The Daily Briefing Friday, October 30, 2020

AROUND THE NFL

Daily Briefing

Fun fact from Michael David Smith of ProFootballTalk.com:

@MichaelDavSmith

The Buccaneers are 5-2 and have a +80 point differential. The Browns are 5-2 and have a -21 point differential.

– – –

Not so fun.  Another Hall of Famers has passed away.

Pro Football Hall of Fame cornerback Herb Adderley passed away Friday at the age of 81.

 

Adderley was a first-round pick for the Green Bay Packers in the 1961 NFL Draft and played for the Packers through 1969 before ending his pro football career with the Dallas Cowboys (1970-72).

 

“The entire Pro Football Hall of Fame family mourns the passing of Herb Adderley,” said Pro Football Hall of Fame President & CEO David Baker. “He was a great player and an even greater man. Herb left an indelible mark on the Game and was respected tremendously by players and personnel across the league. Our thoughts and prayers are with Herb’s wife, Brenda, and their entire family. We will forever keep his legacy alive to serve as inspiration for future generations. The Hall of Fame flag will be flown at half-staff in Herb’s memory.”

Adderley, from Philadelphia and Michigan State, had 48 career INTs.  He collected 3 Super Bowl rings and was on the All-Decade Team for the ‘60s.

NFC NORTH

 

GREEN BAY

Some good, some bad with the Packers and their injuries.  Rotowire offers this on WR ALLEN LAZARD:

Lazard (core) participated in Thursday’s padded practice, Ryan Wood of the Green Bay Press-Gazette reports.

 

One day removed from the Packers opening his 21-day window to be activated from IR, Lazard took part in individual drills. He underwent core muscle surgery on Oct. 1, after which he was given a recovery timetable of “a month or a little bit more,” per Ian Rapoport of NFL Network. Considering the Packers next play Sunday, Nov. 1 against the Vikings, Lazard seemingly has a chance to return this weekend. Still, Green Bay has been cautious with other key skill-position players (Davante Adams and Aaron Jones) this season, so Lazard may have a better chance to suit up Week 9 at San Francisco.

But this on RB AARON JONES:

Jones (calf) didn’t practice Thursday, Olivia Reiner of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports.

 

As coach Matt LaFleur mentioned Wednesday, the Packers will be “very careful” with Jones as he recovers from the strained calf he suffered in practice last week. Jones didn’t suit up Week 7 at Houston, yielding the backfield to Jamaal Williams (114 yards from scrimmage, one TD) and rookie second-rounder AJ Dillon (11, zero). With no practice reps under his belt this week, Jones is trending in the wrong direction for Sunday’s divisional matchup with the Vikings, but he still has one more practice to make his case for active status.

 

MINNESOTA

Covid Alert!  Covid Alert!

Michael David Smith of ProFootballTalk.com:

For the second time this week, a Vikings player has been sidelined as a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

 

In results received this morning a Vikings linebacker tested positive, Adam Schefter of ESPN reports.

 

Vikings rookie cornerback Cameron Dantzler was placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list on Wednesday. It’s unknown whether Dantzler actually tested positive or whether he was placed on the list because of close contact with someone who was infected.

 

There has been no indication yet that the Vikings’ scheduled Sunday afternoon game at Green Bay will be affected.

The afflicted Viking has been ID’d as LB TODD DAVIS.

NFC EAST

 

DALLAS

Who starts for the Cowboys on Sunday night?  Todd Archer of ESPN.com:

Dallas Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy would not completely rule out Andy Dalton for Sunday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles, but owner and general manager Jerry Jones said Dalton “should be ready to go next week” during an appearance on 105.3 The Fan in Dallas on Friday.

 

Rookie Ben DiNucci has taken the first-team quarterback work this week in practice and would start the first game of his career. He completed two of three passes for 39 yards after Dalton suffered a concussion on a hit in the third quarter of a 25-3 loss to the Washington Football Team last week.

 

The Cowboys (2-5) play the Pittsburgh Steelers on Nov. 8 at AT&T Stadium before their bye week.

 

Dalton is in the concussion protocol and was at Friday’s walk-through but not a participant. He was in the quarterback meetings on Thursday.

 

“If Andy would practice [Saturday], that would be the only chance he would have to play in the game,” McCarthy said Friday. “As of right now, he’s not scheduled to practice.”

 

Asked if Dalton could be active but not start, McCarthy said, “You look at all your scenarios, but until he comes out and he’s been cleared by the medical staff, then we really can’t entertain that decision. But that’s definitely an option.”

Eric Edholm of YahooSports.com introduces us to DiNucci:

When the Dallas Cowboys spent a seventh-round draft pick on quarterback Ben DiNucci from James Madison this spring, there was a widespread chorus from the team’s fans.

 

Who?

 

NFL scouts certainly knew what kind of player he was after tracking DiNucci’s long, winding path throughout college football. The Pittsburgh-bred quarterback cracked the top 10 in several school passing marks — including completions, attempts, passing yards and passing TDs — despite spending only two years there.

