Posted on Leave a comment

Five Things: Week 15 – New York Giants at Washington Commanders

It’s back to winning ways for the first time in five weeks for the Giants as they defeat the Washington Commanders 20-12, helped by a monster performance from Kayvon Thibodeaux. Here are five things that stood out. 

Primetime Likes Me  

In the lead-up to Sunday’s critical game, Kayvon Thibodeaux was asked about his first game under the spotlight of Sunday Night Football, and his reply? “Prime time likes me. Y’all can use that one.” By the time the game had finished, it was fair to say that Kayvon had proven exactly what he meant. 

The newly crowned NFC Defensive Player of the Week dominated the game from the get-go with three huge tackles on the Commanders first drive, but the defining moment for the young rookie came during Washington’s third drive in a play scarily similar to one from overtime two weeks ago. 

With Washington backed up on their own 10-yard line thanks to a penalty, Heinicke took the snap, and before he had a chance to set himself, Thibodeaux blew past offensive lineman Charles Leno Jr., swiped the ball out of Heinicke’s hands, followed the fumble across the goal line, scooped it up, and took it in for not only the Giants’ first defensive score this season but Thibodeaux’s first since he had one as a tight end in high school. 

His final stat line for the day? 12 tackles (9 solo), 3 tackles for loss, 1 sack, 1 fumble, 1 fumble recovery, and 1 touchdown.  
 

The 97-Yard Drive  

With the momentum changing after Thibodeaux’s touchdown, there was hope that it would invigorate the offense; however, after the Washington punt was downed on the 3-yard line, most would have expected a quick three and out. That’s not what happened, as Daniel Jones led potentially the best drive of the season so far and the Giants’ longest in eight seasons. 

This was not a high-octane sprint down the field; it was more like a methodical march, with the Giants carving out an 18-play drive that took over eight and a half minutes off the clock with a short pass-heavy attack that included a clutch 4th down conversion to Richie James and culminated in a 3-yard touchdown run with Saquon Barkley lined up in the wildcat. 

It is only fair that Mike Kafka should get some credit for this drive. Kafka, who has made questionable decisions at times, has overall had a successful first season as a play-caller. This is evidenced by the improvement in red-zone touchdown conversion as the Giants have moved from 32nd last year (44.74 percent) to an impressive 8th this year (63.5 percent). 

Spin Move Barkley  

It’s no secret that since his 152-yard showing against the Houston Texans, Barkley just hasn’t been able to get a lot going on the ground, and his stellar rushing season has stuttered. From the season opener to week 10, his average rushing yards per game was 103.4, which has dropped to a measly 38 in the last four weeks, and as such, questions about his durability have begun to be raised again. 

Barkley did little to dispel those rumours in the first three quarters of Sunday’s game, as he was unable to show off his previous explosiveness, rushing 12 times for 39 yards and showing no sign of the shifty cuts he has become known for, aside from one instance during the Giants touchdown drive. In the fourth quarter, though, something switched, and Barkley started not only breaking off some chunk runs but pulling out a trio of Madden-esque spin moves that the Commanders defence could not seem to handle. This invigorated Barkley is what we need as we enter crunch time, and the fire seems to have been lit. 

The Ending  

It would not be a Giants game without a bit of drama, though, would it? As has been customary for the Giants faithful, we found ourselves in yet another tight game entering the final two minutes and with the score at 20-12 as Washington started what would be their final drive. 

Frustratingly, the Giants seemed to crumble at the worst time, as within three plays (including the kick-off return), Washington was already in the red zone after two plays. As nightmares of another 20-20 game going into overtime started to creep into existence, cornerback Nick McCloud had an excellent opportunity to ice the game but dropped the interception, giving Washington another chance. 

With the hearts of Giants fans firmly in their mouths, Heinicke almost turned into the heartbreaker with a run towards the end zone that looked destined to be converted before the monstrous Thibodeaux crushed him at the 1-yard line. A one-yard touchdown by Brian Robinson was then negated by an illegal formation penalty on Terry McLaurin. Another incomplete pass followed before a controversial non-call on the game-sealing pass breakup by Darnay Holmes that, on reflection, the Giants were lucky to get away with. 

The Unsung Heroes 

With so many big talking points in the game, it’s tough to highlight some of the players that shone in this game, so here are a handful of my unsung heroes: 

  • Landon Collins: Called up from the practise squad for what was billed as a revenge game, made a number of key third-down stops. 
  • Jason Pinnock: In his best game of the season, had a quarterback hit, five total tackles, and forced a fumble. 
  • Richie James: Came up big with a couple of key catches on the 97-yard touchdown drive, including two key first-down catches. 
  • Ben Bredeson: Playing in his first game since October, instantly made the offensive line better while also making a key block on the Barkley touchdown run. 
  • Dexter Lawrence, Azzez Ojulari, and Ryder Anderson: All three got themselves a sack of Heinicke during the game, while Lawrence also forced a fumble that was recovered by Leonard Williams. 
  • Graham Gano: Two 50-yard field goals in the second half, both of which kept us ahead by eight points. 
Posted on Leave a comment

Fantasy Recap – Week 15

Welcome to the fantasy recap. Don’t call it a comeback? I’m not actually sure you can call the antics of week 15 anything other than a comeback. Crazy ending and some fantasy games may well have been unhinged by everything going on. The fantasy season may almost be over but for those with Semi Finals and Finals on the line, let’s get you over the line.

