The Athletic Football Show: A show about the NFL - Week 11 Recap: Huge wins for the Eagles, Broncos and Rams, Josh Allen goes off, Niners cruise in Purdy's return
Episode Date: November 17, 2025We spent all last week getting pumped about the Week 11 slate. And then it delivered the goods. The Kansas City Chiefs nine-year reign atop the AFC West is in serious jeopardy after their loss to the ...Denver Broncos. The Los Angeles Rams grabbed a hold of the NFC West steering wheel with their win over the Seattle Seahawks. The Philadelphia Eagles took down the Detroit Lions in a clash of NFC heavyweights. Josh Allen had a monster day. Bryce Young and Jacoby Brissett set records. Like we said, Week 11 delivered. Robert Mays, Derrik Klassen and Dave Helman recap it all on this episode of The Athletic Football Show.Connect with The Athletic Football ShowTake our listener survey: https://forms.gle/9CwBVwManjR9froy9X: https://x.com/TA_FootballShowIG: https://www.instagram.com/tafootballshowYT: https://www.youtube.com/@TAFootballShowTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tafootballshowDiscord: http://discord.gg/theathleticfootballshowCall us: 847-448-0701Email us: athleticfootballshow@gmail.comHost: Robert MaysCo-Hosts: Derrik Klassen and Dave HelmanExecutive Producer: Michael BellerVideo Producer: Katy DuffyAudio Producer: Michael BellerSocial Producer: Scott KrinchFollow Robert on Bluesky: @robertmays.bsky.socialFollow Derrik on Bluesky: @qbklass.bsky.socialFollow Dave on Bluesky: @davehelman.bsky.socialFollow Robert on X: @robertmaysFollow Derrik on X: @QBKlassFollow Dave on X: @davehelman_Theme song: HauntedWritten by Dylan Slocum, Trevor Dietrich, Ruben Duarte, Kyle McAulay, and Meredith VanWoert / Performed by Spanish Love SongsCourtesy of Pure Noise / By arrangement with Bank Robber Music, LLC Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to the Athletic Football Show.
I'm Robert Mays.
One heck of a week 11 slate today.
We had arguably the game of the year coming into the week in Rams Seahawks.
It did not disappoint.
Not great performances from the offenses,
but really good performances by bold defenses.
We dug into that.
We kick things off talking about the Eagles win
in another ugly game over the Lions today on Sunday night football.
A couple performances that grabbed our attention with Josh Allen
and the Bill's big win, the Denver Broncos knocking off the chiefs and putting their
playoff chances and like real peril for the first time in a long time.
The Niners offense looks like we expected the Niners offense to look.
That also grabbed some attention today.
Some WTF performances, one from the Los Angeles Chargers getting blown out by the Jaguars.
Another one by Bryce Young, but not in a bad way.
Just kind of a bewildering performance considering what the Panthers offenses looked like for a good chunk of this year.
and then a couple of things that made us feel romantic about football in week 11.
So we're going to dig into all of that with me, Derek Classen, and Dave Hellman right now.
It was one of those weeks in the NFL where it feels hard to keep track of everything that was going on.
And I love those Sundays.
That's not a complaint whatsoever.
We've had too few of those Sundays so far this season.
So we have a jam-packed show today.
We have a bunch of notable kind of season-swinging potential wins that happened today.
We had arguably the game of the year heading in today to break down.
But we were going to start with the Sunday night football game.
The Eagles win another ugly one over the Detroit Lions.
The Eagles, Derek, are in a spot now where it just feels like they're dragging teams
into the deep end of the pool and drowning them in each one of these games.
Like, there's nothing pretty about it, but they continue to win these.
And today was maybe the ugliest one we have seen from this team in what has been a season full of them.
It absolutely does, which to me feels like I know Vic Fangio is not the head coach,
but like that feels like how he would want all of his football teams to play
where you're just dragging teams into the mud and winning, you know,
16 to 6 or whatever it was at the end of it.
And so I really do think especially too, like last year,
I think the defense played really well for Philly, obviously.
But the story of their season was the offense.
And so I think it's actually kind of cool now that the offense has for a large part
of the season been pretty up and down.
They've had obviously Lane Johnson misses a lot of this game.
They've had a lot of issues.
AJ Brown getting into the mix, you know, off the field a little bit again.
But the defense has really stepped up.
And this game was probably their best performance of the season.
Last week it was also incredible.
They've had two back-to-backs that are insane.
It really does feel like after the moves that they made at the trade deadline,
which we talked about, we were curious,
what would the Philly defense look like after trading for Jalen Phillips,
after incorporating some of these new pieces,
after getting healthy on that side of the ball?
And David, it really does seem like they've clicked into a different year
over the last couple weeks.
How much more do you think Cowie Roseman would pay for Jalen Phillips,
knowing for sure what it would look like?
Like obviously you do that deal and you pay a third because you think he's a good player.
And it hasn't all been Jalen Phillips, obviously.
But just adding that to the mix, it just takes everything up a notch.
And I'd love to know how he's answer to that question because they look incredible since he joined the mix.
One of my big thoughts while watching the defense in this game was Jalen Phillips is much better than a player you typically trade a third round pick for.
There are a couple different things involved here, right?
His injury history obviously cannot be ignored.
He's somebody that's been banged up for a huge chunk of his career.
You know, you don't want to think this way,
but something like that could happen at any moment
given what most of his time has looked like in the NFL.
The other part of it is he is a pending free agent.
And so you're only going to give up so much for a player like that.
But when you're in a position where the Eagles are,
where it's like, we're one or two guys away from being the best team in the NFC again.
He is talented enough to warrant that sort of risk, quote unquote,
and so far it's working about, working out about as well as it could have.
When you're chasing a title, you can afford another title.
You can afford to not care about that.
And I'm not saying they should have given up the farm for him.
But it's just, it's been incredible to watch.
Like it's the classic case of Jalen Phillips.
He can create and wreak havoc all on his own.
But it makes your interior defensive line that much better.
Not that those guys needed the help.
And then a guy like Jalick's hunt,
who those edge rushers were kind of struggling in the early going of this season,
it makes his life easier.
And you see the impact that he can make when the offense is trying to account for everybody else.
This defensive line just felt like they had.
had the lions in a sleeper hold all night long.
Like, and every now and then the lions would kind of shake out of it.
You know, I'm thinking of the back-to-back snaps that Jared Gough had that led to the
touchdown that Jameson Williams had in the first half.
Like the lions would have these moments.
And every single time the Eagles were there to like reapply the ankle lock and just like
drag them back out into the middle of the mat.
It was, it was impressive.
I mean, the defensive line, I think finished with six batted balls.
Six batted balls.
The Eagles had nine quick pressures.
this game.
Not just pressures, quick pressures in the game.
They weren't.
That front really controlled this game on multiple different levels.
I'm glad you mentioned the Jameson Williams touchdown.
That is the only completion in this game that Jared Goff had when he was pressured.
He finished this game one of 14 under pressure per next-gen stats.
The J-MO touchdown was the only pass that he completed.
Nine quick pressures for the Eagles defense.
Overall, per next-gen stats, that is the fourth worst single success rate in a game for Jared
Gough since he got to Detroit, it is his second worst game by total EPA.
I think it was fourth by EPA per dropback.
And so truly one of the ugliest performances that we have seen from the Lions' offense
since Jared Gough got there, let alone since they've become one of the better offenses
in the league.
You did a lot of thinking about, talking about you to video about it this week, about the
Lions offense with Dan Campbell calling plays last week.
We were curious what this would look like against a real NFL defense, which I think we
can pretty safely say that Eagles are.
They're definitely getting there.
Very real.
Where between those two
kind of polls, what we saw last week and what
we saw this week, where do you think the Lions
offense actually sits? Or do you feel
like this is kind of one of those where you burn the tape
and we don't really take too much credence and how
this, what this might mean moving forward?
I think this is a burn the tape. I actually thought Dan called
a good game. Like they were getting receivers open.
Like Jared just kept missing. There were a number of
these throws that there were
especially two like right out of the half where he just
throws these inbreakers that he just throws them low
and puts him in guys' feet.
I think Jared Goff has always been a guy that when it gets a little bit later in the season,
he has to play outside when it's cold, that he just struggles to cut through the conditions.
And especially when it was as windy as it was today, I think he just struggled with accuracy.
So I thought they actually did a decent job to scheme guys open.
I thought them getting as many pop plays for Gibbs when the Eagles knew they were not going to get punished further down the field,
the fact that the Lions could still scheme up enough of those, I thought they called a decent enough game.
So they're probably not going to score 44 every game the way that they did against the commanders.
but I don't think it will be as bad as six.
I think they'll find that level pretty soon.
Maybe they get a fourth down conversion or two
instead of a big donut hole.
The fact that they had five fourth down failures in this game
and then on fourth and ten,
wall down two scores.
They decided to punt the ball away.
And then for the second week in a row,
we had an opposing coach on the other sideline from the Eagles
doing things that were mystifying.
And then Nick Siriani's like,
hold my beer.
Don't worry about it.
I'm going to come up with one that's just as confirmed.
and that he decides to go for it.
The only thing that could keep the lions in that game
was him turning the ball over in minus territory
to give them free points and make it a one score game.
They could not move the ball.
And he gave them the ball on the 30-yard line
for them to cut it to a one-score game.
I truly do not understand that sequence of decisions
from both of these coaches.
Back-to-back weeks for Nick Seriana.
I mean, this very much felt like just a continuation
of the Lambeau field thing.
It's funny, though, because on Monday night football, you're sort of exasperated by how ugly that game was at times, whereas now having done this to an offense that was clicking last week and looked so impressive against an admittedly very bad commander's defense.
But now I'm at the point where I like admire what the Eagles are doing, where I just like the ability to just bludgeon people with a crowbar repeatedly.
I'm just like, yeah, you know, it's not flashy, but it's very effective.
I'm not there yet.
The reason I'm going to kind of wave away the offensive performance today is, again, because it was so windy.
The fact that they could not really throw the ball down the field, they couldn't really get the run game going.
I do think there are probably better days ahead for the offense, even if it's been ugly to this point.
I'll wait to see.
If they have a game like this where Jalen Hertz goes 14 of 28 in a game where it's not 25 mile an hour wins or whatever it was,
then I'll be at a place where I appreciate what the defense is doing, but I won't fully be there the way
you are. I still want to see more. I mean, hey, it's at least worth mentioning. I said this right before
we went live, like, the Lions did not play well enough for me to feel too sorry for them, but
that pass interference flag at the end of this game, that heinous, had it not been thrown,
could have completely turned this game on its end, which I kind of doubt that happens as dominant
as the Philadelphia defense had been, but it's worth mentioning. And like, it is, it's a dangerous
game to play when you do play this style where if you make a questionable fourth down decision
from the head coach or if you don't convert a third down, you wind up in a spot where a game
that you've had control of all night long can come perilously close to being more dramatic than that,
which has happened two weeks in a row, but Eagles get the wins.
