STEELERS NIP PATRIOTS; BEARS STAY HOT
The high-stakes aura is in the air.
Watching the replay of Ravens at
Chiefs on NFL Network the other night, you could feel the
weight of the game through the TV. It was an entertaining affair that featured
a stacked defense going toe-to-toe with the most prolific sophomore QB since
Dan Marino in 1984. Yet, the undercurrent of a fiercely contested AFC battle
was the feel of playoff football -- this game mattered. Every
blitz mattered. Every audible mattered. This is the time of
year where regular-season drama morphs into playoff drama, as the postseason
Rubik's Cube works itself out over Saturday and Sunday. Which leads to...?
Saturday pro football. Love it, much.
With so many games on the NFL slate carrying postseason
weight, spreading the wealth makes plenty of sense. It also provides the chance
to contextualize what you are seeing, as opposed to being bombarded with
innumerable early games on Sunday with nary a chance to sort everything out.
Thus, this week feels like being able to catch a wicked movie on the Thursday
night of its debut weekend. (I saw "Terminator 2" at midnight on a
Thursday in a packed house.) It's getting in a day early on Banana Republic's
50 percent off (no exclusions!) Friends & Family sale.
So, enjoy it. Enjoy the early foray into the
"playoffs," with an earlier entry on Saturday. Everything matters.
Everyone cares ... even about offensive line play:
Cowboys at Colts,
Halloween '99 was a fun game -- as this Sunday's
version should be. Although, Chargers at
Chiefs is this week's headliner. Or is it Patriots at
Steelers? Eagles at
Rams? Your thoughts on any and all are welcome: @HarrisonNFL is the
place.
Now, let's get to it!
I went 10-6 on my predictions
for Week 14, bringing my record for the season to 138-68-2. How will
I fare in Week 15? My picks are below.
THURSDAY, DEC. 13
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 30, LOS ANGELES CHARGERS 26
8:20 p.m. ET (FOX/NFL Network/Prime Video) | Arrowhead
Stadium (Kansas City, Mo.)
Although these two proud franchises have been going at it
for 59 seasons, all the way back to the early days of the AFL, I don't
think any of their previous 117 matchups carried this much weight.
The only instance that would even come close: a 1992 wild-card game that the
Bolts won going away. That Dave Krieg-quarterbacked Kansas City team couldn't
produce any points against Junior Seau and friends. The Chiefs'
quarterback of today is a unique talent. While Krieg was a streaky
player, Patrick
Mahomes seems to be stuck in a hot streak defenses can't pull him
out of. Even the Ravens'
formidable defense couldn't hold Mahomes down in Week 14.
With Austin Ekeler out
and Melvin Gordon questionable,
rookie back Justin
Jackson might have to be a hoss for the Chargers.
The rookie did rack up 139 yards from scrimmage in Weeks 12 and 13 (8.7 yards
per touch), but was comparatively quiet in Week 14 (12 rushing yards on seven
carries, with two catches for 23 yards). Chiefs back Spencer Ware was banged up last week, which might translate to Mahomes throwing
at least 40 times. Thus, the key for K.C. will be getting Joey Bosa (another
sack last week) and Melvin Ingram blocked.
Crowd noise will be a factor for the other quarterback. In case you are
wondering, Philip Rivers has
lost his last four starts at Arrowhead, with the Chargers scoring
50 points. Total. Now that is a stat.
SATURDAY, DEC. 15
HOUSTON TEXANS 23, NEW YORK JETS 17
4:30 p.m. ET (NFL Network) | MetLife Stadium (East
Rutherford, N.J.)
So ... I don't like the Jets this
week, but I'm not seeing a blowout. The Texans have
only been able to string together two really strong offensive showings in a row
this season (vs. Titans and Browns in
Weeks 12-13), with a defense that has been clutch for most of the year often
mitigating some of that offensive inconsistency. Last week,
however, the defense struggled to hold the Colts down
in the red zone, as Andrew Luck engineered
three touchdowns in three trips inside the Houston 20. Luckily for the Texans,
that is the precise area where the Jets have
sucked all season. (Those struggles added a dose of irony to the fact that New
York won last week on
a fourth-and-goal plunge.) If the Jets are
to have a chance, it will be because of the right arm of Sam Darnold.