 

And without an NFL preseason in 2020, the Cowboys learned more about him in Week 7 when he unexpectedly was thrust into the lineup in the midst of an eventual 25-3 loss to the Washington Football Team. Andy Dalton, who had replaced injured starter Dak Prescott, was knocked out of the game following a late hit to the head from Washington’s Jon Bostic.

 

DiNucci, who turns 24 next month, became only the sixth seventh-round QB to play as a rookie in the past 15 years, completing two of three passes for 39 yards. (He also was sacked three times and fumbled twice.)

 

All signs point to DiNucci earning his first NFL start in place of an injured Dalton on Sunday night against the Philadelphia Eagles in what theoretically is a battle for the NFC East playoff race.

 

But most of the country is still learning about him. So who exactly is DiNucci? Here are four things you should know about him.

 

Started his college career at Pitt

As a high school player at Pine-Richland (Gibsonia, Pennsylvania), about 30 minutes north of Pittsburgh, DiNucci racked up quite a resumé.

 

DiNucci was named USA Today second-team All-American and was the Pennsylvania Gatorade Player of the Year, throwing for 7,619 yards and 72 touchdowns during his career — and the first Pennsylvania high school player to top the 4,000-yard mark in a season as a senior.

 

However, Rivals rated him only as a two-star recruit, and he struggled to generate recruiting buzz. DiNucci originally committed to Penn.

 

Pitt entered the mix late after losing one QB recruit and one transfer, and the school offered DiNucci. It was his dream school, and he jumped at the offer.

 

DiNucci was then-new head coach Pat Narduzzi’s first QB commitment that stuck. His offensive coordinator, Jim Chaney, convinced Narduzzi to extend DiNucci the offer.

 

Ben DiNucci almost quit football

Things didn’t quite work out the way DiNucci had hoped with the Panthers.

 

He spent three seasons there, including his redshirt freshman year. And when DiNucci cracked the lineup — including six starts as a redshirt sophomore — he had a few bright spots.

 

DiNucci completed 88 of 158 passes for 1,091 yards with five touchdowns and five interceptions as a sophomore. He came off bench to throw for a season-high 228 yards and a touchdown against Oklahoma State and ran for a TD and a two-point conversion against Penn State. DiNucci also threw for a touchdown in the Pinstripe Bowl against Northwestern.

 

It was clear that Kenny Pickett was the Panthers’ future at the position. DiNucci saw the writing on the wall and figured transferring was his best option.

 

“When I decided to transfer, I wasn’t even sure if I wanted to play football anymore,” he said this spring. “When I was there, the fun kind of got taken out of the game.”

 

It’s a good thing he did, transferring to James Madison.

 

DiNucci started all 13 games in 2018, leading the Dukes to a 9-4 mark and a run in the FCS playoffs that year. He was named third-team all-Colonial Athletic Association.

 

As a redshirt senior in 2019, he was even better, despite having to win back the starting job when a new coaching staff took over. DiNucci started all 16 games, was named CAA Offensive Player of the Year and led the Dukes all the way to the FCS title game where they lost to Trey Lance and North Dakota State. For the season, he threw for 3,341 yards, 29 TDs and only six interceptions, completing 70.6 percent of his passes. DiNucci also ran for 569 yards and seven scores.

 

DiNucci outpassed Lance, 204 yards to 72, in the championship game. The Dukes lost, 28-20.

 

The location of that game provided DiNucci with a chance meeting that might have allowed him to be a rookie starter for the Cowboys.

 

First JMU quarterback in the NFL … and a wild Mike McCarthy meeting

James Madison has never been considered a breeding ground for NFL talent.

 

Even so, there are recognizable alumni from the school who have made it to — and even thrived in — the league.

 

One of the most famous was former Washington wide receiver Gary Clark, a four-time Pro Bowler and two-time Super Bowl champ who still ranks in the top 50 all time in receptions and yards in league history.

 

The other most famous JMU alum in league history is one Cowboys fans know well — Charles Haley. In one of the more decorated NFL careers, Haley was named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame after leading the Cowboys to three Super Bowl victories and the San Francisco 49ers to two more.

 

In recent years, a handful of JMU players have made it to the NFL — former Eagles linebacker Akeem Jordan, former Bills linebacker Arthur Moats and former Cardinals offensive guard Earl Watford.

 

The school’s most infamous alum? It’s probably former Buffalo Bills kicker, Scott Norwood, who missed the would-be winning kick against the Giants in Super Bowl XXV.

 

JMU had never produced an NFL quarterback until DiNucci made his debut last week. (Mike Cawley was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts in 1996 but never played in a regular-season game.)

 

And it’s kind of a miracle DiNucci is even on an active roster — or was drafted — in the first place.

 

DiNucci certainly had NFL talent but the COVID-19 limitations on the draft process tended to hurt smaller-school prospects, as pro days were canceled all over the country and DiNucci was not invited to a single postseason all-star game.

 

Prior to that, as James Madison was preparing for the FCS title game in Frisco, Texas, he ran into a coach — in an elevator — who knew his name. It was Mike McCarthy.

 

McCarthy was staying at the same hotel in Frisco that the JMU players were, and it turned out they had a few things in common. Both grew up in Pittsburgh, growing up in roughly the same area. In fact, McCarthy’s brother was actually DiNucci’s eighth-grade basketball coach.