Two catches on 12 targets for Amman Ross St. Brown in this game.
That's outrageous.
12 targets, two catches.
independent of the conditions,
what were your takeaways from watching the Eagles' offense struggle again today?
Is there anything kind of specific when you're watching them right now
that you feel like is holding them back?
Or again, is this one where you're going to give them a little bit of grace
because of what we were talking about with the wind and everything else?
I think because of the conditions, you lose Lane Johnson fairly early
and he was obviously battling through that.
And then I would say the only thing that I thought that the Lions did fairly well,
And they did this against Lamar Jackson a lot
is they did a lot of like drop eight stuff.
And with Lamar Jackson, it was they did a lot more like half of a spy
where he's like kind of rushing but kind of just watching the quarterback.
It was a little bit less that and a lot more some like true drop eight type of stuff
on some of the pure pass.
And I think again, that was like, okay, if we're in third and nine or second in 11 or whatever
and we know you have to throw down the field in these conditions,
you're not going to do it.
But I do think that that can kind of be an effective strategy against Hertz anyway.
You're looking at so many guys kind of got into the mix here.
Moro Jomo had that forked down.
stuff in the second quarter where they tried to
it was a stunt inside with Brandon Graham
kind of looping around and so Amon Ross St. Brown
gets on Ojomo on that fourth and one play.
He stuffs it. They had the
big chunk run to Tank Bigsby to set up that
touchdown drive where they had multiple pollers on that
play, Aton Hutchinson, Ducks inside.
I mean, you needed two
or three big plays on offense to win this
and that they came up with just enough of them.
Yeah, I think I'm in a point where
obviously the Sunday night game we're preparing
for some other stuff. You're not watching it as
close as you probably want to be. I want
go back and kind of rewatch this just again
to see like that the structure of the passing game
looks like to get a better understanding of
how much of this is their inability to throw the ball
down field because of the conditions and how much
of this is the continued struggles of the offense.
I don't have the most solid answer to
that right now, but at the end
of the day, we're going to need to see more from the
Eagles offense if they're going to accomplish what they want
to accomplish this year. It's pretty simple. As good
as the defense is playing, the offense is going
to need to get, if not to the
level they were by the end of last season, then
much better than we're seeing right now. It's
incredible how the Eagles are living out the Chiefs
2024 season. I mean like the Eagles have lost more games than the
Chiefs had at this point but the similarities are really
striking like the the one score victories the
finding a way to get it across the finish line the like waiting
for things to break out it's it's very funny that they beat them in the
Super Bowl and are now cursed to be as good but I don't want to
say underwhelming but like you're very very good but you're just you
just want that extra gear just a little bit.
And, hey, eight and two while not usually playing your best ball on, at least on the
offensive side of the ball.
Like, it's, it could be way worse.
The real takeaway from this game is that with the Lions loss, the juggernaut Chicago Bears
are now in sole possession of first place in the NFC North.
You guys are intrepid Chicago fans on this show have been charting that since the field
goal went in for the Bears at three o'clock central time.
They were like, lions lose.
The lions lose tonight.
It's all us, baby.
The third seat in the NFC as it stands right now.
How does that feel?
It feels fun.
I don't really feel good about how the game went today.
I don't feel good about being an adversion of JJ McCarthy.
Thank you for saying that because I don't,
I think the number of people in the Chicago area who are willing to admit that might be few and far between.
McCarthy was horrendous for like a huge chunk of that game.
We're not digging into that game today.
We're going to talk about it on The Hangover.
but the Bears still have a long way to go.
Seven and three aside, the bear still have a long way to go.
I think that's the fine point I'll put on the end of that.
All right, let's get to some of the other performances that jumped out to us today.
It's time for you have my attention.
Gentlemen, you have my curiosity.
Now you have my attention.
The Denver Broncos knock off the Kansas City Chiefs 22 to 19.
They now have a commanding lead in the AFC West race,
especially after the Chargers lost today.
per our playoff simulator on the athletic,
which you guys, if you have not checked it out,
I highly encourage you to do it.
Austin Mock handles that for us on our side.
Just a great tool to kind of understand,
all right, if a team loses this week,
what do their chances look like?
You could really go in and kind of customize it.
Right now, after I checked it,
following that Chief's loss,
they currently, according to Austin,
have a 57% chance to make the playoffs.
So this now goes beyond them just not winning the division
and having to go on the road
in the first round if they make the playoffs.
at 5 and 5, there's like a legitimate chance now.
They're playing the Colts next week.
There's a real shot that the Chiefs are 5 and 6 next week after that game,
and they are staring down not making the playoffs this season,
which is a fucking wild place to be.
Completely fair, completely true.
You are correct to frame things that way real quick.
How legitimately worried are either of y'all about that happening?
I mean, they're the Chiefs.
They'll probably get in.
I can't get there.
I can't get there with being worried about them missing the way off.
Is that they have like multiple head-to-head losses against other teams that are going to be in the mix for this in the Bills and the Jaguars who are both currently AFC wildcard teams.
And so the fact that if it's like tied and they don't have the head-to-head, like that's pretty troubling.
If they go to five and six next week.
Yeah.
What is the next week they need in order to make the playoffs?
Like what's your guess?
Do they think they need to be 11 and 6 in order to make the playoffs?
You know what?
Actually, with the rest of the AFC wild car, they probably do need to win 11 games.
So then they hard for run the table.
have to run the table then if they lose next week.
That's a real thing.
It's very tempting to be like, oh, they'll be fine, oh, they'll be fine, oh, they'll be fine.
You're sitting at five and six in a crowded conference.
This is not a guarantee.
It's not a guarantee at all, but that is the degree of equity that they have built up.
That's just how I feel.
I'm not saying it's right.
And they just, I want to make sure we talk thoroughly about this.
Like, I was so impressed by Denver.
Denver outplayed them basically from beginning.
end. There was nothing fluky about this performance by the Denver Broncos, but it's like
Michael Myers. Like, I just got to see that happen before I believe it, basically. The chief's
missing the playoffs, that is. And obviously, like the division, maybe not mathematically, but
realistically, the division is dead. Like, they lost the AFC West today. So we're in, we're definitely
in uncharted waters. This is not something the Patrick Mahomes chiefs have ever had to deal with.
but I think that there's still a, it's a big bridge to gap for me to be worried that they fall out of the playoffs entirely.
They also, to look ahead a little bit, the teams they have typically struggled against,
and we've talked about this and we'll talk about it in this game,
are teams that can kind of man up with you and play a lot of one-on-one coverage and pressure the quarterback really quickly.
They play the Texans in a few weeks, and the Texans are, again, one of those other teams
that they're going to be fighting head-to-head for one of these wild card spots.
They're both five and five right now, which think about what we thought about Houston as recently as like three weeks ago.
And what we thought of the Chiefs as recently is three weeks ago.
It's a crazy spot to be in.
Chiefs at a 38.8% drop-back success rate today per next gen.
Patrick Mahomes against man coverage against this Broncos team,
9 of 17 for 70 yards over the course of the game.
And that's not necessarily surprising,
given what the Broncos, even without Patrick Sartan,
given what the Broncos do and given some of the areas
where the chiefs have struggled, you know,
considering what we've watched Patrick Mahomes do
when teams play a bunch of zone coverage against him.
are we surprised that this team still
when it's working
and when other things about the offense aren't working
refuse to just line up and run the football?
They have 54% rushing success rate
in a very close game.
They ran the ball 14 times.
I think part of it is there
where they can't get explosives that way.
They can't get explosives throwing the ball either.
They had like one of them today.
Yeah, but Patrick Mahomes offers you
the chance at doing that.
There's at some percentage dice roll
that you can get it.
We got a lot of evidence to suggest.
And I was the one that is, isn't that an argument for let's find some stability and eventually over the course of the game, we will find explosives within the rhythm of the game?
I was the one that told you all heading into this that Kareem Hunt was running the ball surprisingly well this season.
Like his efficiency numbers, the explosives are not good and like the big play rate is not good.
But Kareem Hunt has been surprisingly efficient running the football for the chiefs.
Having said that, I don't know.
I still don't blame them for that.
Because especially against this Denver defense,
I think you're limiting yourself when it comes to gaining more than like a handful of yards at a time.
I just kind of wonder, too, if they like try to become a team that is doing a lot more of running ball
and can't get explosives where you get into the ends more quickly and you kind of short,
like you shorten the clock on some of these games and limit possessions.
Like, is your defense good enough and getting enough takeaways to play that way?
Like, I just feel like they're in a weird spot with like what is their calling?
card as a football team.
I don't think that their calling card should be running the ball.
I think that in a game that's very close to the entire time when you're having trouble
throwing the ball down field, maybe you should run the ball more than 14 times.
But like against this front, I don't know.
But it was working.
But like is that by virtue of it?
Like, I feel like if the Broncos really wanted to stop the run in this game and we're worried
about it, they would have.
Like if the Chiefs had committed to it, I think the Broncos have a talented enough front
that it wouldn't have been a problem.
I still feel like there's a balance to be found.
They were like lined up under center one time and gave the ball.
to Kareem Hunt and he had a pop game on that play.
Yeah.
Like, it just feels like there are pads to them being a little bit more balanced on offense
than what we saw today when they were languishing for a good chunk of this.
The biggest thing about the Broncos performance in this game that stood out to you was what?
I mean, they just, I thought they played manned coverage really well on a lot of these guys.
Like, even without Patrick Satan, I thought that I know where, like, the Riley Moss got a handful of penalties.
But otherwise, I thought he actually played a really good game.
And then beyond him, I thought all the other auxiliary players had a good game.
Like Abrams Drain had a really good game.
McLaughlin,
MacLough made a number of good plays.
Tala Noah Hufanga,
not necessarily in coverage,
but just in terms of coming down
and hitting and limiting gains,
I thought other than missing the one tackle
on the big Kelsey play,
I thought he played a really good game.
And so I just thought they kind of did what they did
and played a really good game.
And then Vince Joseph did cook up a number of pretty good pressures.
Like,
I think it might have been on the first drive.
Patrick Mahomes,
they gave him like a double mug look
and then brought the nickel late
and like popped out one of the linebackers.
And like,
that's a pretty good way to get guys.
And so they got him there.
And so I thought it was kind of just the pretty standard
like the Broncos did what they did
and they just played exceptionally well.
We have to say it.
It doesn't erase what happened against the Raiders
and it doesn't change his struggles throughout the season.
Bonnex was fucking nails in this game.
And late in the game he was.
He, I mean, okay, I wouldn't,
maybe nails doesn't apply to everything,
but across the game,
he made the plays that the Broncos needed him to make.
And the reason I push back on that is,
even like on the opening drive of this game,
is this a earth-shattering play
that should change anybody's perception of Bo Nix?
No, but he hit Cortland Sutton on like a little shallow post on third and 11.
That is the difference between you kicking a field goal and not to open this game.