Trying to run against the Texans --
who rank fifth in rushing yards allowed, second in rushing touchdowns allowed
and second in yards-per-carry allowed -- will be tough sledding.
DENVER BRONCOS 22, CLEVELAND BROWNS 21
8:20 P.M. ET (NFL NETWORK) | BRONCOS STADIUM AT MILE HIGH (DENVER)
This matchup is as unpredictable as any of this weekend's
games. If you were basing this decision on the way the Browns and Broncos played
last week, you would go with Cleveland. Nick Mullens shredded
Denver in Week 14, proving that the Broncos are
a totally different team away from their Stadium at Mile High, and that they are
allergic to covering the tight end. A penny -- or nine million -- for Browns tight
end David Njoku's
thoughts while watching George Kittle's
210-yard game tape against Vance Joseph's group. On the other hand, this will
be Baker
Mayfield's first go in the cold, thin air of Denver. That can affect
a player, as well as a young team like the Browns.
The Broncos are
playing for that last
wild-card spot in the AFC, jostling with the pesky Colts,
the fortunate Dolphins and
-- their toughest competition -- the built-for-the-postseason Ravens.
If the Broncos are
to take home a W, it will be up to their defense, which has been
super-consistent ... about being mediocre. Oddly, Denver allows 21.9 points per
game on the road and 21.5 at home. Not the same advantage as in years past.
SUNDAY, DEC. 16
CHICAGO BEARS 18, GREEN BAY PACKERS 13
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Soldier Field (Chicago)
Here's another huge game in the playoff race ...
The Bears are
trying to stay ahead of the Vikings --
with a Week 17
showdown between Minnesota and Chicago looming -- while eyeing
an outside chance of securing a playoff bye, though either the Saints or Rams would
have to stumble over these last three weeks of the season for that to happen. As
for the Packers, last week's
win pushed their record to 5-7-1, and the momentum needle is
pointing up. It's probably going to take only eight wins to capture that last
NFC wild-card spot, with Green Bay owning a tiny advantage thanks to the little
"-1" they're sporting, reflecting the tie
against Minnesota back in September. For you non-math majors,
8-7-1 > 8-8. No need for tiebreakers. (Well, unless it's between the Pack
and Mike Zimmer's boys.)
This weekend's game sparks memories of Rodgers delivering a deep ball to Randall Cobb to best Chicago in Week 17 of the 2013 season, ushering the Pack into the postseason. Yeah, well, Matt Nagy's outfit ain't those Bears. The 2018 Chicago defense made the Rams' tandem of Jared Goff and Sean McVay look very Sam Bradford/Jeff Fisher-ish last Sunday night. I'm not seeing any Rodgers magic this time, as the Bears front seven shuts down Aaron Jones, winning a tight classic.
This weekend's game sparks memories of Rodgers delivering a deep ball to Randall Cobb to best Chicago in Week 17 of the 2013 season, ushering the Pack into the postseason. Yeah, well, Matt Nagy's outfit ain't those Bears. The 2018 Chicago defense made the Rams' tandem of Jared Goff and Sean McVay look very Sam Bradford/Jeff Fisher-ish last Sunday night. I'm not seeing any Rodgers magic this time, as the Bears front seven shuts down Aaron Jones, winning a tight classic.
BUFFALO BILLS 20, DETROIT LIONS 16
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | New Era Field (Orchard Park, N.Y.)
Oh, boy. You want to write this blurb? This looks like a
tough watch for anyone who's not a Lions or Bills
fan -- I'm not sure even the members of those fan bases want to read the following.
Detroit rode its defense to a win last
week. Now that's a surprising sentence if you've followed
this team through the years. Actually, though, that side of the ball has
performed better than the offense overall this season. Offensive coordinator
Jim Bob Cooter is under fire in Detroit, as the Lions have
limped to 20.8 points per game, 25th in the league. (Don't forget that part of
their scintillating point total of 17 in Arizona was delivered by
cornerback Darius Slay on a pick-six.)