 

“He was very familiar with our team,” DiNucci said. “I was kind of surprised that he knew who I was.”

 

After the Cowboys shocked more than one person — including DiNucci — by drafting him, DiNucci was ecstatic on draft weekend.

 

“It’s just crazy to see this thing come full circle,” he said. “It’s an unbelievable opportunity, and I’m so excited.”

 

The DiNucci-Ryan Fitzpatrick connection

Yes, DiNucci and Ryan Fitzpatrick (Harvard) are two FCS-level quarterbacks in the NFL. There are others.

 

If DiNucci starts Sunday he’ll be the first seventh-round rookie QB to start since Fitzpatrick did it in 2005 with the St. Louis Rams.

 

Fitzpatrick’s first NFL start unfolded in similar fashion. Opening-game starter Marc Bulger suffered a shoulder injury, and his backup, Jamie Martin, went down in Week 12 of that season. Enter Fitz with his team down big.

 

Fitzpatrick did what DiNucci last week was unable to do: rally his team to a shocking win. Trailing 24–3 at halftime to Houston, Fitzpatrick threw for 310 yards and three TDs as the Rams won, 33–27, in overtime. Fitzpatrick even was named NFC Offensive Player of the Week.

 

Fitzpatrick earned the Rams’ next three starts but he couldn’t duplicate his relief-pitching magic. Fitzpatrick threw only one touchdown and seven interceptions in those three games, and the Rams lost all three. Martin soon replaced him.

 

Who knows how DiNucci’s trial will go? But if there’s ever a case study for a little-known quarterback overcoming early struggles to survive in the NFL, it’s Fitzpatrick. After all, he’s still active today and ranks 31st in passing yards and 34th in passing touchdowns all time

PHILADELPHIA

WR JALEN REAGOR is the good news on the Eagles injury report per Tim McManus ofESPN.com:

Philadelphia Eagles rookie wide receiver Jalen Reagor has been medically cleared to return from a UCL tear in his thumb and is expected to play Sunday night barring a setback, according to a league source, who confirmed local reports on Reagor’s status.

 

Reagor was injured in the Eagles’ Week 2 loss to the Los Angeles Rams and was placed on injured reserve following surgery on the thumb. The Eagles activated the 21-day window for Reagor to return on Monday and he has practiced all week without incident.

 

Reagor, the team’s first-round pick out of TCU, had five catches for 96 yards before getting hurt.

 

The Eagles also activated the practice window for tight end Dallas Goedert, who has been sidelined since Week 3 with a small fracture in his tibia and a high ankle sprain. Goedert said they are “taking it slow,” as he reacclimates to practice and did not commit to playing Sunday.

 

“I’ve got to be able to run good routes. I can’t go out there at 75 percent and just get covered; [then] I’m just a waste,” he said.

 

Running back Miles Sanders (knee) has not practiced all week and is in jeopardy of missing his second straight game.

 

Right tackle Lane Johnson (knee, ankle) was limited Thursday after sitting out Wednesday’s practice.

 

WASHINGTON

Bill Barnwell of ESPN.com notes that the Football Team has a 29.5% chance of playing a Football Game in the Postseason.

While they only qualify for honorable mention status here, there are some interesting risers toward the bottom of the top 10. Would you believe that Washington’s chances of making it to the postseason have improved more since the start of the season than those of the 5-1 Seahawks? FPI still thinks Seattle has a much better shot of making it into January, of course, with its chances jumping from 60% before the season to 82.3% after Week 7 for a difference of 22.3 percentage points.

 

NFL trade deadline tracker: Latest deals, rumors and everything we’re hearing

Washington started with only a 6.2% shot of making it to the playoffs, however, and two wins in the NFC East are enough to give Ron Rivera’s team a 29.5% chance of making it into January, pushing it slightly ahead of the Seahawks by virtue of a 23.3-percentage-point rise. There’s a chance Washington could consider moving on from players such as pass-rusher Ryan Kerrigan in advance of Tuesday’s trade deadline, but it is simultaneously a half-game out of first place in the worst division in football. What a season!

NFC SOUTH

ATLANTA

QB MATT RYAN has no illusions about his running.  Michael David Smith ofProFootballTalk.com:

Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan is not known for his running. So when he had a season-high 27 rushing yards, including a 13-yard touchdown, on Thursday night, there was jubilation on the Falcons’ sideline.

 

Ryan wasn’t sure whether his teammates were celebrating that he scored a 13-yard touchdown, or laughing at how long it takes him to cover 13 yards.

 

“I can’t tell if they’re laughing at me or just having a good time and excited for it, but they’re always good when we get them and I think guys get fired up by it showing that there’s different ways to get the job done,” Ryan said, via the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

 

On the touchdown, Ryan had plenty of open field ahead of him but wasn’t sure if he was going to be able to outrun the Panthers’ defense to the corner of the end zone.

 

“I never know,” Ryan said. “You never know until you’re really in there. These guys can recover pretty quickly, but just fast enough. I feel like I’ve always been that way throughout my career – just fast enough to make them pay sometimes on third downs. It was a big score for us there. We needed it.”