And when your kicker has to kick five of them and you win this game with 22 points,
that type of stuff matters.
Like he made throws like that throughout the game from the opening drive.
And then obviously, I mean, he really had some heroics in the fourth quarter.
I mean, the throw on third and 15 to Corlin Sutton was awesome.
I mean, to kind of, that was where I swear it,
and this is just my own personal bias,
but again, I refused to write the chiefs off.
And that whole time, I was just like, all right,
let's get to where Patrick Mahomes has the ball,
and he's going to go do the Patrick Mahomes thing.
And when Bo hit that play, which took it to the two-minute warning,
I was like, oh, the chiefs are in trouble.
Like, this is not going to the script that according to the script I thought it was.
So I just, you know, not a life-changing performance from Bo Nix,
but he made, I would say, five throws that were a big part of the difference in this game.
Absolutely.
I mean, the best throw he made all day was the one Detroit Franklin with like 630 left in the third quarter.
I mean, that throw he makes down the left side line is a beautiful, perfect ball.
And the blitz pick up by Prentice on that play was ridiculous.
And so he picks up the blitz and Bo drops it in.
On that play, Fulton misses the jam on Franklin, gives a little bit of a window, hits him,
And then on that same drive,
maybe the next play even.
Connor comes off the edge.
Nix replaces it with a little short post to Cortland Sutton.
That goes for 13 yards.
They score a touchdown on that drive.
And so those two throws setting up that touchdown drive
helps swing this game for the Broncos.
And then the one he made to Troy Franklin on the last drive,
to me that's more of a Troy Franklin play.
It's a corner round.
Bo leaves it inside.
The adjustment the Troy Franklin makes on that play
to kind of come back inside for it,
get a little subtle push off that I don't think,
should be called. That's just like a good move in the moment.
Makes that play and then sets up the game when a field goal.
And so those are like your handful of throws when your defense is playing this way that are enough to win the game.
Yeah, like he made the thing with Bo, like if he, they design deep shots really well.
It's just I've talked about for a number of times.
He just has not hit them for a lot of the time this year.
This game, he hit a number of them.
We talked about a bunch of seven today.
And one of them was a drop.
He hit Franklin on the first drive actually and like Franklin wasn't able to bring it in.
It was like slightly on outstretched hands, but there was contact at the end.
I thought it was actually a really, really damn good throw.
And so Bo hitting his deep shots on top of hitting one or two of the other throws that we know he can make.
Like the short dig that he throws to Cortland Sutton, like that's a throw that he should be able to make.
Best throw we had last year within that offense.
Right.
And just like this year, it's just been a little bit more up and down.
And so if he can do that and then make two or three blitz replacements a game instead of just taking really ugly like second down sacks or whatever.
Like if he can just kind of fit into those buckets and then the defense can do what they do, that's how they win games.
it's just been a little bit more uneven for a lot of the season.
Like this is the game that the Broncos are supposed to win.
This is what it's supposed to look like.
The last one, the chunk he hits a Pat Bryan on that corner route.
That was the other big throw he had in this game.
It's a little half boot to the left.
Connor, it's play action.
Connor has his eyes in the backfield just enough.
And he hits Pat Bryan for 48 yards on that corner route.
And so again, those are like the four or five throws that came up huge in this game.
I thought Mahomes, even given the quality of the Broncos offense, left a lot.
Defense.
given the quality of the Broncos defense,
left a lot to be desired in this game,
going back and watching some of the decisions that he made.
There were a couple plays where there was a third down in the second quarter,
like the two-minute warning from their own 19.
He has Breschard Smith, like in the flat,
turns it down and takes a sack.
And there was another play later in the game
where he had Smith on kind of a wheel route on the left sideline
that if he throws it immediately,
that's a completion, he doesn't throw it.
It turns into an incompletion and it kills the drive.
And then the pick he had on the,
that third and 14, like, that's just a throw you cannot make.
And that was the second interception he had on that drive.
On the TV copy of that.
And like, Mahomes is at a place in his career where at least I do.
I just kind of default to trusting that he's looking at the right thing or making the
right decision.
So like on the TV copy, I'm like, oh, I'm sure he saw something that made sense.
And then you go back and watch it when the All-22 angle hits a couple hours later.
And I was like, this is terrible, which I feel bad.
even saying that Pat Mahomes did something terrible, but just not like there's no way that you're
getting enough loft on that ball to get it over Jaquan McMillan while keeping it in bounds.
Like it's just not going to happen.
And he looked like a guy who was pressing for most of the day.
I also felt like there were a number of times in this game where he did not want to take like
the late release checkdowns.
Like whether a tight end coming out or another running back out of the back, you're like,
you just didn't want to take it.
And so he would end up either taking a sack or he would force himself out of the pocket or he
would just end up chucking up a prayer deep down the field like four or five seconds into the play like there was just a lot of they could not find like a stable passing game between like the six to 15 yard area it really felt like he was uh three of 12 for 92 yards and the interception when throwing the ball 10 or more yards down the field and 61 of the 92 is like that one the one thornton the one shop like a ty one thornton yeah everything else was it was just an abysmal day trying to do anything past the six we talked about it
with in terms of like the overall calculus with the Broncos,
the offense doesn't have to be great to justify the quality of the defense.
Like you need to make a handful of plays a game
in order to be a legitimate threat given the state of the defense
and how they're playing.
Just they really weren't doing that against good teams, right?
I mean, so the fact that that was the formula today
where the defense is still great
and the offense is going to make those six or eight plays
over the course of the day that are enough.
And the other part of it was special teams.
Mims had two huge returns in the,
this game to set them up with short fields.
And so that's all you need.
Like with the defense playing the way that it is, you don't need a ton from the other side
of the ball to be very scary.
And I think that version of the Broncos that we saw today, it's more than enough from
all the complementary areas of the roster.
They've held eight of 11 opponents to 20 points or less.
So, yeah, they just need that version of Bo Nix.
And they are a very, very formidable team.
Like, even if it's not the most fun offense in the NFL.
9 and 2
number one seed in the AFC right now.
All right, before we move on, we're going to take a quick break.
Let's get to our next one here.
The Los Angeles Rams
knock off the Seahawks 21 to 19.
The Rams, I mean, we knew that
this defense had been playing well
for a good chunk of the season.
They turned the ball over.
Sam Arnold throws four interceptions
in this game.
The Rams go to 8 and 2.
Los Angeles Rams
and what we thought might have been the game of the year.
You guys firmly have my attention.
This game was incredible.
Like it was what it was supposed to be.
Like I really think we got a lot of what we were supposed.
Obviously, I think it would have been fun to see one, like for the Seahawks offense,
like them either just explode the Rams defense or have what happened here where the Rams defense like finally took it to the Seahawks offense in a way that nobody else has been able to.
The way that they were forcing some of these Sam Donald interceptions, I thought was great.
Like the first one, Cam Kenches is just kind of playing like a robber role and he throws it a little bit late.
He goes and makes the interception.
But like the second one, they're in Dodgers.
They're showing this five-man pressure.
They pop the linebacker out,
and they get this twist on the right side
where Byron Young comes free,
and you can see the corner,
they pop out into like quarters covers.
The corner playing against the 10-yard out to the right side,
he's like, okay, my guy's getting free.
I have eyes on the quarterback.
I can go.
He goes and makes the interception.
So just them doing a lot of that stuff
where guys were clearly ready to jump on routes
knowing and seeing that these pressures were going to get home.
I just thought the way that they coached this defense today was phenomenal.
It was the number one thing that stuck out to me.
Like when you watch the timing on that second interception in particular,
and you watch when Byron Young comes open on the twist.
And the exact moment that that pressure is supposed to get home
is when the corner starts to jump on the ball.
And that happened throughout this game.
It's like the Rams do such a great job of,
I mean, to me, obviously the four-man rush is very talented.
But we've talked about this so often.
They don't blitz a ton.
But the stunts that they use and how dynamic the front feels,
you get enough free runners.
and the way and the timing of when they're coming open,
it's almost like perfectly timed
when he's going to get to a different point in the progression.
And so there's just like a beautiful synchronicity
to every aspect of the defense.
And tonight or today might have been the best example
that we have seen of that so far this year.
The other thing that I really enjoyed about this,
it's funny.
They did it.
Kudos to them.
But the way the beginning of this game colored everything else that happened.
Like the, I mean, the vast majority of the Rams success on
offense came in the first
handful of possessions of this game.
The Seahawks defense
they I mean they
caught on in a big way. I just had this
pulled up. Where did it go? The Rams after the first
quarter, the Rams were bottom
three in the league and success rate.
Like the Seahawks defense
like they
lived up to their billing as well is what
I'm trying to say. Even if it was
it looked dicey in the beginning.
The Rams did some great stuff with their
run game early on. But
watching the Seahawks defense try to will them back into this
and almost doing it by the way.
I mean, very, very close to, like this, you know,
from the fourth interception onward, I guess,
it was kind of like, all right, well,
sort of a disappointing, you know,
finish to this game,
considering all the hype that went into it.
And the Seahawks defense absolutely did not let that be true.
I mean, one of the biggest questions we had coming into this game is,
how would Seattle match the heavy three tight end stuff
that the Rams were going to do at how successful,
will we be on those plays?
Well, they played nickel to 13 personnel
almost exclusively in like normal down
and distance situations, not in the red zone in this game.
The Rams had a 17% offensive success rate
out of 13 personnel over the course of the game.
On run plays, they had an 8% rushing success rate
on those plays.
It was just the one that they hit to Kyron Williams
where they like had Davis Allen as a fullback.
They hit a little weak zone or a weak lead and that was it.
That was every run after that.
I don't think they got,
I think I was looking this up too.
they didn't get any more than four yards on any of those runs, which is crazy.
They had six passes, the Rams did, out of 13 personnel in this game.
Those passes went for four yards.
And so the Seattle defense, I know if you're a Seahawks fan or if you're somebody
that has been waiting for Sam Darnal to turn back into a pumpkin,
I'm sure there are going to be a lot of I told you so reactions to this game.
And I don't blame you for that.
If that's how you want to come down on this, that's totally fine.
I watch this game not really that.
from what the Seahawks can accomplish this year in a game where their quarterback does not throw four interceptions.
And this to me was just like, this is what a blow-up Sam Darnold game looks like.
And we know that.
Like, we knew that this, like, this to me doesn't really change.
Like, I think in the back of my mind when I think of what the Seahawks are, it's like, yeah, like Sam Darnold might just do this every now and then against a good defense.
So like, I'm not readjusting my calculation to it.
Does it change your opinion at all that the defensive coordinator that has blown him up now,
coaches a division rival.
If they see him in the divisional round
or something, it might pick the Rams.
I do think that there's something
about the way that
they use those twists and stunts
and the fact that it's creating free runners
against him, even like slightly later
in the dropback. Like there's something
about the way that he responds
to seeing those flashes of color
that I do think might be real.
Like I do think that the way the Rams
approach their pass rush, there is
something about it that does give him
issues. I don't think it's a coincidence.