The Bills'
defense has been a strong point for much of the year, often left on the field
by an offense that is even worse than Detroit's. Sean McDermott's fellas feast
off turnovers and sacks -- though unlike in 2017, Buffalo's defense hasn't
manufactured enough to compensate for the sluggish offense. Think the Bills will
force two to three giveaways from Matthew
Stafford this week and pull to 5-9.
BALTIMORE RAVENS 28, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS 14
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | M&T Bank Stadium (Baltimore)
The Bucs' playoff hopes are
hanging by a thread. The Ravens are
in a far better position: tied for the lead among the wild-card bubble teams
and only a half-game back of the Steelers in
the AFC North standings. If Baltimore can prevent Jameis
Winston from getting into a rhythm, it should be in good shape,
matchup-wise, against Tampa's offense. The Bucs are 27th in rushing, but make
up for it by ranking 30th in yards per carry. It's been a problem all year,
solved by neither the rookie draft class nor veteran depth. With Lamar Jackson manning
the helm, the Ravens'
run game has been fuel-injected with that crap Doc Brown was dumping into his DeLorean. Their
rushing marks the last four weeks with Jackson at QB read
like passing numbers: 267, 242, 207 and 198 yards. With Tampa
allowing 6.6 yards per play on first down, "Action" Jackson should be
in favorable conditions all day. Like Carl Weathers. Well, maybe not Carl Weathers in
"Predator."
ATLANTA FALCONS 30, ARIZONA CARDINALS 13
If the Cardinals are
to avoid flying off into the sunset with their 11th loss of the season, they
must develop some semblance of a ground game. It's awfully difficult to
evaluate Josh Rosen when
he's asked to convert on third-and-long all day. Arizona owns a top-five
tailback in terms of ability, yet the team ranks 31st in the league in running
the football. That destroyed the Cardinals'
chances against the
Lions last week, when the Arizona defense allowed just 10 points
(Rosen provided the other seven on a pick-six).
It's a lot easier for defenses -- even struggling units, like the Falcons'
-- to produce pick-sixes when they know a team can't walk a yard, much less run
for one. The Cardinals average
14.9 first downs per game. The rest of the league? 20.8. That's brutal.
CINCINNATI BENGALS 24, OAKLAND RAIDERS 21
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | Paul Brown Stadium (Cincinnati)
This is one of the games this weekend that carries no
postseason juice. Frankly, it doesn't carry much in the way of
draft-positioning stakes, either. That's because the Raiders,
as Derek Carr said
he wanted, aren't playing like a team seeking a top draft choice. Oakland has
played much better of late, winning two of its last four games while giving
the Chiefs all they
could handle in Week 13. Carr, in particular, was excellent
in the upset win over
the Steelers.
The Bengals'
solid play at the start of the season is why they sit at 5-8 and are
not candidates for a top draft pick. This is a game that they should win
for pride, something Marvin Lewis' group displayed against the
Chargers last week. Cincy gave Joe Mixon the
kind of workload this space has been asking for, resulting in the Bengals limiting
the Bolts' time of possession to just 27:22. That won't be as necessary against
a Raiders offense
boasting considerably fewer weapons than the Chargers'
attack, but it will provide Jeff Driskel with
play-action opportunities. The kid has completed 68.8 percent of his passes off
play-action so far, per Pro Football Focus. Not bad.
NEW YORK GIANTS 17, TENNESSEE TITANS 13
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | MetLife Stadium (East Rutherford, N.J.)
