always pretty with Josh Allen,
but the strong-armed rookie is making strides each week. With the Lions focusing
on not allowing Allen to scramble this week (16 yards on nine carries with a
three-yard TD scamper), the No. 7 overall pick was forced to move the ball with
his arm. Allen's accuracy remains an issue, especially deep. The Bills could
have blown the game open early had the rookie been slightly more accurate on a
few deep shots. However, his willingness to fling it deep is refreshing, and he
displayed his cannon arm firing the ball into a few tight windows. His numbers
were pedestrian -- 13/26, 204 yards, TD -- but Allen continues to display
growth getting through his progressions and raising the play of his gaggle of
No. 2 and 3 receivers. The development the past few weeks from Allen has been
encouraging, and he'll give Bills fans
something to watch the last two weeks heading into the offseason.
2. It was all Kenny
Golladay in the first half. The rising receiver made a bevy of
strong catches down the field. The Lions wideout
posturized Bills DBs
in the first two quarters, earning four catches for a career-high 115 yards,
the most by a Lions receiver
in the first half since Calvin Johnson recorded 131 yards in 2014 versus
the Giants.
Golladay finished with seven catches for 146 yards. As Buffalo quieted the wideout
in the second half, the Lions offense
went in the tank. Matthew
Stafford and the Lions earned
117 yards in the final two quarters on six possessions, including three
three-and-outs and a missed go-ahead field-goal attempt. The anemic second half
was a fitting way for Detroit to see its team eliminated from the playoffs.
Stafford and the offense have struggled to move the ball consistently since
trading Golden Tate and Kerryon
Johnson suffering an injury. The Lions will
need to upgrade the skill position next season and could be looking for a new
offensive coordinator if Coach Matt Patricia decides to replace offensive
coordinator Jim Bob Cooter.
3. The Bills earned
the win despite riding with their fourth-string running back much of the game.
With LeSean McCoy and Chris Ivory inactive
due to injury, Marcus Murphy got
the start but left early with a dislocated elbow. That left rookie Keith Ford as
the only running back active. At one point Ford went down with an ankle injury,
giving new meaning to a Zero RBs strategy. Ford returned later after getting
taped up. The running back situation underscores the need for Buffalo to buffer
Allen with playmakers across the offense this offseason.
TENNESSEE TITANS 17, NEW YORK GIANTS 0
1. Rain, wind and cold set up perfect conditions for
the Titans to
impose a physical will on the overmatched Giants.
Tennessee did it on both sides of the ball, as Derrick Henry paced
a punishing ground attack with 170 yards and two touchdowns on 33 carries and
the defense limited the Giants to
260 total net yards of offense. Henry's game marked a second consecutive
150-plus yards effort, and he allowed the Titans to
hold an overwhelming 35:52-24:39 edge in time of possession. Defensively,
the Titans swarmed
a Giants offense
without wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.
(quad), and limited rookie running back Saquon
Barkley to 31 yards rushing on 14 carries. The win improved
the Titans to
8-6 on the season and kept Tennessee in the hunt for the playoffs with two
games to go.
2. Titans quarterback Marcus
Mariota contributed to the physical nature of the game early in
the second quarter with a sinus-clearing block on Giants linebacker Alec Ogletree to
spring Henry down the left sideline. With no regard for himself, Mariota
launched with his right shoulder exposed to level Ogletree. This is the kind of
play from a quarterback that will forever endear him to teammates.
3. The Giants entered
Week 15 mathematically alive for the postseason, so it would be reasonable to
expect a motivated effort. The uninspiring performance Sunday, however,
eliminated the Giants and
captured everything that went wrong the entire 2018 regular season. The Giants were
undisciplined, totaling 10 penalties for 58 yards. Offensively,
quarterback Eli Manning and
Co. failed to generate any consistency, as receivers dropped passes and the
unit went 3 for 16 on third-down attempts. Manning also had two back-breaking
turnovers (interception and fumble) in the third quarter to seal New York's
fate. Defensively, the Giants couldn't
stop the Titans'
ground game, which totaled 216 yards on 44, carries. The loss dropped the Giants to
5-9 on the season and left them preparing for offseason vacations.