Well, and I think a lot of it, too, even if it's not
some of the twists and stunts, even on some of the
other plays, like I think on the first interception,
Tyler Davis does a really good job of pushing the center
into his lap. And so they weren't really, I don't think,
I don't remember if they were doing any games there, but it's like,
he just walked them straight back. He just walks them straight into
him. And I do think that Sam Darnold
every now and then can be like, if you crowd his
space and he's kind of feeder already planted,
he might just, I think to his credit sometimes, he'll sit in there and
take a shot to the chest and he can make an incredible
throw. But I think the nature of sometimes
quarterbacks that operate this way is that it can
look like this, where you guess you try to throw
the ball a little bit early and
ball kind of comes out like this and you end up throwing a pick.
I will say this to
Gray's Able goes down in this game.
And I mean, we don't know anything as
of right now. It sounds like he's going to have
the usual tests, MRI,
whatever done in Seattle.
I assume when they get back.
But if that is a
and hopefully it's not, but if that is a lengthy
the injury, I worry that that could have a little bit of a chain reaction on a Seattle
offensive line that was already dealing with a center injury coming in.
And you could feel that.
I mean, that play where we're talking about with Tyler Davis, he walks Ola-Timmy back into
the quarterback.
Right.
It's the center on that play.
And so then you've got, as the game goes on, back up left guard, back up center already,
and then their right guard is probably their worst starter as is.
And so then you've already got a big issue there.
I think, too, on kind of speaking to Sam Darnold sometimes getting a little bit sped up.
And I think you felt that as the game went on, like as it was.
kind of building towards him.
The third interception he throws,
they're trying to get Arroyo up the seam.
And it looks like the safety to that side
is starting to bail off the hash.
He turns his corners up into the sideline.
Like he might try to go get on top of whatever
the number one is trying to get vertical.
And Sam, as soon as Sam Darnold triggers on it,
that safety, I think it's Cam Kinchins,
blies down to get to that little, like, seam bender.
And so even just the DBs, like, kind of playing with him that way.
Like, again, I just,
Sam Darnold did not play his best.
day, but I really came away more from this being
like Chris Shula can just, he can
really do this shit. And the other guy on
that play, Omar Spates carries that
vertical out. Yes, he doesn't let him flatten back off.
And squeezes it and makes it.
Greg Olson was really critical of Arroyo
on that play where he's like, I mean, the fact
that he did not come back inside
and bend it inside and he didn't cross the
defender's face to kind of leaves his quarterback out to dry.
That to me is a really good play by the
defense on that play. Like, Spate's
carrying that route, I think just really speaks
to collectively how
this unit plays together when everything is
clicking for that. I really enjoy
and there will be Sam Darnold
discourse. I'm kind of with you, Robert.
And I mean, Donald obviously didn't
play well and I don't blame anybody for
being a little bit put off.
I'm not willing to
rewrite what this guy's done
through whatever it is.
10 games. 10 games
now. I'm not willing to rewrite that
off of one game. But
my overall impression, it's funny because we did
a whole thing on our midseason awards about
Stafford and Darnold and shortlist for MVP.
And I was just so much more entertained and interested in what these defenses were doing
against such quality quarterback play.
I think that my takeaway from this when it comes to Sam Darnold is we know these games
are still possible, right?
Like, we know there are games where things can get away from him a little bit.
And I do think the fact that that version of him still exists is worth keeping in mind
as we think about the heights this team can reach against really good defenses
late into the season.
Like we know this is possible and we shouldn't just ignore that.
I still feel like because the defense can play this well,
if he doesn't get into this mode,
they're still going to be really competitive,
basically against anyone they play.
I think the big takeaway for me is when they're forced into playing away
offensively, they don't want to play.
What does it look like?
We talked about that a lot coming into this game.
On play action throws in this game, he was 9 of 10 for 74 yards.
On non-play action throws, he was 20 of 34 with three interceptions.
And so they played from behind for the first time in a really long time.
And I feel like them being pushed into that mode is difficult.
And in the second half especially,
their Rams played a ton of dime in the second half
because they knew they didn't have to worry about them running the ball
with heavier bodies on the field.
And so it was just a version of defense on the other side
and a version of offense from the Seahawks that we just haven't really had to see this year.
And I do think that they just looked a little bit uncomfortable
with the game being dictated to them rather than vice versa.
And like to take a little bit of heat off of Sam Donald for that, I do think part of it is like, we haven't really seen him have to throw from behind in a lot of these games.
But also we haven't had to see this offensive line.
Yeah.
Like pass protect against a really good front in like pure pass.
We're trailing by a couple of scores.
And so, and I think that again, it's kind of a little mixture of both.
Like Sam Donald didn't play his best game.
But a lot of that was like, this offensive line is already kind of iffy.
And they had to play against one of the best fronts in the league behind the scoreboard.
That's just a really tough place to live.
If I'm coping, and I mentioned it a minute ago, but like, if I'm a Seahawks fan, you gave up 21 points to Matthew playing the best football of his career, Stafford, and this Rams offense, two of those three touchdown drives start on a super short field because of a Donald interception, which that is a problem.
But I think I came out of this, like more impressed with the Seahawks defense than I already was.
and like that's saying something
given how dominant they've been at times
but after it's a slow start
and the Rams had some success on the first few possessions
but man
they are impressive they are fast
they are tenacious and similar to Denver
like that unit is going to give you a lot of opportunity
even when Sam Donald's not playing
it's kind of what I had in mind when I was saying
like the offense doesn't need to be
what it's been all season for this team to be really dangerous
it just needs to not be an offense
that's throwing four interceptions.
But they still almost won this game
despite what the offense was doing
because of the quality of the defense.
And even what the Rams were doing early in the game,
it's a lot of bullshit, right?
They had that one chunk run
throwing a ton of tight end screens.
Like they understood
that they had to manufacture offense
in this game because of the quality
of defense they were playing against.
And we talk about teams being able to dictate
the way the games are going.
The Rams not, the Rams understanding
we can't
just come out and play the way we've been playing all season because of the team we're playing
against on the other side, I think really speaks to the quality of that Seahawks defense
because this Rams team, I don't think, wants to change their stripes for anybody right now,
given the quality of their offense, the way they're playing.
You could feel the way they were calling the offense just felt a little bit more tense.
Yes.
Like he just, they really were not sure what was going to work in this game.
And really outside of the first quarter, they didn't have a whole lot.
Can we mention Sean McVeigh's willingness to burn timeouts throughout the game,
probably because of that too was incredible.
My favorite, and I don't remember at what point in the game this was,
but they were in a third and 10, didn't want to get the delay a game,
so they call a timeout.
This was in the second half.
It was in the second half, yeah.
And then they get a false start immediately after that anyway.
So they end up in the third and 15 to begin with.
So that was like, it's not Sean McVeigh's fault,
the right tackle false starts,
but it's funny that they were trying to avoid the third and 15 and end up there anyway.
It's not, but we were talking about this while it was happening,
and I just felt like Sean McVeigh is,
so obsessed with the game within the game where like that feels more important than being able
to stop the clock in a two minute situation, which I don't think I agree with, but he knows more
about it than I do.
I think you can absolutely take issue with the timeout usage and that is a point against
Sean's overall game management approach.
I will say watching him go for it three times on fourth down in the first half knowing
that those opportunities might be scarce in this game.
That is a new version of him that we have not used.
usually seen over the last like eight years.
And they get two of those and they lead to touchdown drives.
And so if those are field goals instead of touchdowns,
this game potentially goes very differently.
Bad kicking will do that for you.
I'm telling you,
we need to saddle these guys with bad kickers for like eight weeks
to order to rewire their brains.
It has worked for the ramps.
Before we move on really quickly,
Pooka-fumbling in this game was like genuinely disorienting to me.
You were so confused.
I could, I, it just,
I saw the ball on the ground and I had heard that Pooka Nakua
caught the football and I was like that just can't that's not correct that can't be right
the catch he made on the right sideline oh he gets both feet down like it again the fact that
we only had a couple of those moments from this ram's offense over the course of this game
speaks to the quality of seattle's defense and it listen there's not you get all the credit in
the world for forcing sam darnal into that sort of game i'll say that one of my major takeaways
from this is i can't wait to watch this again in a couple weeks very much looking forward to
that let's get to our next one here the
Buffalo Bills beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 44 to 32, Josh Allen,
after the most heinous start to a game I can kind of imagine from Josh Allen.
He chess passes a ball out of his own end zone and gets intercepted.
And then, you know, had a couple other dicey throws in this game, gets a ball.
One ball tipped up by Tyke Smith that was not intercepted,
another one that was tipped up by him that was intercepted.
And so not the cleanest game from Josh Allen.
I think still some moments that felt like old school Josh Allen,
not necessarily in a good way,
but over the course of the day,
finishes with 317 yards passing in three touchdowns,
runs in three touchdowns,
so six total touchdowns in a game
where the bills needed every single point he gave them.
Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills,
you guys firmly have my attention after today.
Fourth six touchdown game over the last six years,
and two of them are Josh Allen.
First player in league history with multiple,
games with three passing touchdowns and three rushing touchdowns.
So not that I needed to know he was capable of doing that, but it's fun to see him do it.
It's fun.
It's just fun to see the Superman guy play like Superman.
And it's so fitting for Josh Allen that the game would start that way.
Like maybe you don't want him to always listen to the dipshit on his shoulder, but like, like, you let that guy in a little bit.
I kind of think this version of the offense does need that version of Josh Allen.
I don't disagree with that.
Like they like you can be buttoned down when everything is working great.
But when it's not.
Yeah.
I can buy that.
When you when your run game is killing it and you have some of the best like tying your play action game and all this stuff and like Kincaid's healthy and all this and whatever it is and the passing offense works.
But like they've struggled to kind of piece some of this stuff together, especially in games where the run game is not working for them.
you kind of need Josh Allen
to just hold the ball a little bit
and start wheeling around there.
I mean, there are plenty of plays
he made today on time in structure
that were big time plays.
I mean, the tight window slant
he hits to Gabe Davis
on that fourth and four
that sets up the first touchdown.
That's a beautiful on time throw.
He rips a slant to Josh Palmer
early in the second quarter.
I'm so glad you said both of those
because on paper
like Gabe Davis caught three for 40
and Josh Palmer caught two for 17.
It's nothing crazy, right?
But like he went to them
in high leverage moments
early in this game on touchdown drives.
And I was looking back at it and I was like, yeah, just give them guys he can trust to make
these plays.
And I know Gabe had a drop on a similar play later in the game, but still, you convert a fourth
down.
It just, it was very noticeable to me that these two guys were the guys who was looking for in a
couple of big spots.
The reason I pointed out is just so I don't want it to seem like this was totally like chaos
Josh Leromode all the time that got them to this place.
I think it was a combination of the two.
So on that drive, it's a third and six.
He rips, it's a triple slant to Josh Palmer.
He rips it for a completion.