If either team is to make hay in the postseason race, or be
relevant down the stretch, this is must-win territory. Well, for the Titans it's
"territory." For the Giants,
this weekend's interconference game is absolutely a must-win. The good news is
that Odell Beckham Jr.,
dealing with a quad injury that kept him out of last week's
game, said as early as Monday that he was feeling better (he was
limited in practice on
Wednesday). The bad news is, uh, Thursday
practice was a no-go. Eli Manning fared
just fine without his WR1 in Washington, but game situation and Saquon
Barkley going Tecmo on the Redskins were
significant reasons why Manning was viable. When Tennessee's defense is on, it
can thwart any offense, like the Patriots'
last month. That game was at home, though. Prior to last week's win
over the Jaguars,
Mike Vrabel's defense got clobbered against the run for three straight weeks.
And these Titans have
been an abomination away from home: 2-5, averaging 16.4 points per game. That's
why I am going with the Giants.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS 30, MIAMI DOLPHINS 23
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | U.S. Bank Stadium (Minneapolis)
Another game that will cause repercussions to be felt
throughout the playoff field. The Dolphins sit
at 7-6, hoping that the Bucs upset the Ravens in
Baltimore and that the Colts struggle
against a top-level Cowboys defense.
Miami must play well offensively, which will be a stiff challenge against a
defense that matches up with the Dolphins everywhere.
On the other hand, if the Vikings,
who are in a verifiable mosh pit on the playoff bubble, forget Dalvin Cook is
on their team and throw every down, then Miami has a real chance. The Vikes
have scored a grand total of 17 points the last two weeks, with their lone
touchdown in Seattle coming in garbage time. Though they fared better last week
against New England, the Fins feature the 29th-best run defense in the league.
If Cook doesn't get the football this week, then Minnesota should hire Les Steckel again.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 14, WASHINGTON REDSKINS 9
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | TIAA Bank Field (Jacksonville, Fla.)
Who knows with these Redskins?
Who knows with these Jaguars?
In the words of Arnold Schwarzenegger in "Predator," this game is one
ugly m-----------. The 'Skins will be starting journeyman Josh Johnson under
center, thus making them a wild card, which is apropos given that they are
still firmly in the wild-card race at 6-7. Well, Washington is the definition
of being mathematically in the running, and only mathematically. As
poorly as the Jaguars played
(tackled) last week,
it's easier to trust Cody Kessler
in this, his third start of the season. Man, Josh Johnson vs. Cody Kessler.
Could we get, like, a game of 21-on-21 and have Mark Brunell be all-time QB,
since he played for both teams? It would make for a much more entertaining
game. Adrian Peterson: 30 carries on Sunday.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 23, DALLAS COWBOYS 20 (OT)
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis)
What a fascinating matchup between a couple of teams peaking
at the right time. Last they played, the Colts were
getting blown out in Dallas in 2014.
Yet, the Cowboys visiting
Indy brings back memories of 2010, when a relatively unknown linebacker
named Lee picked off Peyton Manning twice, Dallas benefited from a
rare leverage call
on a field goal and the 'Boys escaped Lucas Oil Stadium with an
overtime win. That was Manning's last healthy year in Indy. The Cowboys were
trotting Jon Kitna out there for an injured Tony Romo. Now it's Andrew Luck versus Dak Prescott,
with the advantage going toward the former (although Prescott has shown flashes
lately). Thus, the Cowboys'
secondary must play at its zenith. The Dallas pass rush is formidable, but few
teams have protected their QB as well as the Colts.
While they've allowed six sacks in the last three games, Luck has also thrown
130 passes in those games. Every team in the league will take that ratio. This
is a tight uni match, man.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 29, SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS 24
4:05 p.m. ET (FOX) | Levi's Stadium (Santa Clara, Calif.)