NB: Scores based on PPR leagues

Fantasy Stars:

QB: Kirk Cousins (MIN) – 34cmp/460yds/4td/2int + 2rsh/0yds = 34pts

What makes this all the more impressive is he essentially did this in the 2nd half and OT.

Other star QBs: J.Hurts (37), J.Allen (34), P.Mahomes (32).

RB: Jerrick McKinnon (KC) – 10rsh/52yds/1td + 8rec/70yds/1td = 34pts

McKinnon top scored again and did work on the ground and in the air. Who remembers who Clyde Edwards Helaire is?

Other star RBs: D.Cook/CMC (26), D.Henry/D.Stevenson (25).

WR: Zay Jones (JAX) – 6rec/109yds/3tds = 35pts

Unforgettable. That what they Zay…

Other star WRs: J.Jefferson (30), AJ.Brown (27), T.Hill/C.Godwin (22).

TE: George Kittle (SF) – 4rec/93yds/2td = 25pts

When he’s healthy, involved and in this case wide open, he’s a monster scorer.

Other Star TE’s: D.Knox (22), T.Kelce (21).

Surprise Packages:

Zach Wilson (DEN) – 18cmp/317yds/2td/1int + 3rsh/7yds = 20pts

Back from the doghouse and scored well but it was against the Lions.

Other surprise QBs: D.Carr (19), D.Mills (18).

Tyler Allgeier (ATL) – 17rsh/139yds/1td + 1rec/-3yds = 23pts

We’ve got to work out how to pronounce his name correctly now don’t we? He’s taken over.

Other surprise RBs: M.Mack (16), J.Warren (12).

KJ Osborn (MIN) – 10rec/157yds/1td = 32pts

This maybe sums up the phrase “Necessity is the mother of invention”. Which applies to a lot of surprise WRs this week.

Other surprise WRs: R.Gage (26), N.Brown (23), J.Dotson (21).  

Juwan Johnson (NO) – 4rec/93yds/2td = 25pts

A New Orleans Tight End scoring mega points without rushing or throwing the ball.

Other surprise TEs: C.Uzomah (18).

Disappointments:

Baker Mayfield (LV) – 12cmp/111yds/1int + 1rsh/1yds = 7pts

After being a hero, he came back to being Baker Mayfield.

Other disappointing QB’s: M.Jones (7), D.Ridder (8), D.Jones (10).

D’Onta Foreman (CAR) – 10rsh/9yds/1fum = 0pts

Technically -0.1. Ooof.

Other disappointing RB’s: M.Sanders (1), J.Williams (3).

Michael Gallup (DAL) – 1rec/2yds = 1pts

A potential waiver wire saviour turned into a week loser.

Other disappointing WR’s: A.Lazard (2), J.Meyers/B.Aiyuk (4).

Greg Dulcich (DEN) – 1rec/11yds = 2pts

So much more was expected. Defines Denver in general.

Other disappointing TE’s: M.Gesicki (0); D.Schultz (4).

Injury Roundup:

A lot fewer injuries this week but some monumentally critical ones for the fantasy playoffs.

Quarterbacks:

Jalen Hurts (Sprained Shoulder – May miss 2 games)

Trevor Lawrence (Toe – DNP on short week)

Ryan Tannehill (Ankle – Could miss time)

Running Backs:

Jonathan Taylor (Ankle – Out for rest of fantasy season)

AJ Dillon (Concussion – Likely miss a game)

Wide Receivers:

Tyler Lockett (Finger – May miss time with surgery)

Tight Ends:

None

Waiver Wire Pickups:

Quarterbacks:

Jared Goff – DET @CAR

Brock Purdy – SF vsWAS

Sam Darnold – CAR vsDET

Running Backs:

Tyler Allgeier – ATL @BAL

Jerrick McKinnon – KC vsSEA

Chuba Hubbard – CAR vsDET

Wide Receivers:

Treylon Burks – TEN vsHOU

Zay Jones – JAX @LV

Donovan Peoples-Jones – CLE vsBAL

Tight Ends:

Gerald Everett – LAC @IND

Evan Engram – JAX vsIND

Chigoziem Okonkwo – TEN vsHOU

Defence/Special Teams (Assume BUF/DAL/PHI/BAL/SF/NE is unavailable):

Ravens vsATL

Titans vsHOU

Benglas @NE

Broncos @LAR

Posted on Leave a comment

5 things to look out for as Rams visit Packers on Week 15’s MNF

After a scintillating Saturday and a dramatic Sunday, Week 15 is brought to a close as the Los Angeles Rams travel to Lambeau Field to visit the Green Bay Packers

1. Will Baker make it two wins from two?

Baker Mayfield pulled off what seemed like the impossible last Thursday, leading his new Rams offence to a fourth-quarter comeback over the Las Vegas Raiders.

Mayfield asked for his release from the Carolina Panthers that Monday, and arrived in Los Angeles after they claimed him on waivers. The Rams were the only team to put in a claim for Mayfield.

With two days’ understanding of the offense, and little time with his receivers, the former number-one overall pick proved his point. Will he go to 2-0 as the Rams starter tonight?

2. Will the Rams win two in a row after losing six straight?

Last week’s win for the Los Angeles Rams was huge, it was their first in six, and only their second since their Week 3 victory in Arizona to go 2-1 on the season.

The defense stepped up in Aaron Donald’s absence, only allowing 16 points against a Raiders offense that had scored 29.7 points on average in their previous three games.

Detroit Lions fans may want to think twice about rooting against their division rival Green Bay Packers tonight, as a Rams win will see the Lions pick fall to 9th in the draft order. 