It's a good blitz pickup on that play.
They have a six-man pressure.
They pick it up.
On that same drive, it's third and three.
The bucks drop eight on that play.
That's the one where he buys time moving to his right in the pocket
and throws the ball all the way back across the field
to Shavers for a 43-yard touchdown.
And so when their run game is not going to be the engine of the offense,
I think the version of Josh Allen you want,
is a combination of those two things.
And you want him to be surgical and important moments,
but at the same time,
you're going to need him to kind of dig into that devil
on his shoulder mode on the place like that one to Shavers
where it's like, this is the right blend.
Like, I don't want him to be conservative underneath Josh Allen
if we're going to be running the ball three yards a clip
with James hook over the course of this game.
Yeah, like you need some amount of both.
And I think that was like the whole conversation with his early careers.
That for the first two, three years, he was kind of mostly just the crazy guy.
And then I think the last couple of years, he's certainly toned it down.
And obviously last year, he did an incredible job of kind of waffling between the lines and finding which two of those he needed.
I also did think that there were a couple of moments where the play calling and play design from Joe Brady actually was really good.
Like the James Cook wheel route touchdown in the late third quarter was incredible.
Like they've got the ball on the left hash and they do this little half roll the other way.
But what I thought was interesting is so they clear out that side with a.
post route from whoever the number one receiver was to that side.
But Anthony Nelson, the defensive end to that side, is supposed to be peeling if the back
comes out of the back field.
But they usually when that's happening, the back is going all the way outside of the tackle.
And so it's very easy for the defensive end to see.
They run him actually through the left guard and the left tackle.
And Anthony Nelson has this kind of like, oh shit.
Like I have to cover him moment.
And he just ends up scoffrey down the side.
Like I thought that was just a nice little wrinkle to that way to get him wide open.
there must have been 150 combined yards off of like running back wheel routes in this game the bucks too i mean like
yeah tucker had one yeah Sean Tucker showed up for his annual 40 point fantasy game he did it against the saints last year he had an amazing game but uh oh yeah no i did want to ask you though
what do you think keon coleman's reaction was to tyrell shaver's having the game that he or gave davis yeah i mean
Gabe Davis, but like Tyrell Shaver's like he made the Keon plays in this game.
And the crazy thing for me is, and I don't want to disparage Shavers because it's a really cool story.
But like he just made the plays that were there to be made.
Yeah, like just loop out of your route and go downfield when you see Josh in her creator mode.
He had like a nice catch over the middle of the field on a dig.
They threw to him on mesh.
Like that's all stuff Keon Coleman can do.
theoretically anyway, assuming he makes his meetings on time.
And then he had the 20-yard completion of Shavers with like a minute left in the second quarter,
and that sets up the screen touchdown to Ty Johnson.
And so Shavers had plays that where he scored and then set up other touchdown drives for this team.
I think overall, I feel like my biggest takeaway from when the bills were able to do work in the passing game today
is when the Bucks weren't bringing extra bodies.
Like that play that you mentioned, I'm sure, I'm curious what the call was on that play
where Anthony Nelson is supposed to peel off,
whether or not that's a blitz
or it's a simulated pressure
because there were multiple plays in this game
where he's dropping
or Yaya Diabi's dropping.
On plays where Josh Allen was not Blitz today,
he was 10 of 15 for 179 yards
and two touchdowns.
The buck's front,
so non-back seven players,
had zero quick pressures
in this entire game.
They had three for the game.
Two of them were Savasier-Dennis
and one of them with, I think, Jacob Parrish.
So it was all on blitzes from the second and third level.
in this game,
Yaya Diabi had five snaps in coverage.
It's too many.
That's a lot for your best pass rush.
Especially when your front four,
the way that it currently exists,
no Redick,
no Clashicancy.
Oh, yeah.
No Closher cance.
Like, that's,
we need our best pass rusher
to be a pass rusher in these moments.
And anytime they weren't blitzing
or any time they were using
some of these simulated pressures,
I think that's when the bills did a ton of their work
in the passing game.
I hate that the Bucks offense looked good
for the first time in a while,
and it just wasn't enough
because Josh Allen played like MVP,
Josh Allen.
I mean,
it's not a deep thought,
but I'm still worried about the bill's defense.
I was going to say,
they got run on for 200 yards.
How could you not be?
And that is actually the thing I do want to talk about.
They,
the bucks in this game did a lot of gap stuff,
and they were a lot,
they hit a number of like GT counterplays
where they had like Tristan Worse
wrapping out in front for mostly Sean Tucker.
the long Sean Tucker run where Worst gets all the way out in front of him
and he is like out pacing Sean Tucker on this run
and completely puts I think it was Jordan Poir
in the ground which obviously he's Tristan Wurst like flying at you
of course he's going to do that but just like the fact that he can be in that position as a tackle
is just like he's an incredible player how do you like if you and Jordan Poirer's done
some great things in this league but like when you've played as long as he has and
you're bouncing back and forth off the practice squad
and you just get put through the earth's crust
by Tristan Worf's like I don't know
I wouldn't want to I wouldn't want to be doing that
You start thinking about Vante Davis
Yeah you just you just start thinking about life after football
When that type of stuff happens
And the other big defensive play that's worth mentioning
Because the game kind of swings in this moment
Is the pick that Cole Bishop had
And it's a really strange play
Like Ibuka and Shepard are both running
Like crossing routes almost right next to each other
and Baker is throwing the ball to Abuca because he has a step on Taryn Johnson
and Cole Bishop just kind of falls off of that shaller route and makes the play.
And then the next play, James Cook scores on that wheel ride touchdown against Anthony Nelson.
So the game completely swings on that play.
If Colbishop doesn't make that play, there is a chance we're not talking about this Josh Allen performance in that way.
That's a really good point.
I would have to watch too like it.
Did they just get like weird timing disruption?
I don't remember exactly how they ended up.
I watched it five times on the All-22 and I still don't exactly understand what happened on
that play. I will say the bill's drive for to go up 37 to 32. I think that's worth just like
laying out how they were moving the ball against this team specifically. There's an underneath
checkdown to James Cook on that on that drive for 18 yards as the linebackers are like flying out
and getting tons of depth to start the drive. Third and 11, another play where Diabi is dropping.
They throw a comeback to Curtis Samuel to great blitz pickup by Dawson Knox and Ty Johnson on that
play. They're in a split back look. They both
pick up guys coming off the left side.
Johnson hits Sandelan
a comeback for 14 yards, I think,
to get the third down.
He escapes to his right on that drive,
finds Gabe Davis on a big inbreaker for
22 yards, and then right up
the seam, Dawson Knox goes
for 23. The linebackers are nowhere to be
found on that play, which is
an issue that continues to be
worth mentioning for the Buccaneers.
And then Josh has a design keeper for a touchdown
with nine minutes left in the fourth quarter.
they go up 37 or 31, that's it.
That's the ball game.
So that was the drive that kind of put things away.
And that was another example of,
if you weren't heating him up in this game and they were playing coverage,
they were consistently getting what they wanted in a lot of these moments.
Get to our next one here.
The San Francisco 49ers beat up the Arizona Cardinals 41 to 22.
And Brock Purdy's return, he has a massive game today.
I mean, the passing game, it looked easy for the Niners for a good chunk of this game
against a Cardinals defense that had been,
pretty good as they've gotten healthier.
In this game, Brock Purdy,
a 57.1%
drop back success rate
for the Niners. And I think on a lot
of levels, it felt for the first time
we can talk about why, that
the Niners offense felt like the Niners'
offense we thought it might be coming into the season.
And so this Niners team
that now sits at 7 and 4
cruising to the playoffs, and
I think at least on offense, is going
to be playing potentially its best ball
of the season moving forward.
you guys have my attention
literally the first drive that they have
they get well the first real drive
their first technical drive is they return the
yeah that doesn't count
where they return the kickoff to the one
and Christian McCaffrey punches the good way to start the game
it's a very good to start the game
to get ahead to like a free seven zero lead
but I would say like where you really started
to kind of immediately feel like okay this is how the Niners
are supposed to play they get into a third and eight
on their first real possession they have this empty
bunch to the left where they have Christian McCaffrey
Joanne Jennings, Ricky Pearson.
Ricky Pearson is the kind of point man
in this little stack.
He just flies off the line
in this deep corner route.
It clears out both the quarter safety there.
He's trying to stay high on top of him.
And then the actual outside corner
tries to stay on top of him.
Jennings runs the other like shorter corner around.
It's like a 7-7.
Yeah.
And he is wide-ass open.
Like anybody could have made the throw.
And so I think you just saw them
hit a lot of those type of plays
over the course of this game
where they just did a really good job
of clearing guys.
So I showed you guys a clip I was watching.
I can't remember what play it was.
I think it was a completion, I think, to Kittle at the start of the second quarter.
And you have CMC on a wheel route to the right side.
And you have PIRSOL and this is the play that it was.
And you have Piersall and like a little bender over the middle.
And then you have Kittle on the high low with Piersall.
And I showed you guys, I paused it like at the top of Purdy's drop.
And it's like the most beautiful like still photo of offensive football that you can see.
because I can't remember who was in the left flat,
but there's somebody in the left flat.
There's CMC running up the left,
on the right sideline.
So he's controlling the flat defender
and threatening vertically on that play.
You have Pierceall coming on the bender
and you have Kittle coming underneath.
And so you have five guys out in the route
and it's as perfectly spaced
as you possibly could have five guys out in the route.
And why that play just really made me smile
is that that's what the Niners offense is at its best.
And it has been a while since we have seen that.
This year, it's because we haven't had the receivers in the lineup.
Like Pierce Saul getting back in there and giving them a little bit of the juice,
it's absolutely part of this.
We haven't seen Purdy for a huge chunk of this year.
And last year, when Purdy was playing well,
you didn't have McCaffrey doing that.
And so for the first time in a very long time,
and it felt like this today,
we got the Niners passing game that was at least reminiscent
of what this team looks like when they are a fucking machine on that side of the ball.
Kyle Shanahan took the batting donut off of his back.
He's just finally getting some hacks
with a normal baseball bat for a change.
I mean, the wheel route to Kittle for 30 yards.
I mean, that's like when you have all of these guys out there,
at least most of these guys,
obviously IUC isn't back yet.
But we're at a place now where I'm excited to see
what the offense can look like.
Go ahead.
Say it.
The defense is,
Jacob I've said, completed 47 passes in this game.
I understand it was a blowout from the start.
But I do think that the defense will probably hold this team back
from accomplishing what it wants to.
but I'm at least excited to have this version of the offense back in my life.
I thought this game was a really picture perfect encapsulation of why we took the Niners off the table,
but why we might have been conflicted about it.
I was curious.
The Cardinals called 80% pass plays in this game, which like it got out of whack early.
They did it out of necessity.
You got to throw to catch up.
But I was curious, how many teams have done that and how successful has the quarterback been?
So I actually, I took it to 75% called pass plays.