Just like old times, Seahawks at 49ers will
affect the playoff race. For one team, that is. Seattle enters the Big Blue
Jean with an opportunity to sock away a wild-card spot. The most educated guess
would be that eight wins will secure the NFC's sixth seed, so if the Seahawks do
prevail, they will be sitting pretty at 9-5 and in firm control of their
destiny. Seattle and San Francisco teed it up two weeks ago, with Pete
Carroll's group clobbering
the 49ers by 27 points. Nick Mullens competed
till the bitter end, tallying 414 passing yards and two touchdowns, yet San
Francisco could not pay off drives when it mattered. A fumble, a stalled drive
and an interception ruined a handful of long marches, while the Seahawks ran
the rock all day. It will be incumbent on the 49ers'
front seven to stop Seattle on the ground. Kyle Shanahan's defense performed
admirably against Phillip
Lindsay and the Broncos last
week. Let's see if the Niners can string together two strong showings.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS 28, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 27
4:25 p.m. ET (CBS) | Heinz Field (Pittsburgh)
The Jesse James revenge
game. You remember last year, when James' catch
vs. New England late in the fourth quarter, initially ruled a
touchdown, was overturned after review in the did-he-secure-the-catch-nebula.
The controversy marred what was a Patriots-Steelers
contest for the ages, or at least since Y2K -- and a game that
helped New England secure home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. Now
Pittsburgh is merely trying to hold on to its postseason reservation. The Steelers were
thought to be a sure thing a month ago. After dropping three straight games,
including two on the road to lesser opponents, they're clinging to a half-game
lead in the AFC North. If they lose this home match versus Bill Belichick
and Tom Brady,
they could be done. New Orleans pops up next on the Steelers'
schedule, with it quite possible that the Colts and Dolphins pass
them in that maelstrom for the AFC's sixth seed. Taking Pittsburgh over New
England, solely because the Steelers are
at home and in desperation mode. They can't fall behind early, though,
because after last
week, Brady and the Pats' defense won't be in any mood for blowing
leads.
LOS ANGELES RAMS 34, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 26
8:20 p.m. ET (NBC) | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (Los
Angeles)
Last season's Eagles-Rams
matchup played a huge role in Philadelphia's march to Super Bowl LII. Carson Wentz
hurt his knee in Los Angeles, forcing Nick Foles to
enter the game in the fourth quarter. Foles did his part, connecting with Nelson
Agholor on a key third down to salt away the clock and
ultimately earn home-field advantage throughout the playoffs for the Eagles.
They are hanging on by a wing this year, with Sunday's contest at the Coliseum
a must-win and Wentz not expected to play with a back
injury. Sean McVay's group doesn't face such dire straits, but is
coming off its worst
performance of the season. Perhaps this is a week that McVay eschews
going play-action constantly to set up the air game, and hands the ball off
to Todd Gurley 25
times instead. Keep that Eagles front
four at bay. The Cowboys did
the same thing last week,
though Jared Goff is
more likely to make Philadelphia's secondary pay downfield than Dak Prescott. Eagles DC
Jim Schwartz must find creative ways to help his corners, without showing his
hand too quickly. You know the same crappy homework assignment Schwartz has
wrestled with all season. Goff rebounds this week. Mark it down.
MONDAY, DEC. 17
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 30, CAROLINA PANTHERS 20
8:15 p.m. ET (ESPN) | Bank of America Stadium (Charlotte,
N.C.)
The Saints inch
closer toward securing home-field advantage, helped in part by the Bears
shutting down the Greatest Show on Grass last week. That sounds
weird. (Maybe the Rams were
suffering from the munchies?) New Orleans sometimes starts slowly on the road,
leading critics to say they are a different team away from their home. News
flash: That's true for the vast majority of the NFL's membership (although
the Saints have
just as many losses on the road as they do at home this season -- one). The
takeaway here is that the Saints just
find ways to win, as much as that sounds like a sports cliche. Not because that's
some mysterious football adage that's been overused for decades, but because
New Orleans has so many tools at its disposal. The Saints can
win by relying on Drew Brees,
targeting the most reliable WR1 in the business, or they can win by alternating
35 touches between Mark Ingram and Alvin Kamara.
Or the special teams can wreak havoc at the most opportune time, a la Taysom Hill
last week. The Panthers could
quell another New Orleans uprising by getting Cam Newton in
rhythm early with short throws, then leaning on Christian
McCaffrey on the ground (and on some of those short passes).
That is, if Ron Rivera's secondary can hold the fort. Ooohh, yeaaah...
No comments:
Post a Comment