3. A win for Green Bay will keep them in playoff contention

Somehow the Green Bay Packers are still in contention for the playoffs. Albeit a small chance (6% according to FiveThirtyEight).

Back-to-back wins over the Rams and the Dolphins will but the Packers just under .500 with two home divisional games to close out the season.

Imagine a win-and-in scenario vs the Lions to close the year on Sunday Night Football. No matter how unlikely (very) it is, the thought of it is awesome.

4. Is Green Bay’s offense hitting a groove?

Aaron Rodgers and company have had three of their best offensive performances in the last four games, averaging 27.25 points per game.

That’s a whole seven points higher than their season average of 20.2, which ranks 22nd in the league. The emergence of the impressive rookie, Christian Watson, is a big factor.

If the Packers are to win, they’ll have to do it without star offensive lineman David Bakhtiari. The offensive tackle hasn’t suited up since Week 12, due to him undergoing an appendectomy.

5. Sean McVay vs Matt La Fleur

Former colleagues Sean McVay and Matt LeFleur will meet tonight for only the third time as head coaches. Until this year, neither coach has had a losing season.

Le Fleur was on McVay’s staff in 2017, before moving to become Mike Vrabel’s offensive coordinator in Tennessee. A year later he was named HC of the Packers.

In their two previous meetings, the Packers have come out on top both times. The most notable win was in the divisional round of the 2020 season’s playoffs, where Green Bay put up 484 yards of offense.

Posted on Leave a comment

Fantasy Recap – Week 14

Welcome to the fantasy recap. If it wasn’t already, it’s fantasy playoff time and the end of bye weeks so plenty to celebrate if you’re still in your leagues. There’s also a lot to be anxious about with line-up decisions and injuries likely to become a big topic this week. Apologies for this being late and a bit quick, as some of you may know, I play in 40+ leagues and things are getting critical.

NB: Scores based on PPR leagues

Fantasy Stars:

QB: Trevor Lawrence (JAX) – 30cmp/368yds/3td/0int + 3rsh/7yds/1td = 33pts

I’d say Lawrence has officially arrived now.

Other star QBs: J.Hurts (30), J.Goff (26).

RB: Jerrick McKinnon (KC) – 6rsh/22yds + 7rec/112yds/2tds = 32pts

Maybe RBs should start being called “narrow receivers”.

Other star RBs: CMC/M.Sanders (29), A.Ekeler (24).

WR: Jerry Jeudy (DEN) – 8rec/73yds/3tds = 33pts

Remove Sutton from the equation and suddenly there’s clarity.

Other star WRs: J.Jefferson (33), J.Chase (29), T.Hill/M.Williams (24).

TE: Evan Engram (JAX) – 11rec/162yds/2td = 39pts

Erm… wow. Skipped surprise package and just gone straight here. Top score on the week.

Other Star TE’s: D.Njoku (19), D.Schultz (15).

Surprise Packages:

Russell Wilson (DEN) – 23cmp/247yds/3td/0int + 4rsh/57yds = 27pts

For once, Russ cooked.

Other surprise QBs: B.Purdy (22).

Chuba Hubbard (CAR) – 14rsh/74yds/1td + 3rec/25yds = 19pts

How to make a backfield interesting and annoying in equal measure.

Other surprise RBs: P.Strong (17), M.Mack (16).

Chris Moore (HOU) – 10rec/124yds/0td = 22pts

When you’re the next man up, you’re the next man up, no matter how bad the team is.

Other surprise WRs: Z.Jones (22), D.Chark (21), M.Goodwin (20).  

Chigoziem Okonkwo (TEN) – 6rec/45yds/1td = 19pts

Repeats in this position after going beyond what happened last week.  

Other surprise TEs: A.Hooper (12).

Disappointments:

Derek Carr (LV) – 11cmp/137yds/2int + 4rsh/11yds = 5pts

The Carr didn’t get going.

Other disappointing QB’s: M.Jones (7).

Travis Etienne (JAX) – 17rsh/32yds = 3pts

Plenty of work, but no output, which was the opposite of the rest of his team.

Other disappointing RB’s: J.Williams (4), D.Singletary (5).

Jaylen Waddle (MIA) – 2rec/31yds = 5pts

A weird off day for Miami and Waddle in particular.

Other disappointing WR’s: G.Davis (6), S.Diggs (7).

Noah Fant (SEA) – 0rec/0yds = 0pts

Knox was locked down against the Patriots but you could argue they didn’t need him.

Other disappointing TE’s: M.Gesicki/F.Moreau(0); M.Andrews(4).

Injury Roundup:

I’ve added a new section to note who left games with injuries which may have affected their fantasy score and you will have to keep an eye on over the coming week or weeks.

Quarterbacks:

Kyler Murray (Likely ACL tear – Out for season)

Kenny Pickett (Concussion – Usually miss next week)

Russell Wilson (Concussion – Usually miss next week)

Brock Purdy (Oblique/Ribs – Questionable for TNF)

Tyler Huntley(Concussion – Usually miss next week) (NB: Lamar still out with knee injury).