 

NEW ORLEANS

The Saints may get WR MICHAEL THOMAS back, and hopefully in a good frame of mind.  Mike Triplett of ESPN.com:

New Orleans Saints receiver Michael Thomas returned to practice Thursday, giving him a chance to return to the lineup for the first time since Week 1.

 

It’s still unclear if Thomas (ankle/hamstring) will be able to play Sunday at Chicago. But he was participating in individual drills during the early portion of practice open to the media Thursday — which is something he did not do last week or on Wednesday of this week.

 

Thomas, the NFL’s reigning Offensive Player of the Year, was originally sidelined by a high ankle sprain that he suffered in Week 1. He appeared close to returning in Week 5, but then he was benched for team disciplinary reasons after a practice altercation in which he punched teammate C.J. Gardner-Johnson.

 

Then Thomas returned to practice after New Orleans’ Week 6 bye — only to suffer a new hamstring injury. Sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter that an MRI revealed a Grade 1 hamstring strain that was expected to sideline Thomas for one to two weeks.

 

The Saints could certainly use him at Chicago. Their No. 2 receiver, Emmanuel Sanders, is on the reserve-COVID list. And undrafted rookie receiver Marquez Callaway, who led the team with 75 yards on eight catches last week, has been dealing with an ankle injury of his own.

 

Thomas and Callaway were officially listed as limited in Thursday’s practice.

 

Sanders could technically be eligible to return to activity for the first time on Sunday after testing positive last Thursday. But he said that he will miss two games on Uninterrupted’s “17 Weeks” podcast on SiriusXM/Pandora.

 

Callaway was present for the start of Thursday’s practice but did not participate in the portion open to the media.

 

The Saints (4-2) have won three straight games despite their depleted WR corps, with Drew Brees and the passing offense finding a better rhythm by the week. They converted 12 of 14 third-down attempts and never punted in last week’s 27-24 victory over the Carolina Panthers.

AFC WEST

 

DENVER

Covid Alert!  Covid Alert!

Josh Alper of ProFootballTalk.com:

The Broncos will not be practicing on Friday after learning that a player on the team has tested positive for COVID-19.

 

According to multiple reports, the Broncos were given the go-ahead to practice despite the tests but have opted to hold virtual meetings on Friday with the intent of holding practice on Saturday instead.

 

Tom Pelissero of NFL Media reports that two other players on the team have been deemed close contacts of the infected players and they are currently isolating at their homes. Both players could be back on Saturday if they continue to test negative and are not classified as high risk contacts. If they are high risk, they will have to stay away for five days since their last contact.

 

The Chargers also had a player test positive this week, but there does not appear to be concern about rescheduling Sunday’s game at present.

AFC NORTH

 

BALTIMORE

A big guy gets a big extension.  Josh Alper of ProFootballTalk.com:

Ronnie Stanley said in August that a new contract wasn’t a top priority for him this year, but he won’t be hitting the open market in 2021.

 

Stanley is in the final year of his rookie deal, but he and the Ravens have moved to make sure that he’ll remain in Baltimore for years to come. The team announced that Stanley has signed a five-year extension with the team on Friday.

 

The team did not disclose any financial terms of the deal, but multiple reports say it has a maximum value of over $112 million with more than $70 million in total guarantees.

 

Stanley has started all 61 games he’s played for the Ravens since joining the team and he was named a first-team All-Pro last year. He’s set to make his 62nd start against the Steelers this Sunday.

Numbers from Jamison Hensley of ESPN.com:

Stanley becomes the NFL’s second-highest-paid left tackle, striking a $98.75 million extension, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. His annual average of $19.75 million trails only Houston’s Laremy Tunsil ($22 million per season).

 

Stanley’s deal maxes out at $112.866 million, the source said. He did surpass Tunsil in three areas: signing bonus ($22.5 million), total guarantees ($70.866 million, over $16 million more than Tunsil) and payout through March 31 ($47.116 million).

 

The extension keeps Stanley protecting Lamar Jackson’s blind side through the 2025 season and comes 29 days after the Ravens signed All-Pro cornerback Marlon Humphrey to a five-year, $98.75 million extension.

AFC EAST

 

BUFFALO

Huge game for the psyche of the Bills.  Marcel Louis-Jacques of ESPN.com:

The Buffalo Bills have publicized their one goal for the 2020 NFL season.

 

The MVP talk in September, the dark horse Super Bowl talk after Week 4 — those were media and fan creations. The Bills’ goal is winning the AFC East for the first time since 1995.

 

Since their arrival in Buffalo in 2017, general manager Brandon Beane and coach Sean McDermott have helped change the course of the Bills’ franchise, snapping a 17-year playoff drought with two postseason appearances over the past three seasons. Their success in building and developing this roster led to some preseason hype rarely seen in western New York, with some football pundits labeling the Bills the team to beat in the AFC East and even as a team to watch come playoff time.

 

Internally, the Bills (5-2) believe neither happens unless they do one thing — beat their Week 8 opponent, the New England Patriots (2-4), on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, CBS).