And so 25, excuse me, 28 quarterbacks have had a game with that skewed of a run pass ratio.
Only five quarterbacks have had a successful EPA, positive EPA per dropback when doing that.
Matthew Stafford, also against this beat up Niners defense.
Joe Flacco against the Bears, not surprising.
No.
Patrick Mahomes twice this year and Justin Herbert once this year.
and Jacoby Bressett today.
So to have it be that skewed and still be so successful,
you're either MVP caliber quarterback or going up against a God-fricking awful defense.
And I hate to dog on the Niners because obviously there's a lot going into it.
It's not just that they're bad, they're beat to shit,
but it's tough to imagine a defense like this giving you like a true shot
when you get into some of these games against the heavyweights.
but I will say, I think it's going to be entertaining to what it absolutely is.
The NFC West is going to be incredible down the stretch here.
Like, okay, the Rams have played both games against the Niners,
but the Rams still have another Seahawks game.
And the Niners still have another Seahawks game.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
So, I mean, that is all going to be appointment viewing.
All right.
Before we move on, we're going to take one more quick break.
What the fuck?
What the fuck?
The what?
The Los Angeles Chargers get destroyed.
by the Jacksonville Jaguars today, 35 to 6.
Jags go to 6 and 4.
Huge boon for their playoff chances winning this game today.
The Chargers go to 7 and 4.
Chargers.
You can lose to the Jags.
That's fine based on the current status of your offensive line
and a lot of the issues you've had this year.
But to get destroyed like this,
what the fuck?
Here's where I took issue with this game
in terms of it being like an embarrassing performance.
When I think of the Chargers defense,
now that they've gotten some guys healthy,
like, okay, Khalil Mack is back.
Denzel Perryman is that linebacker again.
Like they can start to hit some people.
The run defense can be okay.
And it I think has been better since they've gotten those guys back.
They have some real oomph again.
The Jaguar's offensive line,
while I think they've been actually a pretty successful run game for a lot of the
parts, even when the passing game has fallen off,
they're not a run game that like pushes you around today.
They were today.
But today, they pushed the chargers around so bad.
They were clearing linebackers out.
Like any time they got four hands on the defensive.
tackle. They were five yards
Bastilina scrimmage.
The Jacks had a 55.6%
rushing success rate today, which
I think maybe until Sunday night
football was at least the highest of the day
and I assume that held.
They were incredible.
I don't think either those teams were really
no. They ran for
192 yards and there was nothing
accidental about it. Like you watched it from
start to finish. I mean, the first
or late in the first
quarter, they had like an 11
yard two and run that sets up
a touchdown. And on that play, like
It's a great job by Little to capture the edge.
Hansey does a great job with a reach block there.
They had multiple plays today where they're running
Weinback runs.
Those tosses.
It's a windback, design, windback plays where you have a guy slicing across.
They're getting on to the second level.
I mean, the first one they had was like eight minutes left in the second quarter.
The left side of the offensive line, like Walker Little just like moves Scott Matlock on that play.
They have a really nice rep of counter from the pistol with like five minutes left in the second quarter.
Cleveland and McCarray do a great job in space on that play.
And so they really owned that side of the line of scrimmage.
I think we could guess that that might happen on the other side of the ball, which we'll talk about.
Exactly.
But for them to control a Chargers front that I actually think had been playing pretty well since they got
healthy, honestly, one of the more shocking things that happened over the course of an entire game.
And where I kind of felt like it was really going to start worrying me on the Tudin rushing touchdown early
in the game, they run one of those like the one of those,
cosplays, Colvan Lannin, who has this team's
back-up right tackle, mashes
Khalil Mack, like completely washes him down the line
and makes the cut back into the end zone as easy
as it could be. And so I was like, okay,
if we're going to have a day where Khalil Mack is getting
moved around by a backup right tackle, this is not going to go well.
And it really never got any better for the, for the Chargers.
On that side of the ball, I also thought Trevor was really good in this game.
Trevor was awesome, dude. I thought he was really, really good in this game.
This is one of those games.
The pick-aside, he was really good.
Yeah, the interception, but...
So that's a theme for Trevor.
Like, okay, aside from his worst throw of the day, he was really good.
But typically the worst throw of the day, there aren't like 10 really good throws on the
other side.
Maybe there are two or three.
That was, he had one really bad decision in this game, but down to down, this is the
most impressed I have been with him in a game in a while over the course.
They probably since the Chiefs game.
And even that game was very different than this.
That game against the Chiefs, I think the biggest.
the most damage that he did was extending plays as a creator as a scrambler.
The work he was doing from the pocket in this game today,
I mean, there are a ton of examples,
but a lot of the throws he's making into zone coverage
into space in this game with anticipation.
I was really impressed with it.
He had a curl to Parker Washington on a second and 10
in the first drive of the third quarter,
just beautiful timing, rips that ball into space.
They had a third and 12 on that drive.
The chargers are running like a funky little pressure.
It's a full slide.
He rips it to Jacoby Myers for 21 yards.
There's another curl against a soft zone
with like five minutes left in the third quarter.
He rips the one of Jacobi Myers
with four minutes left where he progresses all the way back
to this inbreaker that he rips past Dyes earhole.
There were so many plays in this game
where he is on time, understanding where the windows
are going to be progressing to them.
I thought the past protection was really good in this game,
which has not always been the case with this team this year.
And so I think the offensive line went a long way,
kind of dictating that.
And again, you had probably three, four examples of Quinn Allen doing a great,
great job with Blitz pickup in this game.
And so this was just cohesively such an impressive performance from like every level of
the Jags offense in a way that I don't know if you could hear it in my tone,
but like it's kind of surprising based on what we have seen from this team recently.
So maybe the most shocking part of the early window was like,
this game kind of looked exactly like you thought it might going into halftime.
where like the Chargers are struggling.
They're like Herbert's under siege.
The Jaguars have pieced a few things together,
but it's 14 to 6.
Like it's not hard to imagine the Chargers climbing out of this.
And then the sequence as the game starts,
Jags 11 play seven minute touchdown drive,
no shooting themselves in the foot,
no stupid shit.
They go up 216, force a three and out.
16 play nine minute touchdown drive.
Game over.
Yeah.
When have the Jags ever done?
something that efficient in their lives.
Do you know,
you know their penalty count for this game?
It couldn't have been very many.
One.
Really?
For five yards.
That is shocking to me.
It's one of the most team that like all year has had like illegal formation.
They were one of the most penalized teams in the league coming in.
I mean, clearly they played their cleanest game of the year.
And I want to say two things.
First of all,
I think you already feel how much Trevor trust Jacoby Myers.
Like Trevor is a guy who hell or high water, God bless him.
He's going to throw the ball over the middle into tight windows.
And Jacobi Myers is a guy who can make those plays.
And it's pretty clear that he or you trust him to do that.
And so I think that's going to unlock something in the offense.
And then Robert, you talked about kind of coming into the week.
Every head coach is going to kind of face a moment where it's like stuff is not going well for you.
And you need to see if you can kind of bow up and, you know, kind of step up to the moment.
And for obviously the Chargers just didn't play their best game today.
But for you as the Jaguars to walk into this game and handle them pretty convincingly,
that's a pretty cool moment for Liam Cohen.
I totally agree.
It was really impressive.
The last throw I want to mention, and again, just speaks to, like, him seeing things really cleanly today.
They ran mesh with like four minutes left in the third quarter.
And he has, it's against zone coverage, and he has that little sit route over the ball to Quentin Morris, and he rips it on time.
It's great protection again on that play.
And so just so many examples of that on the offensive side for the Jags.
On the other side, this is not a fair fight with the Chargers' offensive line and the guys that the Jags have on the edge specifically.
Justin Herber had a 50% pressure rate on non-blitzes in this game.
And you felt it.
I mean, it just can't live that way.
They had absolutely no shot.
On the first, well, the first play of the game, there was an intentional grounding on a naked,
like right back into Trayvon Walker.
And that just kind of set the tone for like how this was sure.
The next two plays, they just threw two perimeter screens, which I wrote exactly that in my notes.
I was like, the fact that the first drive was Herbert pressured immediately into an intentional grounding.
and then two perimeter screens, I was like, oh, they don't, they have nothing today.
I was curious.
I went back and watched all the way through the first, like, the first slow developing play
where Herbert, like, where it wasn't a screen, it wasn't like a three-step drop, it wasn't,
get the ball out, get the ball out.
I would argue it came with three and a half minutes to play in the first half.
Like, that's how, like, that's how long it took for them to buy Herbert time to look for something downfield.
Trevor Penning
Not a
Not a wonderful day
Josh Hines Allen
Against Trevor Penning
Went about as well
As you thought
It was what you thought
It was what you do the Trevor
Penning trade
Because like we talked about it
On trade deadline day
It's like we just
We need a body
Who can do things
And I'm sure
People thought
This will be
Like he could be an upgrade
Over Austin Deculous
At Left tackle
And I don't know
That is the case
I don't know
I mean there was just
so many examples
like eight pressures on the day three quick pressures they had the ball the charges were down
21 to 6 was six minutes left in the third quarter second and eight josh hans allen's in his lap immediately
next play it's third and eight he immediately toast penning around the corner hits herbert as he throws
there was a he had a pb u on a quick throw to quentin johnson uh with like nine minutes left
in the second quarter on that third and ten he beats penning to the corner herbert has nowhere to go
with the ball and that's a sack and so josh hines allen was really good in this game traerun walker had
couple of splash plays in this game.
The other guy who I thought
had some really, really nice moments
for the Jags defense was Devin Lloyd.
Multiple really nice plays in this game.
There was a sack at the beginning of the second quarter.
They're trying to run a play action Inbreaker
and Devin Lloyd just turns robots right back
at the inbreaker, takes away that window.
Herbert has to take a sack.
The next play, Devin Lloyd erases Kamani Vidal
on a screen pass for a five-yard loss.
Was that the one? Like, Devin Lloyd beat the blockers
to the catch point.
I believe that was that one.
The Chargers offensive line
is like trying to get in position
and Lloyd's already celebrating the tackle.
And then with two minutes left in the second quarter,
they tried to get a double move to a Ronde Gasson
down the right side line.
Lloyd runs with him step for step.
Penny gets called for a hold on that play.
That was the day.
That was the day for the Chargers' offense.
And so we know this is going to happen
to their offense against teams that have
quality pass rusher or two.
And that's exactly what happened today.
And I think accentuated by some decent play
by other guys in the Jags defense.
What happened to the Chargers defense in this game?
I think that is what is truly shocking about the result.
Right.
And I think like there's going to be some percentage of people that want to get on to Herbert this
game.
And I don't think he played his best game.
He didn't think he was seeing it very well.
Obviously the interception he throws, he's trying to target Ladman-Conkie on a deep over
in the fourth quarter and just like sails it over his head by like 10 yards.
Like he did not play his best game.