Running Backs:

Jeff Wilson (Hip – Day to day)

Rhamondre Stevenson (Ankle – unknown)

Dameon Pierce (Ankle – Potentially out 1-2 games)

Josh Jacobs (Finger – Questionable as he is every week but usually plays)

CMC (Knee – Questionable for TNF but should play)

Wide Receivers:

Tyreek Hill (Ankle – Should be fine)

Deebo Samuel (Knee/Ankle – Will miss multiple weeks)

Amari Cooper (Hip – Day to day)

Tee Higgins (Hamstring – Day to day)

Tyler Boyd (Finger – Day to day)

DJ Moore (Knee – Day to day)

Devante Parker/Richie James (Concussion – Likely miss a game)

Tight Ends:

Daniel Bellinger (Ribs – Unknown)

Pat Freiermuth (Foot – Unknown)

Waiver Wire Pickups:

Quarterbacks:

Trevor Lawrence – JAX vsDAL

Andy Dalton – NO vsATL

Mike White – NYJ vsDET

Running Backs:

Rachaad White – TB vsCIN

Jerrick McKinnon – KC @HOU

Zonovan Knight – NYJ vsDET

JK Dobbins – BAL @CLE

Wide Receivers:

Elijah Moore – NYJ vsDET

Treylon Burks – TEN @LAC

Zay Jones – JAX vsDAL

Donovan Peoples-Jones – CLE vsBAL

Tight Ends:

Greg Dulcich – DEN vsARI

Dawson Knox – BUF vsMIA

Evan Engram – JAX vsDAL

Chigoziem Okonkwo – TEN @LAC

Defence/Special Teams (Assume BUF/DAL/PHI/BAL/SF/NE is unavailable):

Broncos vsARI

Chiefs @HOU

Panthers vsPIT

Packers @LAR

Posted on Leave a comment

Five Things: Week 14 – Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants

If there is a way to forget this game and it’s subsequent 48-22 score, then I am more than happy to try it. It was brutal to watch, and I can’t imagine doing this is going to make me feel any better, but the “good, bad, and ugly” theme continues! Here are five things that stood out:

The Good

If I were being brutally honest, the answer would be that the game is over and the Eagles can’t humiliate us anymore. Yes, it’s a damning statement, but after watching almost all of the defeat (thanks Sky Sports for switching to the Dallas game), there really wasn’t a lot to write home about. However, if you look at the bigger picture, there are at least a couple of good trends we can focus on.

Isaiah Hodgins, who seems to have completely taken on the so-called “Kenny Golladay” role, had another solid game, snagging four of his six targets for 38 yards and a touchdown while also adding a two-point conversion in garbage time.

Kayvon Thibodeaux had a good but not spectacular showing (four pressures); however, his counterpart Azeez Ojulari continued his incredible return from injury as he recorded four tackles (two for a loss), two sacks, and two quarterback hits on 41 defensive snaps. There were also sacks from two of our UDFA class members, as Ryder Anderson recorded his first sack and cornerback Zyon Gilbert, who had a drastically reduced workload this week, was also able to get home.

The Bad

Other than some sparks on the pass rush, the defence was almost nonexistent during the game, and Jalen Hurts was able to go up and down the field using both his legs and arm with relative ease.

Hurts, who barely had to get out of first gear in the passing game, completed 21 of 31 passes for 217 yards and two touchdowns. His first was a fourth-and-seven conversion, which was easily avoidable had Julian Love decided to force the incompletion; however, he went all in on the interception, missing the ball completely and allowing Devonta Smith an easy walk-in. His second came only five minutes later after a shocking punt from Gillan (more on that later) gave the Eagles great field position, and Hurts took full advantage with a one-play, 33-yard touchdown pass to A.J. Brown.

If the passing defence was bad, then the rush was worse. Hurts, Myles Sanders, and Boston Scott combined for four touchdowns and 253 yards on 31 carries. All three had a long of over ten yards, and they all averaged above five yards per carry; in fact, the Eagles averaged a disgusting 8.2 yards per carry. Inexcusable

The Ugly

In what seems to be a running theme for the Giants, our special teams unit outside of the stellar Graham Gano stinks. Admittedly, Elerson Smith did block a punt to set up our first touchdown, but that was the lone good moment.

In the Eagles’ return game, the aforementioned Scott, who seems to always have a career day against the Giants, had 117 total return yards, including a 66-yard return late in the second quarter. On the opposite side, the Giants’ return game was nowhere near as impressive, with the Eagles testing Gary Brightwell’s ability with short kickoffs that amounted to minimal gains, if any.

The punting game, though, is the real reason for this ugly entry. Though three of Gillan’s punts landed inside the 20-yard line, he will be remembered for one complete lapse of concentration in which he not only fumbled the ball as he went to drop it to punt but then followed through to kick the ball after it had bounced, drawing a flag and a 10-yard penalty for illegal kicking that paved the way for the A.J. Brown touchdown.

Ward of Wisdom

With the stench of defeat fresh in the air, the beat writers started doing their rounds in the locker room, and after veteran defensive end Jihad Ward was asked about the Giants’ recent struggles, the air soon turned blue with his expletive-ridden speech, and for their own sake, the rest of the locker room better take notice:

“It’s December football, man. It’s about who the (expletive) wants it more. You know what I’m saying? There’s more to it than just doing your job. There’s more to it than just knowing the playbook. You have to do more. How bad do you want it?

“Ain’t nobody going to sit here and give it to us. How bad do you really, really want it? “Now is the time where the veterans put (the young players) on that and let them know this (expletive) ain’t no game out here. It’s a bunch of grown (expletive) men. We’re not treating these rookies like young bulls. They’re grown (expletive) men.

“I don’t see no rookie no more in my mother (expletive) eyes. You gotta come with it or you’re going to fold. What are you going to do? You want to sit back and wait until next year? I want it now. That’s the kind of mindset I have and one I expect every single person in this organization to have.”

