The 2018 NFL regular season was filled with highs and lows
from start to finish. New players established themselves as the future, older
players have had their careers called into question, and the amount of change
league-wide was unparalleled. It was exciting, frustrating and euphoric all in
one. But for some players, it was also wildly disappointing. Who are the players
who disappointed? Here’s a look at 10 players who under-performed in 2018.
10. CHRIS BOSWELL,
K, PITTSBURGH STEELERS
A year ago, Chris Boswell was considered one of the best
kickers in the league and was voted to his first ever Pro Bowl. In fact, he was
so dominating in 2017 that he was named an honorary member of the Killer B’s
alongside Ben Roethlisberger, Antonio Brown and Le’Veon Bell, and even received a four-year, $16.8 million extension from the Steelers.
However, like each of the other Killer B’s, 2018 wasn’t nearly as kind to him.
Boswell alone cost Pittsburgh at least two games with missed kicks, and it
could be argued that he was the reason they ultimately missed the playoffs.
Boswell finished the 2018 campaign having connected on just 65 percent of his
field goal attempts (13-of-20), while missing five — yes, five — point after
(PAT) attempts. It had gotten so bad late in the season that Pittsburgh
considered signing a new kicker, cutting Boswell loose and just eating the
remainder of his contract.
9. VIC BEASLEY,
DE, ATLANTA FALCONS
When he was taken at No. 8 overall in the 2015 NFL Draft,
expectations were that Vic Beasley would take the league by storm and establish
himself as one of the elite pass rushers in the game. It was considered such a
sure thing that teams like the New York Giants were actively working to move up
and acquire him in said draft. In the end, he landed with the Falcons and in
2016; he recorded 15.5 sacks, was named an All-Pro and seemed to be on his way
to living up to the immense expectations. However, it was all downhill from
there as Beasley fell off the map in 2017 and continued that trend in 2018. In
16 games (nine starts), Beasley recorded just 20 tackles (16 solo) and five
sacks, while earning a Pro Football Focus grade of 42.2, which put him behind
more than 100 other edge rushers.
8. HAYDEN HURST,
TE, BALTIMORE RAVENS
As a first-round pick (No. 25 overall), Hayden Hurst was
expected to come in, start and produce for the Ravens right away. And
considering what they had passed over when trading down in the 2018 NFL Draft,
the pressure was immediately on the young tight end to make some magic happen.
That is not how things went, however. Hurst began his career on the bench,
missing the first four games of the regular season due to a foot injury. When
he finally did reach the field, it was clear the tight end was light years
behind other players. It took him several more weeks to get up to speed, but he
was never able to establish himself as any sort of reliable target or
dominating force. Ultimately, Hurst fell well short of his rookie expectations,
finishing the season with just 13 receptions for 163 yards and one touchdown.
7. CASE KEENUM,
QB, DENVER BRONCOS
After a remarkable 2017 campaign in which he led the
Minnesota Vikings to an 11-3 record in 14 games, Case Keenum earned a two-year,
$36 million deal to take over as the Broncos’ starting quarterback. However,
things in Denver did not go as planned as Keenum led them to a record of just
6-10, while completing 62.3 percent of his passes for 3,890 yards, 18
touchdowns and 15 interceptions. Head coach Vance Joseph, who has since been
fired, challenged Keenum during the season, saying the quarterback simply had
to make more plays. Meanwhile, shot-caller John Elway said Keenum will remain
the quarterback, but cautioned that decision may be on borrowed time. All in all,
it was a far cry from what the Broncos expected after Keenum looked like a
superstar just a year ago.
6.
GOLDEN TATE, WR, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES
With the Eagles now in the playoffs and Golden Tate making
plays, many are quick to look back and label the receiver one of the best
mid-season pickups. However, it may be easy to forget that Tate really didn’t
do much for the Eagles after they sent a 2019 third-round pick to the Detroit
Lions in exchange for him. Rather, in eight games, Tate recorded just 30
receptions for 278 yards and one touchdown as he struggled to fit in Philly’s
offense. His yards per reception were down under double-digits for the first
time in his career and his impact on special teams was non-existent. Of course,
Tate could erase half a poor season with continued success in the playoffs, but
either way, he failed to live up to expectations during the regular season and
could be on his way out of town once the new league year arrives in March.