I think the thing that like Herbert suffers from is that because he's proven that at times he can put
together Herculane efforts when he's getting pressured half of the time, that there's this
expectation that he should do it all of the time. And it's just like, you can't do that every
game. It's kind of impossible. I'm not saying that he should do it every game, but it's,
it's frustrating to try to guess when he's going to be capable of doing it. Because he is.
Like, Justin Herbert has played some games like that. And then sometimes the bottom just gives out.
And it's, I'm not blaming him, but it's, it's frustrating to, you know,
just be like which, which Chargers offense am I going to watch today?
The one that's DOA or the one that Justin Herbert might give a chance to.
He didn't play well today, but this is another one of those games where it's like,
you have no shot.
If you're going to give up a 50% pressure rate on non-blitzes and you're going to have a 23% rushing success rate over the course of a day,
it doesn't really matter.
Like what you do as a quarterback.
You can have your best day and it's still probably going to be enough.
And when you don't have your best day like he did today, you watch a game like this where it ends up,
35 to 6.
Let's get to our next one here.
We put this here because we didn't have,
we had four things already and you have my attention.
Bryce Young.
Bryce Young, after some of the low points we have seen from him so far this season,
to go out and throw for 448 yards against this Falcons defense.
And we said this coming into the week.
We said anything could happen when you open Falcons Panthers,
considering what these teams have looked like over the course of the first.
half of the year.
This game could be anything.
And guess what?
We were right.
It lived up to that billing.
So for the first time, at least this season and maybe ever, I'm going to do a complimentary
Bryce Young.
What the fuck?
A week ago, we were talking about having to let go of the idea that Bryce Young could be
a franchise quarterback.
And I'm not saying one game against Atlanta should change your mind.
But this is one of those games where it's like, come on, man.
He's the franchise record holder.
Season, single game passing yard.
He passed Cam Newton.
Are we ready to have the conversation about whether Bryce Young is a better NFL quarterback than Cam Newton?
My flight out of here is on Friday.
I'll move it to tomorrow morning if we're going to do that conversation.
Please don't make Derek rage quit the podcast.
This is one of those games where you and I, we come into the season.
And again, listen, I was excited to watch Bryce Young because I liked watching the style that he played with last year.
And he played with that today, to be fair.
And I was like, man, like, I don't know if this is going to work, but I liked watching him play in the back half of last season.
And I do think that they have enough up front and you get some better receivers and they really let him down last year.
Like, what could this look like heading in 2025?
And then it looks the way that it does over the first 10 weeks of the season where he is one of the worst starting quarterbacks in the NFL.
And I start to lose a little bit of hope.
And then he comes out in the game he comes out and has the game he had today.
And that's why my response is like, Bryce, what the fuck?
Why can you do this today and then look like you looked over the first 10 weeks of the season?
This is what the Falcons let people do.
But the Falcons defense is not that bad.
The Falcons defense is not that bad.
But they're still spiritually the Falcons.
Like this looked like it was going to go the way some of these other games have gone too.
Like Atlanta was up 21-7 and my eyes were sort of gravitating toward other things.
Like, okay, the Packers are playing a nerve-wracking game.
Like Atlanta's doing what I thought they would do.
and then Bryce
did that?
I mean,
and like at the start of the second,
actually it was even before halftime
because he made some nice plays
to get them into position
for the field goal
at the end of the first half.
And then the touchdown
does Xavier Lee get
at the beginning of the third quarter,
I'm like, okay, Bryce,
I will watch this.
This is what I was excited about.
I mean, that's the beginning of the third quarter.
So even like, yeah, the touchdown,
a couple throws to get them
into field goal range at the end of the half.
I mean, the crosser he throws to T-Mack on the back side of that play is a beautiful throw.
And then even like the first touchdown drive that they scored,
he progresses back to Koker on like a drop eight versus cover two.
And like finds him for 15 yards.
There's a little like half boot on that drive on fourth and two where Watts is flying downhill
and he hits Legat for 22 yards.
And so that he was making nice plays even earlier in the game.
And then in that he sets up the field goal drive.
And then coming out in the third quarter,
the crosser he throws to Koker with like 13 minutes left in the third quarter to grape let's pick up
by Daudil he like lofts it right over Kate Nellis who's like sinking on that play and then it just keeps
kind of happening over the course of the second half where he's just making throw after throw after
throw and it really did feel like it felt like in the back half of last season where he's just seeing
these opportunities to push the ball down the field and consistently making these throws over and over
again and I really enjoyed it the same way I did in the back half of the last season.
half of last season. I just missed the fact that it hasn't
been happening this year. And he was, because that
was the thing, the reason, I
still, again, like, maintain that at times
when it works like this, he's kind of getting away
with it and like pushing his luck a little bit.
But it works when he's throwing over the middle really aggressively
and when he's willing to just stand in there and like take
a hit. And in this game, he was in there and he
took some shots. Like, he really did.
Oh my God. He took one.
It's somewhere in my nose. Jalen Walker about took
his head off on one of those. Dude,
he had one. I think it was, I think it was
the 39-yard catch and run to T-Mack before halftime,
where he got decked as he was letting the ball go.
And I was going to say the other thing, too.
And again, we don't have to relitigate whether this changes
Bryce Young's ceiling as the Panthers quarterback.
But having Teteroa McMillan to make you right in a big way is such a big part of that
because the ball was perfectly placed.
But on that play, McMillan goes like both hands over his helmet,
snags it in stride.
and then dusts A.J. Terrell and Jesse Bates to make that a 40-yard gain.
And when you have that, it can supercharge maybe what you don't like about Bryce Young a little bit.
The fact that McMillan in that moment, the ball is above his head and he can just snatch it, gather himself, and accelerate like that.
For a guy whose size is just like, oh, my God, man.
Eight for one 30 and two in this game and like looked every bit of a top 10 pick.
He made a play in the late in the third quarter that to me is just like such an expression of what he can do as a receiver.
And it's a small play.
But it's a third and four and he's running a comeback on the left side.
And the aggressiveness that McMillan has in coming back to that ball to make that play play play.
He is just, I mean, he's a quarterback's best friend.
Like every aspect of how he plays the position makes it easier to play quarterback.
And that's not always the case with like highly drafted, super talented guys.
Like not all of them are that quarterback.
quarterback friendly, but so many aspects to his game, you are just the best possible option for a
quarterback like Bryce Young. Can I tell you a fun stat I found from this game? Jeff Olbrick
blitzed Bryce Young more in like more than anybody in his NFL career not named Todd Bulls.
Thirdmost net blitz. And then it's just been the bucks that have done it more.
18 dropbacks where the Falcons blitz them. Bryce went 10 of 13 for 127 and a touchdown.
but finished with a negative 0.38 EPA per dropback
because they sacked him five times.
That's one of those games where if the ball's coming out, we're good.
He technically detourched them when they blitzed him
except they sacked him five times.
I've never seen a split like that,
or at least I don't remember it.
I had the same stat 10 of 13 for 127 against the blitz.
The other like situational thing that's worth pointing out,
they were fantastic off-play action today.
9 of 11 for 143 yards in a touchdown when they used play.
action. You could feel it. I mean, even the
safeties were kind of flying down when
they were using run fakes in this game.
Because obviously, Falcons came in, really
worried about what the Falcons could do on the ground,
or the Panthers could do on the ground, and that ended up
hurting them. The one guy, I think that
the Falcons, or the Panthers did
a really good job of picking on over the course
of this game. Natron Brooks, the other
outside corner, who was playing
on the other side of AJ Terrell, had a rough day in this game.
They, Legette beats him on
the sluggo for 36
yards on that touchdown. And then, on that
same drive. He gets beat by
a cocker on a crosser for a big
chunk gain. He then muffs the kickoff
immediately after the touchdown to Liget
which is a pretty tough back to back
for any player. Panthers don't score
on that play but and then the
huge chunk play to Mitchell Evans
off of the leak which is like
it's good to see a good old like
2017 league play back in my life
again and then the series
sequence that I think really does
goes a long way and swinging in this game
is that on third and one
with 13 minutes left,
they give the ball to Bejean Robinson,
and DJ Wanam just makes an incredible play
to blow that thing up.
And then the Falcons get the ball at the plus 39
with three minutes left in the fourth quarter
when they're up 21 to 19,
and they settle for a field goal
after like three straight incompletions.
And then they had another drive in the fourth quarter
where they had three straight incompletions.
And so Kirk Cousins coming into this game late,
I think does do a decent amount of work
and the Panthers being able to hang in this thing
and eventually win.
Michael Penix, there's nothing out officially, but Ian Rappaport said late Sunday afternoon that there's at least some concern he's going to miss time with this injury.
And the offense, I mean, even if Michael Pennox has been on even this year, the offense with cousins when he has been in has been like borderline unwatchable.
Yeah.
And so it's always bad.
At least with Pennix, sometimes it's not bad.
I don't want to get too far ahead of myself.
Who am I kidding?
Yes, I do.
The Bucks and Panthers play both of their games against each other in the last three weeks of the season.
So what are you trying to say over there?
I'm trying to say that it could be a fun finish to that division.
I mean, they're tied on wins.
Like the Bucks, the Panthers have played more games.
They're behind the Bucks, but they're tied on wins.
And I don't know, the Panthers get the Niners next week.
The Bucks have the Rams.
Like, it could be bumpy here for a little bit.
But when you get both of those games in quick succession at the end of the season,
I'm going to step out on a limb and say it's going to go a long way towards swinging who wins the NFC South.
And that's very fun.
And now the Panthers.
will go do something inexplicably awful now.
That's where I'm at right now.
To wipe away all my enthusiasm.
I watch this game and it's so tempting to watch this game and like want to buy back in.
And I just can't do it because he did this and looked like this.
Obviously not to this extent.
But he looked like this and stretches in the back half of last season.
And so the fact that we've already seen this version of him and then you've seen the version of him that's happened over the first half of this season.
I've already lived this life.
I've already done this exact process before.
And so I'm being very cautious with how I'm taking this Bryce Young performance.
And that's not to take away anything from the way that he played today.
He was really, really good today.
I've just already done this.
And I'm just not sure I want to go any further down that road before we like watch him play again.
You don't have to do that.
Like you're allowed to just live week by week.
I mean, like, this was amazing.
And he holds a franchise record now.
And it was really cool.
He's better than Cam Newton.
And okay.
We got to wrap up the show.
He's a week away.
He's a week removed from scoring seven points against the Saints.
Two teams that we're not going to dig into here,
but you are on notice after the way that today went
and what you needed to win these games.
The Packers win an ugly one against the Giants.
A couple fantastic plays by Jordan Love.
A couple fantastic plays by his receivers as well.
Some brutal drops for the Packers receivers in this game,
but also some fantastic, like, high leverage plays by the Packers.
receivers in this game.
They knock off the Giants 27 to 20.
And then the Ravens needing Chardur Sanders to come into this game and go four of 16
or whatever he went.
There was a moment, I think after his like first 12 or so dropbacks, I think it was
12 dropbacks where he was averaging negative 0.1 EPA per dropback.