 

“We haven’t won the division and to me, that’s the goal we have to do because we need to host playoff games here in Orchard Park,” Beane said in September. “We haven’t been able to take down the Patriots, yet — nobody has since we’ve been here. That’s still the name we’re chasing.”

 

It has been an ugly chase. Buffalo has lost seven straight to the Patriots, last beating them in Week 4 of the 2016 season. But even with their self-imposed standards, the Bills aren’t looking at their next game as anything other than what it is — their next game.

 

Quarterback Josh Allen, whose three-interception game against New England in Week 4 of the 2019 season (a 16-10 loss) provided motivation for his improved play since, said the Bills absolutely want to win a division game, but the team is taking the same approach in Week 8 as it would any other game.

 

“It’s the most important game because it’s the next one,” Allen said. “We’re not trying to make it a bigger deal or a smaller deal than it needs to be.”

 

It’s not quite your average game, though.

 

Sunday represents the Bills’ first opportunity to knock off a team that’s held them at arm’s length for two decades. This game is their first real litmus test, even after sweeping the winless Jets and beating a rebuilding Dolphins team in Week 2.

 

“You’re playing a division rival, a team that’s had control of the division for decades,” ESPN NFL analyst Matt Bowen said, “and you’re in position to add another game on top of them for the division lead. So there should be a lot of energy on that football field — and the practice environment should change a little bit. It should be more up-tempo, and that’s just a natural reaction from the players when you get into a big-time game like this.

 

“Beating the Patriots is important — but winning the division is more important. … In the AFC East, we know that to win that division, you’ve got to knock off New England. There’s different personnel than they’ve seen in the past, but it’s still New England and it’s still [coach] Bill Belichick.”

 

Buffalo holds a 1.5-game lead over the second-place Dolphins (3-3) and a 2.5-game lead over the Patriots. New England, despite winning the division 11 straight times and 17 of the past 19 seasons, looks nothing like its former dominant self.

 

New England’s pass defense ranks 11th in the NFL after allowing the second-fewest passing yards in the league last season. The Patriots also led the league in points allowed and total yards allowed per game in 2019; those figures have dropped to 17th and 12th, respectively, in 2020.

 

Those are the least-dramatic differences from last season to this one.

 

The Patriots are also 27th in rushing yards allowed in 2020, compared to sixth in 2019. Offensively, their eighth-ranked passing attack has dropped to 28th after the departure of quarterback Tom Brady. They’re 2-4 for the first time since Belichick’s first season with the team in 2000, according to ESPN Stats & Information, and have the third-worst touchdown-to-interception ratio through six games of any team over the past 20 seasons.

 

Patriots QB Cam Newton, who was a crucial part of New England’s 2-1 start to the season, has been abysmal over his past two games, throwing five interceptions. His QBR of 3.5 in Sunday’s 33-6 loss to San Francisco was the worst single-game QBR by a Patriots starting QB since the metric was introduced in 2006, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

 

The Bills have also been far from perfect over their past three games, needing six field goals from Tyler Bass to beat the Jets last week after losing consecutive games to the Tennessee Titans and Kansas City Chiefs. But the Patriots have failed to crack 300 yards of offense in either of their past two games and are in the midst of a three-game losing streak.

 

Buffalo is a 3.5-point favorite Sunday, the first time the Patriots have been an underdog in a division game since Week 2 of the 2015 season, but don’t tell McDermott.

 

Though Buffalo’s brass has made it clear the Bills can’t take the next step until they beat the AFC East’s reigning champion, it’s also clear they don’t want to discuss it this week.

 

“It’s another game on our schedule, all games are important,” McDermott said. “You guys know how I feel about that.”

 

NEW YORK JETS

Will this drive the massive spread against the Jets even higher?  Josh Alper ofProFootballTalk.com:

Depending on which sportsbook’s odds you’re using, the Chiefs are favored to beat the Jets by somewhere around 20 points in this Sunday’s home game.

 

The Jets’ chances of playing spoiler aren’t going to be helped by their injury situation at wide receiver. Head coach Adam Gase said Friday that Breshad Perriman will not play after suffering a concussion in last Sunday’s loss to the Bills and Jamison Crowder appears set to join him on the inactive list.

 

Gase said, via Rich Cimini of ESPN.com, that it is “not looking good” for Crowder because of a groin injury. Crowder did not play last week and missed two other games earlier this season.

 

Denzel Mims, Braxton Berrios, Jeff Smith, and Vyncint Smith are the other wideouts on the Jets’ active roster.

 

And this:

Tom Pelissero of NFL Media reports that it is right guard Graham Glasgow. Glasgow will not play against the Chargers on Sunday as a result of the test.

 

Two other players are also isolating because contact tracing showed they were close contacts of Glasgow. Their identities are not known. Both will be able to return to work Saturday if they test negative and are not deemed high risk contacts.

 

Austin Schlottmann will likely get the start in place of Glasgow against the Chargers.