5. MARCUS PETERS,
CB, LOS ANGELES RAMS
Marcus Peters is known as an overly-aggressive ballhawk,
which has worked in his favor in recent years. It led him to back-to-back Pro
Bowl nods in 2015 and 2016, landed him on the All-Pro Team in 2016 and even won
him the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year honor in 2015, among other awards and
accolades. However, the Kansas City Chiefs had enough of him and shipped him off
to Las Angeles last March. In a new system needing his style of play,
expectations were high for Peters, who was intended to help establish a
dominant defensive culture for the Rams. Instead, Peters had his worst season
to date, recording just 43 tackles, eight passes defensed and three
interceptions. All of those numbers were career-lows, and they weren’t helped
by his 60.1 Pro Football Focus grade, which was 95th among cornerbacks
league-wide.
4. RONALD JONES
II, RB, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS
While Saquon Barkley was clearly the best available running
back in the 2018 NFL Draft, many experts believed similar quality talent could
be found later in the first round and even into the second and third rounds. Suffice
it to say, when the Buccaneers selected Ronald Jones II with pick No. 38
overall, they anticipated a back who would come in and compete for a starting
job and, possibly, even rush for upwards of 1,000 yards. They got anything but
that. Jones struggled with his field awareness out of the gate, failing to
recognize running lanes, lacking patience behind his blockers, and producing
little out of the backfield. He fell way behind Peyton Barber on the depth
chart and failed to log a single touch in the team’s final four games,
finishing his rookie season with a lowly 23 carries for 44 yards (1.9 ypc) and
one touchdown.
3. BLAKE BORTLES,
QB, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS
After leading the Jaguars to an AFC Championship Game a
season ago, Tom Coughlin & Co., perhaps foolishly, put all of their eggs into the Blake Bortles basket this
past season. Their belief was that he had finally turned a corner and was going
to become a quarterback capable of winning big games. Instead, Bortles
regressed and set the stage for what would be a wildly disappointing season
across the board in Jacksonville. In 13 games, Bortles completed 60.3 percent of
his passes for 2,718 yards, 13 touchdowns, 11 interceptions and eight fumbles.
He was ultimately benched in favor of Cody Kessler despite a three-year, $54
million extension in the offseason. The end of Bortles in Jacksonville is
almost a guarantee heading into the new league year.
2. JOE FLACCO, QB,
BALTIMORE RAVENS
Some would argue that Joe Flacco is a disappointment more
often than not, but that’s a debate for another day. When it comes to the 2018
season however, there’s no denying he was a letdown. In nine games, Flacco
completed 61.2 percent of his passes for 2,465 yards, 12 touchdowns and six
interceptions. And while those numbers are far from awful, the Ravens were 4-5
over that span and Flacco wasn’t exactly raising their odds of victory. After
suffering an injury, Flacco was benched in favor of rookie quarterback Lamar
Jackson, and the team never looked back. Flacco took the demotion in stride,
but the avalanche had already begun. The Ravens made it clear Flacco would open the 2019 league year on the trading block and
that his career in Baltimore was over. It was a rapid fall from grace for the
one-time Super Bowl MVP and a disappointing end to his time as a Raven.
1. KIRK COUSINS,
QB, MINNESOTA VIKINGS
Kirk Cousins connected on a career-high 70.1 percent of his
passes in 2018, tossed a career-high 30 touchdowns and amassed 4,298 yards
passing, which was the second-highest total of his NFL career. Those are hardly
numbers of a disappointment, right? Wrong.
While Cousins put up some solid numbers for the Vikings this
past season, an ongoing issue persisted: an inability to rise to the occasion
and win a big game. Some players have the ability to step up in big moments,
but at this point in his career, Cousins has been unable to do so despite being
provided with ideal opportunities. Such was the case in Week 17 when the
Vikings needed a win against the Chicago Bears. Instead of earning his
three-year, $84 million contract, Cousins bombed out and had his worst game of
the season in a soul-crushing loss that saw him in a visible spat with a teammate. All the big numbers
in the world don’t mean a thing when you can’t win the game you have to.
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