BALTIMORE RAVENS 20, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS 12
1. A sloppy Sunday in Baltimore almost became the Ravens'
undoing, but ultimately, it was what these new Ravens have
become -- a running team -- that propelled them to victory. After Tampa Bay
broke the scoreless tie with a touchdown, it didn't find that patch of grass
for the rest of the game thanks to a Baltimore defense that woke up, and
a Ravens offense
that dominated time of possession by riding the ground attack. Gus Edwards rushed
19 times for 104 yards (which included a 26-yard run right before the
two-minute warning to seal the win) and a touchdown. Lamar Jackson ran
18 times for 95 yards, and frequently kept the ball in Baltimore's hands by
scrambling past the line to gain on third down. It had to be frustrating for
Tampa Bay, which had defensive stops in reach many times and couldn't secure
them.
It also spoke to the value of Jackson, who was playing in
unfavorable, wet conditions as he continues on his path to comfort in the
passing game, yet was the main reason Baltimore defeated Tampa Bay. His passing
touchdown was a shovel pass to Chris Moore on
a well-timed misdirection jet sweep play, and perfectly summed up the day,
which the Ravens won
by being the old-school, grind-it-out AFC North team it has morphed into in the
last month -- but with a modern flair.
2. Baltimore deserves some credit for its resilience. Fresh
off a heartbreaking loss to the Chiefs,
the Ravens looked
flat early and appeared primed for an upset defeat that would have seriously
hindered their postseason aspirations. They instead bounced back, shaken from
their slumber by Tampa Bay's early scores. Baltimore rode on the shoulders of
Jackson, and then relied on its stout defense in key moments. Marlon
Humphrey's timely interception and the defense's two-play stonewall
of Peyton Barber and
a Winston attempt to Chris Godwin produced
a huge turnover on downs that all but ended Tampa Bay's chances.
3. There aren't many positives for the Buccaneers from
this game, but we can dig a couple out of the offense. Barber ran well (19
carries, 85 yards, one TD) against the league's No. 4 rushing defense; Mike Evans broke
120 receiving yards on just four catches, thanks in part to a 64-yard
reception; and Godwin exists on this team, even though he didn't have a catch
Sunday. Unfortunately, the unit's inability to muster much of anything and
failure to capitalize on Ravens fumbles
put Tampa Bay's defense in a difficult spot, tasked with stopping a
productive Ravens rushing
attack (242 yards on 49 attempts) on a wet afternoon. This team will have a
different coach next season and return a healthy amount of promising talent.
Here's to hoping they can do something with it.
CINCINNATI BENGALS 30, OAKLAND RAIDERS 16
1. The Bengals'
ended their five-game losing skid, but lost yet another key starter in the
process. Shortly after becoming the first Cincinnati wideout not named A.J. Green to
reach the 1,000-yard mark since Chad Johnson in 2009, breakout receiver Tyler Boyd went
down with a knee injury. Boyd and second-year tailback Joe Mixon (130
yards and a pair of touchdowns on 29 touches) have carried the offense,
emerging as nucleus players with Green and starting quarterback Andy Dalton lost
to injured reserve for the final month of a lost season.
2. After falling to last place in many key stats entering
December, the Bengals defense
has stiffened in back-to-back weeks with head coach Marvin Lewis calling the
plays and veteran linebacker Vontaze
Burfict sidelined by a concussion. In addition to handling
blocking duties in short-yardage situations on offense, rookie pass
rusher Sam Hubbard recorded
two sacks and a third hit on Derek Carr to
lead a spirited defensive effort. All-Pro Geno Atkins pitched
in with three sacks of his own, bringing his season total to 10. Considering
the concussion issues and his declining level of play, Burfict's roster spot
might just be in jeopardy for 2019.
3. Playing without both starting guards, the Raiders shot
themselves in the foot with ongoing fumbling issues. Derek Carr lost
his career-high sixth of the season while scatback Jalen Richard dropped
his second in three weeks. Recently pilfered from Baltimore's practice squad,
tight end Darren Waller was
a bright spot for Oakland, rushing once for 21 yards and hauling in a Carr pass
for another 44 yards. Waller is the great grandson of jazz legend Fats Waller.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS 16, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 13
1. Just enough from the team-trotting Josh Johnson and
a trio of field goals from Dustin Hopkins,
including a 36-yard game-winner with no time left, propelled the Redskins to
a 16-13 triumph over the host Jaguars in
a game that kept Washington's slim postseason hopes alive and served as a
showcase of offensive ineptitude. Alas it is Week 15, so it's that time of year
when quarterbacks such as Johnson, starting for the first time since 2011, and Jacksonville's Cody Kessler,
closing out a disastrous season for the Jaguars while
the much-maligned Blake Bortles continues
to ride the pine, find themselves on the field and in our living rooms. In the
matchup of quarterbacks you could have never predicted would've faced off at
the season's genesis, it was Johnson, playing for his fourth NFL squad, who did
just enough to give his team the win. Better yet, it's more than likely he did
less wrong and that's why he was celebrating following Hopkins' final field
goal, dropping to the field and slapping his throwing hand on
the turf in celebration. Like all the stats in this one, Johnson's were modest
(being polite) as he completed 16 of 25 passes for 151 yards and the game's
only offensive touchdown (a 6-yard score to Jeremy
Sprinkle with 5:52 to go in the game to tie it at 13), while
rushing for 49 yards in nine carries. Meanwhile, Kessler struggled to the tune
of throwing for just 57 yards and an interception, while scrambling for 68
yards but also giving up a fumble. In the end, it was the two turnovers from
Kessler and none for Johnson that truly told the tale.