On To Next Week

I think even the most optimistic Giants fans would have predicted anything other than a loss this week, and the way it went will obviously sting, but in the grand scheme of things, not a lot really changed in the playoff picture, except maybe momentum.

Seattle, who had an opportunity to knock the Giants out of the playoff spots, fell to a shock defeat to the Carolina Panthers, and Washington overtook the Giants into the seventh seed thanks to their superior divisional record.

All in all, it comes down to Sunday Night Football this coming week as the Giants travel to FedExField in what is essentially a make-or-break game for the G-Men. Win, and the playoffs are still a possibility. Lose, and it’s almost game over.

Posted on Leave a comment

5 things to look out for in Week 14

Three inter-division clashes and Tua vs Herbert on SNF are among five things to look out for in Week 14

1. Bills out for revenge against the Jets

PFF’s second-ranked offense meets their second-ranked defense for the second time this season as the Buffalo Bills host the New York Jets.

Buffalo regained the lead of the AFC East after Miami’s loss to San Francisco on Sunday, a win over the Jets is crucial before their big division decider against the Dolphins.

Unfortunately, they will be without star pass rusher Von Miller for the rest of the season due to a torn ACL discovered during a scope on the knee he injured on Thanksgiving.

2. Giants desperate for a win in an all-NFC East clash

The New York Giants are in desperate need for a win as the NFC playoff picture is heating up. Brian Daboll’s team have won just one in four, after starting the year 6-1.

A lack of real quality, especially in roles that require depth is really starting to catch up with them. Daniel Jones’ offense has only scored over 25 points once all season. 

Philadelphia looked like they were back to their old selves after a dominant win over the Titans on Sunday. Another outstanding performance from Jalen Hurts will boost his chances of being named MVP

3. Can the Denver Broncos upset the Kansas City Chiefs?

Denver hasn’t beaten Kansas City since Week 2 of the 2015 season, the year they won the Super Bowl, meaning that the Chiefs have come out on top in each of the last 13 meetings.

If the Broncos pull off an upset, it could seriously jeopardise the Chiefs’ chances of claiming the top seed in the playoffs. If the Chiefs lose and the Bengals or Ravens win, they will fall all the way to three. 

An unlikely fumble by Travis Kelce cost Mahomes and company the lead in Cincinnati on Sunday night, while the Broncos blew their own lead to a Tyler Huntley-led Baltimore team.

4. Brock Purdy vs Tom Brady in San Francisco

Tampa Bay are hitting form at the right time, being in the last five games, which were all within one score, and winning three of them.

Monday night saw another classic Tom Brady comeback, this time from a two-score deficit with five minutes remaining.

Brock Purdy came in for an injured Jimmy Garroppolo and made all the throws necessary to help San Francisco beat Miami last week. 2022’s Mr. Irrelevant makes his first career start in this game.

5. Tua vs Herbert on Sunday Night Football

2020’s number five and six overall picks face off as Tua Tagovailoa and Justin Herbert meet for the first time since their rookie year, where the Dolphins were victorious

Tua’s currently going through a career year, whilst Herbert is having a down year. Mike McDaniel’s faith in the quarterback, paired with a better offensive cast, especially Terron Armstead, has helped a potential bust turn his career around. 

All eyes will be on Justin Herbert who has to win this game to keep the Chargers in the playoff picture. A loss and their season is all but done. Can he put the team on his back and win?

Posted on Leave a comment

Week 13: Rookie Standouts

Games going down to the wire, overtime ties, and the return of a controversial quarterback ensured that Week 13 had its surprises, but most games went the way of the betting favourites. Here are the rookies that stood out this week:

Daron Bland, Cornerback – Dallas Cowboys

Despite the overwhelming 54-19 score line, the Colts had kept the game within a score against the Cowboys, but when Dallas scored early in the fourth quarter to make it 28-19, the Colts imploded in dramatic fashion. Indianapolis turned the ball over four times in the space of 13 minutes, and rookie Daron Bland had a hand (literally) in two of them.

Bland, who has filled in for injured corner Anthony Brown, has been steadily improving in recent weeks, with the exception of a poor performance against the Packers in Week 10, but his performance against Indianapolis was by far his best. After spending the majority of the game in tight coverage, Bland showed almost telepathic knowledge of where the ball was going on both interceptions, finishing with two interceptions and one pass break-up while allowing only two catches for nine yards on seven targets.

Jalen Pitre, Safety – Houston Texans

A few weeks ago, the Texans made the decision to move Pitre to free safety, and they seem to be reaping the rewards as the rookie out of Baylor looks much more comfortable. During the game against the Cleveland Browns, he not only had one of his best games against the Browns but also broke a Houston Texans defensive record.

Pitre recorded a season-high 16 tackles against the Browns, breaking ex-Texan linebacker DeMeco Ryans record from 16 years ago of 15 tackles. Interestingly, in that game against the Raiders on the 3rd of December 2006, Ryans also had an interception, something Pitre also matched, as he picked off a pass intended for Amari Cooper by the returning Deshaun Watson, who incidentally was playing in his first game in 700 days due to injury and suspension.

Christian Watson, Wide Receiver – Green Bay Packers

Christian Watson received his first nomination in my condensed Week 10 rankings after an impressive four receptions for 107 yards and three touchdowns. Against the Chicago Bears, Watson was able to continue this recent success as he showcased his ability as both a receiver and a rusher, scoring a pair of touchdowns.