 

THIS AND THAT

 

RISERS

Bill Barnwell of ESPN.com looks at five teams that appear to be significantly more likely to make the playoffs now than they did seven weeks ago:

Let’s run through some more conventional improvements, starting with a dominant offense that got back on track on Sunday:

 

Green Bay Packers (5-1)

Preseason playoff chances: 48.1%

Current playoff chances: 92.0%

Difference: +43.9%

 

I’m not sure I can recall an offense quite like what we’ve seen from these Packers. They’ve been great every week except for one — Week 6 against the Buccaneers — when they were their normal selves for a drive or two and then utterly collapsed after a pick-six. They came into the season with one wide receiver of note, lost that receiver and their No. 2 wideout across the first six games, and didn’t seem to skip a beat. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers didn’t have his other star playmaker last Sunday when running back Aaron Jones sat out, but with wide receiver Davante Adams going for 196 yards, it didn’t really matter.

 

The numbers on the Packers make the simultaneous arguments for why they’re special and why they might not be quite as dominant as they seem. Through seven weeks, Rodgers & Co. are averaging 3.03 points per possession. Just six teams since 2001 have averaged more points per drive across the first seven weeks of their respective seasons, and it’s a bunch of teams that were quarterbacked by Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Peyton Manning and Patrick Mahomes. The 2020 Packers are ahead of any Rodgers-era Green Bay team, including the 2011 edition, which started 7-0 and finished 15-1.

 

At the same time, scoring is up in 2020. A whopping six teams this season are in the top 16 for most points per drive through seven weeks. The 2020 Raiders (2.80 points per possession) are averaging more points per drive so far than those 2011 Packers (2.73 points per trip). Adjusting for the leaguewide scoring rate by year, 2011 Green Bay is more like the 42nd-best offense going back through 2001, in line with teams like the 2012 Falcons and 2014 Ravens. (And yes, after making that adjustment, the 2020 Jets are the worst offense of this millennium so far.)

 

Still, being the best in 2020 is damn good, and we really haven’t seen any team slow down the Packers outside of those three quarters against the Bucs. How did Tampa Bay get that done? Pressure.

– – –

Here’s the problem with copying that strategy: Tampa Bay is comfortably the league’s best defense in football by DVOA, so even if teams try to emulate what it does, they’re probably not going to be anywhere near as good while they’re doing it. At the same time, we haven’t really seen the Packers play difficult defenses; the Texans rank 29th in DVOA after the Packers torched them on Sunday, and the only top-10 defense Green Bay has played outside of the Bucs are the Saints, who rank 10th overall and 16th against the pass.

 

Arizona Cardinals (5-2)

Preseason playoff chances: 25.3%

Current playoff chances: 66.9%

Difference: +41.6%

 

The Cardinals, coincidentally, are coming off their most important victory since that famous double Hail Mary matchup with Rodgers in the 2015 playoffs. Being the first team to beat the Seahawks put the Cardinals a half-game back in the NFC West after seven weeks while leaving them with a 2-0 mark inside what might be the league’s toughest division. This is a team that didn’t have a winning record for even one week from 2016 to 2019.

 

Even given the Cardinals’ record, I’m still trying to figure out how good this team really is, in part because of its schedule. Arizona’s two losses were to the Lions and Panthers, teams that will be on the fringes of the NFC playoff picture. The Cardinals picked up quality wins over the 49ers and Seahawks by a combined seven points, but their three blowout wins came against the Jets, Washington and the remains of the Cowboys. Those teams don’t represent tough opposition.

 

This is a question we can ask for each of the NFC West teams, which have been blessed with a gift from the scheduling god this season. Each gets four games against the vaguely football-like substance that is the NFC East and a fifth game against the Jets, the one team NFC East teams might see as a week off. The Cardinals, as you can count from the prior paragraph, have already played three of those five games.

 

The best-positioned team here is Seattle, which still has four of those five layups to come after beating the Cowboys in September. The 49ers still have two games of these matchups to come, while the Rams have already swept the NFC East and just have that lone game against the Jets due later this year. On the other hand, FPI thinks the Cardinals have the ninth-toughest schedule remaining, but that’s still the easiest of any NFC West team.

 

What I’m finding difficult when it comes to calibrating the Cardinals is getting a sense on what their stars are going to do from week to week.

 

Nobody embodies that more than quarterback Kyler Murray, who was getting MVP attention early this season before cooling off. He was 9-of-24 passing against the woeful Cowboys secondary, although one of those completions was an 80-yard touchdown, and the former first overall pick added 74 rushing yards.

 

On Sunday night, Murray did a little bit of everything.

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On the other side of the ball, it was a quietly impressive game for cornerback Patrick Peterson. There has been talk around the league that Peterson has slipped. Heading into Week 7, he was allowing 0.54 expected points per target as the nearest defender in coverage, a mark that ranked 60th out of 77 qualifying cornerbacks who have played at least 100 coverage snaps. For a guy in a contract year who turned 30 in July, a sudden drop-off can be worth tens of millions of dollars, as we saw when Chris Harris Jr. hit free agency after leaving the Broncos in March.

 

Peterson was likely hoping to have a big game in front of the bright lights on “Sunday Night Football,” and while he did, the problem is that the eight-time Pro Bowler might have been too good to attract much attention. He took on the job of stopping DK Metcalf and helped hold the star wideout to his quietest game of the season, interception chase-downs aside. By my count, Peterson had 34 snaps in which he was the primary defender on Metcalf and didn’t allow a single completion.