And so they had, actually, it might have been 13 dropbacks because he was at like negative
12 and a half EPA in those first 13 plays.
Without that, the Ravens.
might not win this game.
They do,
but I'm not sure
how much credit they deserve
for that.
Yeah,
this feels a lot more.
At least the Packers,
I feel like they like,
they shouldn't have been
behind and struggling the way they were,
but at least it felt like
they earned their way back into the wind.
The Ravens got pretty fortunate
with,
I think,
the way that this one ended.
What a disgusting game, though.
Like, truly,
I don't,
we didn't do this for Sicko Street,
but it was deserving of it
when you consider,
what,
a bobbled pick six by Lamar,
an bat at the line,
our boy, Carson Swessinger, with a pick.
He fought for that pick, too, in the air, by the way.
That was insane.
An explosive quarterback sneak touchdown from a tight end.
The fact that that was like a game swinging play
in this one is all you need to know.
Also, Miles Garrett continuing to make his push for the most
impressive single season by a guy on an irrelevant team.
The most tungstenarm O'Do Doyle performance we've ever seen from Miles Garrett in this one today, I think.
The way, go watch him, like, hip drop Roger Rosengarten to get, I think it was his second sack,
the way he just bumped him out of the way, like a high school player.
I want to find it.
I want to find the tweet from Zach Johnson, our bronze reporter, talking about Miles Garrett in this game.
And like the historic nature of what Miles Garrett did in this game, because there is, here it is.
Miles Garrett's 10 sacks in the last three games
tie Hall of Famer Richard Dent 1984
for the most in a three game span
in the same season since sacks became an official stat in 1982.
Only Garrett, Reggie White,
Chandler Jones, and Carl Mecklenburg
have four plus sacks in multiple games in a season.
As the Browns fall, 23 to 16th to the Baltimore Ravens.
They cut to Garrett when this game went final
and, like, you know, Lamar does victory formation or whatever.
They cut to Garrett on the sideline
after the game was over
and like just the look of
stoic acceptance on his face
like it's like past the point of being numb
it was it was telling
how do you feel about the fake
tush push
reverse pivot touchdown
it feels to me like you might consider that
like a dishonorable version of football
it's it's a little bit dishonorable
but I don't know I'm kind of like
I'm kind of into the fake tush push stuff
I think it's fine
I'm just how you felt about it I'm more like
maybe this is me like I just think the Ravens are cool when they win.
And so like Mark Andrews doing it, I think was kind of cool.
But I don't know.
I didn't really mind that so much.
Typically it feels like something that does feel a little bit like razzle-dazzle bullshit to me,
but I don't really mind it.
All right.
Let's get to the moments that made us feel romantic about football in week 11 before we get out of here.
I mean, this thing was a thing of beauty.
Every week, we like to pick out a few moments that start out to us.
Just just, you know, make you feel warm and fuzzy about what football really is.
Derek, why don't you kick us off?
What is the moment that made you feel romantic about football in week 11?
We just got a very Baker moment today on one of his touchdowns
where they run this little slide RPO to the right on like the one yard line
and he ends up running it in.
And as he gets in, he gets chopped down and like lands really badly on his neck.
And it looks like if you stop it right there, you're like,
oh my God, he surely is going to be stuck on the ground and hurt on this play.
Immediately bounces up and chucks the ball into the stance.
I'm like, all right, we're going to get that kind of baker today.
And so just getting that, like right off the like around when Josh Allen had just done his stupid chess pass interception.
Like I was like, okay, this game is getting into silly mode.
My version of this today is the darnall Washington play from the second quarter of that Steelers win against the Bengals,
which we will talk about on the hangover tomorrow.
But I mean, come on, man.
Like you're throwing a crossing route to a 300-pound man.
What he does to, I believe, is Demetrius Knight on that play, just puts him in the ground with a stiff arm.
like Derek Henry-esque stiff arm.
And then my favorite part of the play is immediately after,
Jordan Battle has a chance to tackle him at the sideline.
And he has no fucking interest in this.
Like, could not be less enthusiastic.
I mean, I guess if it's your job, but man, I wouldn't want to.
Come on.
Just try to chop him down at the very least.
Gives the most half-hearted attempt ever.
And Darno Washington rumbles for like 10 more yards.
And then at the end of the play.
He's like about to step out of bounds and DJ Turner is there.
He runs into DJ Turner and launches him.
I'm not kidding.
Five yards out of bounds further down the field.
So three different Bengals just get absolutely embarrassed on this one single play by
Darnell Washington.
How can you not be romantic about that?
There was a lot of discourse when Darnell Washington came out about whether, like,
let's just call it what it is and make this guy an offensive tackle.
Like, what are we doing here?
But there were plenty of great plays on his college tape that suggests
that he was more than that.
And I deeply appreciate Arthur Smith
for getting the most out of him.
Because I don't think anybody,
just anybody could do it.
That was easily my favorite play of the day.
Easily.
Dave, what made you feel romantic about football
in Week 11?
If you were worried we were glossing over this,
don't worry anymore.
I wasn't going to let it happen.
Because Robert,
we're going to talk about some special teams
because they made me feel romantic
about football this week.
Let's start it off here.
And we can build to a creation.
Shindo. Five games were won on a walk-off field goal in week 11. Started with the morning game,
Madrid, Riley Patterson, 29-yard field goal, nothing to get super excited about, but the dolphins walk
off the commanders. I don't know how many people saw this game, and hopefully, honestly, you
didn't, but in a game, very few people were watching, Houston walks off Tennessee. Matthew Wright
kicked three field goals on the day, including the game winner.
He's on his third team of the year, by the way, including the Titans.
So he goes from kicking for Tennessee like a month ago to beating them today.
Cairo Santos goes four of five for the Bears, overcomes the 45-yard miss to hit a walk-off in a game that I can't wait to hear you all talk about on the hangover.
Then Ryan Fitzgerald gets an overtime game winner after the big Tommy Trimble catch and run in the Atlanta game.
Will Lutz, five of five on the day with a 54-yarder.
then he gets the walk off
after the big Bo Nix completion
to beat the Chiefs
essentially knock them out of the division race.
Big day for kickers, right?
Except for the one that was missed
in large part because of
I think the best punt I've seen
in a long freaking time.
Ethan Evans of the L.A. Rams
with the game on the line.
It's 21 and 19.
Rams run into the line.
They get to fourth down,
minute to play,
Ethan Evans
bounces this punt
on the two-yard line
and it dies on the inside
the one.
It dies at the pylon.
I've never seen anything like it.
And you know what gets me romantic about football?
When a punter gets to do the
I'm-him thing.
Like when a punter is like
and it was so well-deserved.
Think about this.
Jason Myers is a 61-yard attempt.
He was right at the line of his range.
if that punt by Ethan Evans
is anything other than the best of his life
Seattle might win this game
but the most perfectly executed
coffin corner pun I've seen
maybe ever made Seattle start
at the 0.5 yard line
and I mean they did drive it out to midfield
but if that's even downed at the five
we could be talking about Seattle having won this game
Ethan Evans that was awesome
and it made me feel really romantic about football
I would love to
the thicker kicker
Ethan Evans. Those are some big boys.
That's the specials for the Los Angeles Rams.
They have a type that they're developing.
I fully support it.
All right. Before we get out of here,
let's talk about what we learned today.
You know, I think I've learned something today.
Each week, we like to wrap things up with a lesson that we learned from the week in the NFL.
And my lesson today is pretty simple.
This is anybody's ballgame, man.
I mean, who is the best team in the NFL, like definitively right now?
I think it's probably the Rams.
So that's the thing.
I think it's the Rams and their MVP quarterback
had 4.6 yards per attempt today.
It's crazy.
We're in a spot where like you look at the current seating in the playoffs.
The Broncos are the one seed in the AFC.
The Patriots are the two seed and considering the rest of their schedule,
I think legitimately have a chance to win a shitload of games.
Like I don't think it's out of the question
that the Patriots are the number one seed in the AFC at the end of all of this,
which is a crazy place to be.
As it currently stands, the Chiefs are not in the playoffs, right?
they are the ninth seed in the AFC.
As it currently stand, the Lions are not in the playoffs right now.
They are currently the eighth seed in the NFC.
The Bears are the three seed in the NFC.
The Eagles are currently the one seed,
but I don't know how good the Eagles are right now.
It just feels like this thing right now is wide open,
given like the current state of this.
The Ravens, like we expected them to come back
and would the Ravens be like, you know,
a real force to contend with in the AFC by the end of the year?
It's been kind of uneven for them.
I don't know what to make of the bills.
The Colts have had a weird couple weeks.
It just feels like this is as muddled and as crowded as I can remember it being.
Because even when we get to this point in the year, 10, 11 weeks in, and the standings are all jumbled up, it still feels like we know who like the truly elite teams are that are going to come out on the other side of it.
And I just don't know who those teams are right now.
Like you could, if you told me like five or six teams that could win the Super Bowl,
as it currently stands,
I think I'd probably believe you.
And maybe more than that.
And I just can't remember being at a place
this deep into the season
where it felt like it was anybody's game to this degree.
And even if I still cling to
hope or belief in some of those teams,
like I said, I'm not done with the Chiefs.
I'm not out on the Lions.
I feel silly saying this,
but like I'm holding some stock in the Packers still.
You can make fun of me if you want to.
I don't care.
But if you're a team,
Because why not?
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, with all of these teams, why not?
But like, but having said that, and as easy as it is to fall back on those, like,
established teams that have proven some things, if you're the, if you're a fan of the Broncos
or the Patriots, the Colts, the Bears.
Hold on.
Hey, I got to draw the line.
I don't think you have to.
Like, if I was a fan of one of those teams, you couldn't tell me shit.
Even if I don't really think that highly of the Chicago Bears, what,
we're seeing this year and the flaws that most of these teams are displaying, you might as well
just have fun with it because it feels that wide open that like even some of these teams that I'm
not sure I take seriously. Whatever, man, you got to line up and play. I think there are a lot of teams
kind of mired in the muck of how tight this feels that have a chance to do it. I'm not sure the
bears are one of those teams, but I think there are plenty of them. Would I bet on that? Absolutely
not, but hey, it's been a long
seven or eight years here in Chicago,
right? If you want to have some fun with it, I can't
hold that against you. The fact that it's November 17th and the
Bears are in first place, I will take it as
ugly and as strange as it has looked
in some of these stretches. We're going to talk about that game
tomorrow on The Hangover. We're going to dig into Bears Vikings
and what that game looked like. Also
going to chat about Steelers
Bengals, which we did not really
talk about today other than the Dernal Washington play.
And then we're going to discuss the Texans
Titans game as well. Those are
three games for the Hangover.
tomorrow. Looking forward to that. We've got a full slate of shows coming your way over the
course of this week, all of our regularly scheduled programming. For now, that is all we've got.
Appreciate you guys listening. We'll talk to you very soon.