His first, a 14-yard pass from Aaron Rogers on fourth down with only 17 seconds left in the first half, was likely the catalyst the Packers needed to mount their comeback, and his second was a simple jet sweep that completely fooled the defence, allowing him to turn on the afterburners for a 41-yard rush. Watson now has 8 touchdowns in the last four games, giving him the distinction of sharing the record for most touchdowns scored over a four-game span with Hall of Famer Randy Moss.

Honourable Mentions

Reed Blankenship (Philadelphia Eagles), Greg Dulcich (Denver Broncos), Garrett Wilson (New York Jets), Jack Sanborn (Chicago Bears), Brian Robinson Jr (Washington Commanders),

Posted on Leave a comment

There Is Only One Takeaway; The New Orleans Saints Season Is Over

There are plenty of things I could talk about from an analysis perspective from this game, about what went well and what clearly didn’t. How this team could be much better after their bye week as they will be getting more key players back. 

Honestly, none of it matters, the false hope of winning the putrid NFC South is now gone; the only thing left for this team is to try and win as many games as possible so the pick they gave to the Eagles is as far down the draft as possible.

Overall Thoughts From Saints @ Bucs (and other ramblings)

In many ways, this was one of the Saints best games of the season. For 54 minutes of the game, the Saints looked in control and looked like they would win the game and go into the bye week with real hope of turning their season around.

Until an almighty collapse reminiscent of another NFC South rival. That’s right in a season that didn’t feel like it could get much worse, the Saints did what all us fans mock our division rival for doing, impossibly giving up a massive lead in the fourth quarter and losing a game that should have comfortably been a win. The collapse seemed almost impossible with six minutes to go in the fourth quarter. Until one crucial play, which switched a lot of jaded fans from hope to the realization despair was likely coming.

Mark Ingram had enough room to easily get the first down with six minutes left in the fourth quarter, all he needed to do was put the ball in his other hand and extend the ball past the marker. I would have been first and ten at the Tampa 43, instead Ingram, who had been injured a few minutes prior stepped one yard short of the first down because he re-aggravated the injury from a few minutes prior and couldn’t finish the play. This left third and one which the Saints couldn’t convert, sparking the Bucs comeback.

That play shouldn’t have cost the Saints the game. After the punt, the Bucs needed to go 91 yards to reduce the deficit to six points. As the defense had been dominating Brady and the Bucs again throughout the game to minimal gains, 91 yards should have taken the Bucs so long that a second scoring drive should have been out of the realms of possibility. Have you noticed I’m using the word should a lot here? That’s because the Saints defense crumbled at the worst time possible, aided by a massive DPI penalty on Paulson Adebo the Bucs went 91 yards in ten plays in only two minutes and 21 seconds.

From this point on the loss felt inevitable the Saints despite wanting to be a run-first offense have proven incapable of being able to sustain drives to ice a game and that’s exactly what happened, immediately going three and out, even this drive had a chance for the Saints to pull off a remarkable game-saving play, facing third and 17 Andy Dalton delivered one of the most perfect passes downfield to Taysom Hill you will see, Hill caught it but couldn’t hold on to it after a hard hit, this play perfectly sums up the Saints season, plenty of chances to win but ultimately shooting themselves in the foot.

The Saints punted, giving the Bucs plenty of time to go down the field and win. It feels harsh to blame the defense holding Tom Brady to three points until deep in the third quarter and forcing two turnovers should be more than good enough but this team has no margin for error, especially as the offense struggles to score many touchdowns.

So that surely means the offense was the issue? It was but not how many might expect. Usually, when an offense only scores 16 and can’t close out a game in the fourth quarter it’s the QBs fault, again similar to last week against the 49ers I truly don’t believe that to be the case here. 

This was arguably Andy Dalton’s best game as a Saint, he made some incredible throws in big moments but his receivers couldn’t make the plays. Dalton finished 20 of 28 with three of those incompletions being drops from his receivers, the Hill drop I mentioned earlier. Olave dropped one in the second quarter on third down which would have put the Saints near the Bucs RedZone. Conservatively this took three points off the board possibly more. Jarvis Landry dropped a pass in the RedZone that would have been a touchdown, granted it was a tough catch but it’s a catch a player of his calibre needs to make.

There were plays in this game that if they were made and they should have been and the Saints would have been home and dry. Unfrotunelty this has been the case in several games this year (Vikings, Bengals, 49ers) there’s a clear path despite the mountain of significant injuries this team has dealt with that they could easily be leading the division if everything went their way they would be sitting pretty at 8-5. 

Ultimately they are not and now they are left with many more questions than answers about the team’s future. No first-round pick, no future at QB, no salary cap space to work with, ageing stars, and the most pressingly massive questions at HC and OC.

There’s no question in many Saints fan’s minds that Dennis Allen should not be the HC next season, I’ve not been so quick to jump to that conclusion to justify some of the results and games this season with what I’ve spoken about above. But my hesitancy is long gone, as an HC during his tenure with the Raiders and now the Saints have the second worse winning percentage all time out of the 17 coaches to have coached between 48 and 50 games. At some point, excuses can’t come into it anymore and you need to look at the simple facts that Dennis Allen-led teams don’t win football games,  it’s that simple.