 

Metcalf was targeted three times against Peterson. One throw produced an interception when Metcalf broke off his route and quarterback Russell Wilson expected him to keep going. Metcalf then beat Peterson on a go route, but Wilson’s throw was short and Peterson was able to catch up and make the (still-catchable) pass a difficult grab. A third throw was tossed out of bounds.

 

At the same time, Peterson allowed a 34-yard catch to wide receiver Tyler Lockett on the opening play of the game. Peterson was blocked by Lockett out of the play on a screen that Metcalf took to the house for what looked to be a game-winning touchdown, only for the score to be called back for holding. Peterson also was the nearest defender in coverage on a 47-yard Lockett score, but he didn’t appear to be the primary defender, with Baker seemingly losing track of the ball and stopping while Lockett continued to run by him.

 

Against Seattle, Baker had that interception and a near pick-six, but he got lost on the Lockett touchdown and overpursued on a 28-yard catch-and-run by Will Dissly. Hopkins, who is battling an ankle injury, had a huge catch early and should have had a second long touchdown, but he lost a fumble and had just 23 receiving yards after halftime. Rookie top-10 pick Isaiah Simmons, who intercepted Wilson to set up the winning score, is still on the outs and only finished the game with six defensive snaps, three of which came in overtime.

 

This team still feels like a work in progress, but the second half and overtime of the Seahawks game reminded us just how high its ceiling can be.

 

Pittsburgh Steelers (6-0)

Preseason playoff chances: 59.1%

Current playoff chances: 98.5%

Difference: +39.4%

 

As it turns out, being the last undefeated team in football helps your chances of making it to the postseason! The Steelers haven’t always been dominant — they have one victory by more than 10 points — but they might be the team with the most combined upside on offense and defense. Mike Tomlin’s defense hasn’t been the takeaway machine it was a year ago, but Pittsburgh is second in the league in defensive DVOA.

 

The offense’s upside is more on paper and theoretical than it is something we can expect to see on a week-by-week or even drive-by-drive basis. The Steelers are still frustratingly inconsistent on offense. Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger & Co. rank ninth in points per drive, have the third-best third-down conversion rate and somehow also have the fifth-highest three-and-out rate of any team.

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One thing is coming clear, though: This offense is different with wide receiver Chase Claypool in the lineup. Roethlisberger’s splits with and without the rookie on the field are dramatic. We’re looking at samples of only about 100 passes on either side, and Pittsburgh is seemingly planning on rotating Claypool with Diontae Johnson and James Washington when all are healthy, but he has been a different quarterback with the second-rounder:

 

Having Roethlisberger available goes a long way, and depending on how you slice it, the Steelers have been healthy this season. Pittsburgh has just three players on injured reserve; only the Falcons (two) have fewer players on IR. The problem is that those three players were all expected to be meaningful contributors: Devin Bush was emerging as a star linebacker, Zach Banner had won the right tackle job and Stefen Wisniewski was the swing lineman who was filling in for David DeCastro. DeCastro and Johnson have missed time, but a lot of teams would be envious of what the Steelers have left through six games.

 

As long as Pittsburgh doesn’t lose Roethlisberger or a significant chunk of its core, it’s difficult to see this team taking a major step backward. It has faced the second-easiest schedule in football, but its schedule toughens to become the 10th-easiest in the league over the remainder of the season. The Steelers have outplayed their point differential so far, as we would expect them to have 4.4 wins as opposed to their 6-0 start, but there’s no reason to think they are suddenly going to fall off.

 

Tennessee Titans (5-1)

Preseason playoff chances: 56.0%

Current playoff chances: 91.3%

Difference: +35.3%

 

If the Titans had come back and beaten the Steelers last week, I’m not sure I would have been able to believe that they would ever lose a close game again. Tennessee blew out the Bills and has otherwise gone 4-1 while outscoring its opposition by a total of nine points. Its biggest win of the season outside of the Bills game was the overtime victory over the Texans, a game it tied with four seconds left before winning on the first drive of overtime. Those four non-Bills wins came against teams that are a combined 5-21 this season, and yet the Titans were within a Stephen Gostkowski miss of going to overtime and starting 6-0.

 

At the same time, if you’re waiting for the Titans’ formula to stop working … you’ve been waiting for a full year now without much success. Ryan Tannehill is fourth in the league in QBR this season and averaging a league-best 10.8 yards per attempt off play-action. The Titans have a turnover margin of plus-nine, the top mark in football. Mike Vrabel’s late-game management helped create a comeback opportunity when most other teams would have been out of luck. This sure seems like the real Titans.

 

Tennessee’s red zone performance is what really sticks out. Once Tannehill took over last season, this offense converted 86.8% of its red zone trips into touchdowns on offense through the end of the postseason. No other team topped 73%. The league average was 58%. Even with Derrick Henry in the fold, the Titans hadn’t been anywhere near that mark before Tannehill took over, and there’s not really much precedent for it reoccurring.