2. For 60 minutes Sunday, it was an exercise in offensive
futility. As the teams entered halftime with Jacksonville leading, 10-3,
following a 74-yard Dede Westbrook punt
return that was far and away the most exciting play of the game, the teams had
combined for some simply horrendous statistics. Ugly incompletions and sparse
connections colored the day for Johnson, Washington's fourth starting QB of the
year, and Kessler with the squads combining for 153 total yards of offense and
eight first downs -- season lows for the league through the first half.
Obviously some praise must go to the defenses, but this was truly an offensive
display.
3. During an injury-plagued season, the Redskins finally
snapped a four-game losing streak, their longest since 2014. But the Jaguars'
woes continued in their 2018 home finale as they lost their second in a row and
ninth over the last 10. This was more than likely Bortles' last time appearing
in a Jags' uniform on their home field and might well be Doug Marrone's final home game with
Jacksonville as the team's failure to get anything going on offense continued
as it has all year as it scored 20 or fewer points for the 10th time and
couldn't find the end zone.
ATLANTA FALCONS 40, ARIZONA CARDINALS 14
1. This long-hamstrung Falcons offense
finally woke from its slumber against the horrifyingly lost Cardinals.
Atlanta (5-9) found a heartbeat in the backfield when Tevin Coleman (145
yards on the ground) ripped off a 65-yard gallop to set up an early field goal
before burying the Cardinals with
a 43-yard scoring burst midway through the third frame. Coleman also had a
44-yard touchdown romp called back by penalty. Through the air, Matt Ryan leaned
on Julio Jones,
who managed 82 yards off six grabs but also spent time on the sideline with a
rib injury. It was discouraging to see Atlanta settle for field goals on a pair
of drives that ended at Arizona's 14- and 7-yard line, but those kicks also
helped forge a 26-7 halftime lead against a Cardinals (3-11)
team missing the DNA to forge a comeback.
2. The Cardinals might
be a lost cause, but Arizona fans still have something to care about in Josh Rosen.
The rookie passer authored one of his finest drives all year with an
eight-play, 64-yard march highlighted by a deep shot to running back David Johnson,
who capped that march with a 1-yard scoring burst. Disaster struck on the
following series, though, as a Rosen pass was tipped by Vic Beasley into
the waiting arms of linebacker Deion Jones,
who raced 41 yards to the house. Two drives later, Rosen lost a fumble when he
was blasted by Atlanta's Grady Jarrett,
which set up a quick Falcons score
for a 17-7 lead. Behind one of the league's shoddiest lines, Rosen took too
many violent shots from a slew of Falcons free
rushers, threw a second pick and wound up mercy-benched for Mike Glennon inside
an offense that managed less than 300 total yards for 12th time this season.
The Cardinals desperately must find a way to nurture and grow this young
player, which starts with a less disastrous front five and a long look in the
mirror about the coaches in place around him.
BROWNS 17, BRONCOS 16
1. Saturday night's game wasn't pretty by any stretch of the
imagination, but the Browns have
now won four of their last five games to improve to 6-7-1 and remain
mathematically alive for the playoffs. The Browns won
their Week 15 matchup with timely plays on both sides of the football.
Rookie quarterback Baker Mayfield got it going early with
an incredible 31-yard touchdown pass to Breshad
Perriman, and rookie running back Chubb totaled 100 yards
rushing on 20 carries. Mayfield finished the game with two touchdowns,
including what proved to the game winner in the fourth quarter on a 2-yard toss
to rookie Antonio Callaway. Mayfield also snapped a
personal bad streak. He had an interception and a lost fumble, and the Browns were
previously 0-3 when he totaled two-plus giveaways in a game. Make that 1-3 now.