OC Pete Carmichael Jr. should not be far behind Allen, on his way out the door. Carmichael has proven to be a very good offensive game planner, but as a full-time OC without Drew Brees at QB he’s looked out of his depth on gamedays. Showing a lack of imagination through countless second and ten runs or in big moments calling plays to the wrong people. An easy example in this game is on the Saints penultimate offensive drive the Saints had second and ten, Carmichael called a pass play where his only WR on the field was Kirk Merritt, a practice squad WR that was playing his first regular-season NFL game. Where was Jarvis Landry or Chris Olave, where was Rashid Shaheed? The play ended in a seven yards sack.  Carmichael has served the Saints well for many years but his time as OC should not extend past this season.

Thankfully the Saints now go into their bye week, which means Saints fans can have a much-needed detox from this exhausting and infuriating season and the team can try to use the time to work out the future of this season and beyond. 

As for me, all that is left to care about in this season are two things:

Sweeping the Falcons and giving the Eagles as bad of a pick as possible.

Enjoy the bye week Saints fans! We need it.

For more Saints articles- https://www.full10yards.co.uk/saints/ 

Please let me know your feedback on this article and the others throughout the season. I’m always looking to improve and add things that people want to read about!

Follow me on Twitter and Instagram @SaintsReportUK, for much more Saints content and discussion.


Posted on Leave a comment

Fantasy Recap – Week 13

Welcome to the fantasy recap. Week 13 will have been unlucky for some, especially those with players who suffered game ending injuries early on. Week 14 marks the start of the fantasy playoffs in some leagues but with 6 teams on bye I hope for your sake that they start in week 15. You don’t want people knocked out of the playoffs due to their star being on bye. That being said, injuries are also going to be key, and some have major knock on effects for other assets so this may make tough reading for some. But there were some stars too so let’s start with the positives.

NB: Scores based on PPR leagues

Fantasy Stars:

QB: Jalen Hurts (PHI) – 29cmp/380yds/3td/0int + 5rsh/12yds/1td/1fum = 33pts

Hurts was top of the tree in this week where many have put theirs up for Christmas.

Other star QBs: J.Burrow(30), G.Smith(23).

RB: Christian McCaffrey (SF) – 17rsh/66yds + 8rec/80yds/1td = 29pts

The 49ers lose their starting QB but their best asset stepped up to carry them through.

Other star RBs: T.Pollard (25), D.Swift (21), J.Jacobs (20).

WR: Davante Adams (LV) – 8rec/177yds/2tds = 38pts

Adams once again dominated albeit if you have Brown in your name you were probably good too.

Other star WRs: A.StBrown(35), AJ.Brown(32), T.Hill(30).

TE: Greg Dulcich (DEN) – 6rec/85yds = 15pts

This should be in surprises as a Denver player makes it into this section but it was a bad week for tight ends.

Other Star TE’s: C.Otton/E.Engram(14), T.Hill/C.Kmet/G.Everett(13).

Surprise Packages:

J.Goff (DET) – 31cmp/340yds/2td/0int = 22pts

Goff and co. put up 40 points on the Jags as though they were playing Madden on rookie.

Other surprise QBs: M.White (19), T.Huntley (17), B.Purdy(15).

Cam Akers (LAR) – 17rsh/60yds/2tds + 1rec/0yds = 19pts

Cam Akers has returned from the wilderness. Not sure how long it will last but good for him.

Other surprise RBs: S.Perine (22), A.Dillon (18pts), Z.Knight/J.Cook (17).

Garrett Wilson (NYJ) – 8rec/162yds/0td = 24pts

A Jets player, not scoring a td but puts up 24pts. Maybe times are changing for this offence.

Other surprise WRs: A.Pierce(19), J.Dotson(16), I.Hodgins/T.Sherfield(15).  

Chigoziem Okonkwo (TEN) – 4rec/68yds = 11pts

Okonokwo went with the flow this week and the rookie has started to emerge.

Other surprise TEs: N.Fant(14), C.Heyward/B.Jordan(9).

Disappointments:

DeShaun Watson (CLE) – 12cmp/131yds/1int + 7rsh/21yds/1fumlost = 6pts

Ignore fantasy, he’s a disappointment in general as a human so many will have taken delight in his terrible statline on his return.

Other disappointing QB’s: K.Cousins(12), A.Rodgers/T.Lawrence(14). Other low scorers were somewhat expected.

Jeff Wilson (MIA) – 1rsh/3yds = 0pts

Wilson was against his former team but here he was MIA, Missing in action.

Other disappointing RB’s: J.Hasty(0), G.Edwards(1), R.Mostert(3), A.Kamara/D.Henry/C.Patterson(6).

George Pickens (PIT) – 1rec/2yds = 1pt

The Steelers won but the Pickett to Pickens connection wasn’t picked by the coaching team.

Other disappointing WR’s: J.Waddle(2), M.Jones(3), Z.Jones/M.Pittman(4), A.Thielin(5).

Dawson Knox (BUF) – 0rec/0yds = 0pts

Knox was locked down against the Patriots but you could argue they didn’t need him.

Other disappointing TE’s: M.Alie-Cox(-1); M.Gesicki/T.Hill(0); G.Kittle(4).

Injury Roundup:

I’ve added a new section to note who left games with injuries which may have affected their fantasy score and you will have to keep an eye on over the coming week or weeks.

Quarterbacks:

Lamar Jackson (Knee – Could miss time)

Jimmy Garoppolo (Foot – Out for season)

Running Backs:

Kenneth Walker (Ankle – Unknown)

Wide Receivers:

Jalen Waddle (Leg – Returned to game but unclear)

Jacobi Meyers (Head – Unknown)

Treylon Burks (Concussion – Unknown)

Tight Ends:

Hayden Hurst (Calf – Unknown)

Waiver Wire Pickups:

The last week of byes but it is a big one so I hope that these don’t bias your playoffs.