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As we approach the trade deadline, the one other thing that would concern me is just how dependent the Titans are on Tannehill and Henry staying healthy. Every team would drop off if they lost their quarterback or their most prominent offensive playmaker, but the Titans would have arguably the worst depth chart at quarterback or running back in the league if they lost their starter. We’ve seen teams like the 2015 Bengals and 2016 Raiders sputter to a halt in the postseason after excellent regular seasons because they lost their starting quarterback to an injury and didn’t have a qualified backup. Tennessee has Trevor Siemian on its practice squad, but 2018 seventh-round pick Logan Woodside has zero career pass attempts. If Tannehill stays healthy, though, the Titans are essentially playoff locks.

 

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (5-2)

Preseason playoff chances: 64.0%

Current playoff chances: 93.5%

Difference: +29.5%

 

The Bucs have the league’s best DVOA after seven weeks, which is driven by the No. 1-ranked defense. If you’re surprised that the Buccaneers are great on defense, well, you shouldn’t be. We talked about this a bunch after Tom Brady arrived in Tampa, and the Bucs’ 29th-place finish in scoring defense last season was a product of factors almost entirely out of their control.

 

If you evaluated Tampa Bay by points allowed per game last season, its defense was held responsible for the seven pick-sixes thrown by Jameis Winston. It inherited the worst average starting field position in football, another product of Winston turning the ball over and handing the opposing team short fields. Because the offense typically either scored or turned the ball over quickly, the Bucs faced 189 meaningful possessions, which was tied for the league high. They also faced the league’s toughest schedule of opposing offenses. None of that was likely to recur this season.

 

With Brady taking over at quarterback, the defense has had things much easier. He has thrown two pick-sixes, but the Bucs have had only seven giveaways in seven games. They’re facing 11.2 possessions per game, down from 11.8. They’ve inherited close to a league-average starting field position and faced a league-average slate of opponents. Last season, they finished seventh in expected points per drive on defense at 0.14 points per possession. This season, at 0.34 points per trip, they rank atop the defensive leaderboard.

 

Losing tackle Vita Vea hurt, especially against the run, but this is a great defense and in different ways from what we saw a year ago. Shaquil Barrett had an out-of-nowhere 19.5-sack season in 2019, and while he has only three sacks through seven games, Jason Pierre-Paul is up to 5.5 on the opposite side of the line. William Gholston, who has been a run-stopping end here forever, has two sacks and a career-high 11 knockdowns, which is impressive given that we’re not even halfway through the season.

 

The young players in the back seven have been difference-makers. Safety Antoine Winfield Jr. continues to make a strong case to be in the running for Defensive Rookie of the Year, having intercepted his first career pass against the Raiders. Linebacker Devin White was good as a rookie and has looked even better in his sophomore campaign; the 2019 first-rounder just claimed NFC Defensive Player of the Week honors after racking up three sacks of Derek Carr. Vea had developed into a superstar before his ankle injury, and Carlton Davis has emerged as one of the NFL’s best cornerbacks. Pro Football Reference notes that the 2018 second-rounder is allowing a passer rating of 59.4 in coverage, down from 80.0 a year ago.

 

Only the Jaguars and Rams have gotten more defensive snaps out of players on rookie contracts than the Buccaneers this season, and the Bucs have far more talented players on those rookie deals. The only team in the league who can compete with them for young difference-makers on defense is the Steelers.

 

This offense is still evolving. Rob Gronkowski was anonymous over the first month of the season, and then over the past three weeks, he’s fifth among tight ends in yards per route run. Wideout Scotty Miller had 83-yard games in Weeks 3 and 4, totaled 6 receiving yards between Weeks 5 and 6, and then came back with 108 yards and a touchdown against the Raiders. Mike Evans, who was targeted 9.5 times per game during the Winston era, is averaging 5.6 targets per game so far with Brady. If anything, with six touchdowns across just 25 catches, he’s the new Gronk.

 

In Week 9, Antonio Brown will get added to this mix. I’ve already wasted too much of my life previewing how post-Steelers Brown might impact a new team, so I’m not going to repeat that mistake. Brown took a step backward in 2018 and has played one game since, so I don’t think we have any idea about what his skill set is going to look like. When Evans and Chris Godwin are healthy, Brown will take Miller’s spot in the lineup and draw targets away from everyone else, resulting in a situation where neither Evans, Godwin nor Brown will be particularly thrilled with how many passes he’s seeing. Brown also might last a week before being released.

 

The Bucs don’t have the best record in football, and it hurt to lose Vea, but this is about what Bruce Arians & Co. could have hoped for when they signed Brady and acquired Gronk this spring. Brady hasn’t been perfect, but with improved weapons, he looks much more like the guy who won the Super Bowl in 2018 than the one who couldn’t move the ball with the Patriots last season. His arrival has unlocked what was already a good defense by drastically improving its surrounding context. Ryan Succop has even been a competent kicker for a team that hasn’t had one for years.

 

With games against the Saints, Rams and Chiefs coming up before their Week 13 bye, a lot of people are going to find out whether the Bucs are for real. The available evidence suggests we already have our answer.