Meanwhile, the Browns'
defense deserves plenty of credit for coming up big in the fourth quarter with
an interception and a sack to end the game. Cleveland totaled two
interceptions, two sacks and seven quarterback hits. They also held the Broncos to
270 net total yards of offense, almost 89 yards below their per game average.
2. Speaking of Chubb, the rookie running back got stronger
in the second half, as 77 of his came after halftime. Chubb's 40-yard run with
4:35 remaining in the game helped the Browns eat
up precious time off the clock before the team turned it over on downs with
less than two minutes. Chubb's third 100-plus-yard performance gives him 860
rushing yards on the season, leaving him a very attainable 140 yards shy of a
1,000-yard campaign with two games to go.
3. After a 24-yard rushing effort on 14 carries, one can't
help but wonder what in the world has happened to Broncos running
back Phillip Lindsay in the past two games?
And it's not like Lindsay didn't have a good matchup, as the Browns entered
Week 15 ranked 28th against the run. In Denver's three-game winning streak from
Weeks 11-13, Lindsay rushed for 346 yards and five touchdowns on 44 carries.
But in the past two games, the rookie running back has totaled 54 yards rushing
and a touchdown on 28 carries, averaging a paltry 1.9 yards per attempt. It's
probably no coincidence the Broncos have
lost two straight games with an absent ground attack to drop to 6-8 on the
season, and Saturday night's defeat places Denver in a gaping hole for the
postseason.
TEXANS 29, JETS 22
1. The Texans made
this game tougher than what they probably wanted. The offense as a whole
struggled and losing running back Lamar Miller to
an ankle injury early in the game didn't help. But Houston can thank wide
receiver DeAndre Hopkins for bailing them out
and helping the team improve to 10-4 on the season. Hopkins was a monster,
totaling 10 catches for 170 yards and two highlight-reel touchdowns. To put his
numbers in perspective, the Texans totaled 286 net yards of offense,
meaning Hopkins accounted for 59 percent of the production.
Hopkins showed off his speed on a 45-yard touchdown catch
when he streaked down the middle of the field and split the defense, and
displayed his tremendous hands on a 14-yard circus grab in the end zone. On the
game-winning touchdown, Hopkins said 'it was hard to run out there' after he
rolled his ankle on the first play of the drive. Quarterback Deshaun Watson and
running back Alfred Blue carried him off the field
after the touchdown, but Watson said he didn't believe Hopkins was banged up,
just worthy of being carried off. During the game, Hopkins became the
second-youngest player (26 years, six months, nine days) in NFL history to
reach 500 career receptions, trailing Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry
Fitzgerald, who accomplished the feat at 26 years, 192 days. The
sixth-year pro made his first All-Pro team in 2017 and is well on the way to do
it again given he's already eclipsed the 1,000-yard receiving mark as one of
the NFL's top wideouts.
2. Watson completed 22 of 28 passes for 294 yards, two
touchdowns and a 134.2 pass rating. But his impressive production through the
air won't tell the whole story of his night. With six sacks on the game, Watson
has been sacked a league-high 52 times through 14 games. A lot of blame will
fall on the offensive line, but some of the sacks against the Jets fell
squarely on Watson, who held the ball too long.
Granted, one sack came when officials blew the play dead too
early. But for the most part during the pressures, Watson was a sitting duck in
the backfield as he looked to make a big play instead of throwing it away.
Watson, who was on the receiving end of 10 quarterback hits against the Jets,
has taken 3.3 sacks per game since entering the NFL in 2017, marking the most
in the league (minimum four starts).
3. The Jets'
future is clearly in good hands with rookie quarterback Sam Darnold,
who had a head-turning performance against the league's 13th-ranked defense.
Darnold connected with nine different receivers en route to completing 24 of 38
passes for 253 yards and two touchdowns. He showed off his arm strength and the
ability to throw on the move, including an eye-popping 5-yard jump pass for a
touchdown. On that play, Darnold sensed the pressure around him in the pocket
before stepping up. The Texans'
defenders quickly closed on him, perhaps thinking he was running the ball.
Darnold, however, turned slightly to his left just shy of the line of
scrimmage, spotted Robby
Anderson coming across the back of the end zone, before
hopping off the ground to throw a strike to Anderson. The Jets'
signal-caller also flashed his ability to hurt a defense with his legs, rushing
six times for 35 yards. Once the Jets surround
Darnold with talent, the offense should take off.
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