BYE Weeks: ATL, CHI, GB, IND, NO, WAS

Quarterbacks:

Derek Carr – LV @LAR

Geno Smith – SEA vsCAR

Tyler Huntley – BAL @PIT

Running Backs:

Deejay Dallas – SEA vsCAR

Cam Akers – LAR vsLV

Zonovan Knight – NYJ @BUF

D’Onta Foreman – CAR @SEA

Wide Receivers:

Garrett Wilson – NYJ @BUF

Josh Palmer – LAC vsMIA

Nico Collins – HOU @DAL

Donovan Peoples-Jones – CLE @CIN

Tight Ends:

Greg Dulcich – DEN vsKC

Noah Fant – SEA vsCAR

Evan Engram – JAX @TEN

Defence/Special Teams (Assume BUF/DAL/PHI/BAL/SF/NE is unavailable):

Seahawks vsCAR

Chiefs @DEN

Titans vsJAX

Raiders @LAR

Posted on Leave a comment

Five Things: Week 13 – Washington Commanders at New York Giants

In a game that offered little in terms of playoff clarity for both teams, the New York Giants and Washington Commanders played out a drab 20-20 tie. I suppose a silver lining is that I can continue my “good, bad, and ugly” theme from last week. Here are five things that stood out:

The Good

In a game that is likely to be remembered for all the bad, there were still a few positives to take away for the Giants.

Isaiah Hodgins played in his fourth game since joining the team from the Buffalo Bills practice squad, ending the game with five receptions of six targets for 44 yards and a touchdown, his first in the NFL. Not only has Hodgins shown safe hands since joining (13 receptions of 14 targets), but as he showed on a third-and-10 catch in the first half, he’s got the determination to fight for the dirty yards.

We also finally had the emergence of a pass rush, as for the first time this season we were able to see Azeez Ojulari, Kayvon Thibodeaux, Dexter Lawrence, and Leonard Williams all on the same field together. Although Williams had to leave the game in the second half with a neck injury, the Giants recorded five sacks in the game with Thibodeaux, Lawrence, and Ojulari, who also recorded a fumble and recovery, each grabbing one along with fellow linemen Jihad Ward and Justin Ellis.

The Bad

After a 10-day break following the Cowboys’ second-half thrashing, you’d think the Giants would be raring to go, but it was a lethargic start on both sides of the ball. Daniel Jones scrambled and then fumbled the ball on only the fourth play of the game; the defence then decided that missed tackles were the order of play (a total of eight on the day according to PFF), leading to the Commanders scoring 10 points in the first quarter.

The Giants did manage to clean up their play for the 2nd quarter and the start of the third scoring 20 unanswered points but after that, the offence descended back into their sluggish play and looked devoid of inspiration. With the game score at 13-20 in favour of the Giants with just over three minutes of the third quarter gone, the Giants had plenty of time to find anything that would have likely sealed the win, but their next eight drives (overtime included) went punt, punt, punt, punt, kneel, punt, punt, and finally, the missed field goal to end overtime.

The Ugly

Other than the result, there were plenty of moments in the game that left many a Giant fan dumbfounded.

We’ll start with Jon Feliciano’s decision to run from his position on the field to the sideline to flex. Now admittedly, Feliciano has since said he was flexing in the direction of Giants wide receiver Darius Slayton, who had just converted a first down, but the wily veteran should know better than to test this season’s referees, who spotted the myriad of Washington players around him and put two and two together. The ensuing flag negated the yards gained, and instead of being able to capitalise on the momentum to increase their lead, the Giants ended up punting the ball away just four plays later.

Overtime itself was another story with a couple of facepalm moments, but none more than when the Giants lined up for a third-and-three just inside Washington’s half and, as the ball was snapped, Saquon Barkley and Richie James ran into each other, leaving Jones to give up a sack. The decision to get cute with the play calling ultimately ruined what was a promising drive that could have ended the game.

Worst Coached Game of the Year?

It’s safe to say that if you isolated the first half of the season, you could argue that the coaching staff would all be deserving of nominations for honors, but in the last few weeks, mistakes, poor clock management, cautious play calling, and not resolving the season’s Achilles heel of slow starts have brought Giants head coach Brian Daboll back down to earth.

The slow start is not something new, but for some reason, we’ve been unable to ascertain what the root cause is. Earlier in the season, it wasn’t too much of an issue due to our second-half comebacks, but with the Giants’ offence now wildly inconsistent, we need to play from the first play to the last.

Mike Kafka’s play-calling hasn’t been awful, but it also hasn’t set the world alight either, and there were multiple missteps this week. There was the decision to not take a shot into the endzone late in regulation on third and one and to call a run, either of which shows a distinct lack of trust in either Daniel Jones or the wide receivers, plus the aforementioned overtime play and punt, which gave most of us the impression that the staff were happy to not lose rather than win.

A Tie, Really?!

The scoreboard may read tie game, but in the hearts of the fans and the players, this was just as deflating as a loss. Coach Daboll may have downplayed it by saying, “It’s better than a loss; not as good as a win,” but in the grand scheme of things, this one had to sting, especially since it was against a divisional rival.

The strange thing is that due to the scheduling this season, the Commanders will now take their late bye week while the Giants will need to be vastly improved as they take on another divisional rival, the high-flying Philadelphia Eagles before we do it all again against the Commanders, this time at FedExField in a game that has now been flexed into the Sunday Night Football spot.