The Athletic Football Show: A show about the NFL - Week 3 Hangover: Chiefs win ugly, Vikings and Commanders cruise, Nick Bosa out for the season
Episode Date: September 23, 2025The Chiefs are on the board, while the Vikings and Commanders both got easy wins with their backup quarterbacks at the helm. Robert Mays and Derrik Klassen recap Chiefs-Giants, Bengals-Vikings and Rai...ders-Commanders on this episode of The Athletic Football Show. The guys also consider what Nick Bosa's season-ending ACL injury means for the 49ers and take sad voicemails from you, our dear listeners and viewers.Rundown (timestamps are approximate)4:20 Nick Bosa out for the season with torn ACL7:12 Chiefs-Giants recap28:47 Bengals-Vikings recap44:14 Raiders-Commanders recap56:49 Monday Mourning with the Cowboys, Broncos and BengalsConnect with The Athletic Football ShowX: 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-Host: Derrik KlassenExecutive Producer: Michael BellerProducer: Michael BellerFollow 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.
Today it's the week three hangover with me and Derek Klesson.
Do this every single Monday into Tuesday,
hit a couple or a few games that we did not get to on the Sunday night recap.
For the most part, and I mentioned this during the recap show last night,
because we prep the Sunday night show during the Sunday night game,
we'll mostly lead this show with the Sunday night football game.
And today is no exception.
Kick things off with the Chiefs Giants Sunday Night game.
on to the Bengals Vikings game, a big win for Minnesota without J.J. McCarthy and then finish
things off those three games with the commanders and the Raiders and then ended the show by hitting
a few of your voicemails in a segment that we are calling Monday morning with a you.
If you were going through something on Sunday night, we want to hear from you and we tried to
talk through the issues a few fans were feeling three weeks into the season. Really enjoyed the show.
Hope you guys do as well. Let's get to it right now.
They're a week, Derek, when the slate that we're going to dig into makes the hangover an apt name for this show.
And I would say that the three games that we're going to talk about today fit the bill.
A little sleepy, the three games that we're going to dig into today.
But I'm no less excited to have these conversations.
I want to be very clear about that up front.
Yeah, I think the two games where teams allowed 40 plus points in like kind of bizarre fashion in some of those cases.
And then a giant Sunday night game.
It's like that is that is why we named the show what we named.
show. Yeah, today the hangover is exactly what we're getting into. But we're going to hit three
games today. This is the normal format that we talk about on the weekly hangover. Three games we did not
get to on the Sunday Night Recap show. If you guys have not checked that out, either in your
podcast feed or on YouTube, highly encourage you to do that. If you're watching on YouTube,
please like and subscribe to the channel. If you want to check out the Sunday Night Recap,
you'll see all the new stuff that we're doing this year. There are actual highlights on the
plays that we're talking about, got some new graphics packages, just really trying to level up on
side of thing. So if you guys are not YouTube listeners or viewers and are interested in checking
it out, now is the time to do that. So we're going to get to those three games. Before we do that,
though, some news breaks on Monday morning that really does kind of change the complexion of the
NFC playoff race. We talked last night about how the Niners were three and no, despite some of the
injuries they had already endured. Unfortunately, there's a big one they're going to have to deal with
over the course of the rest of the season. Per Ian Rappaport, Nick Bosa, torn ACL. He is
out for this season.
I mean, it's just like brutal.
We talked about because we kind of like couched this a little bit on the show, right?
Of like, okay, the cool thing about what the 49ers have done is they were already a shaky team that we knew that we're going to be a little bit top heavy and we're probably going to be a little bit up and down.
But they've given themselves this three and no cushion.
And like because they have this three and no cushion, even if things do get a little bit more rocky from here, they've still set themselves up well to at least get into the wild card.
Like maybe they won't still win the division.
I think we think the Rams are really good.
but like this is a team that I think we thought in the very best case scenario,
the absolute star power of this team could propel them to like a fairly deep playoff run.
But Nick Bosa, you really needed him to be around for that,
especially with the defense, you know, Fred Warner is kind of your only other guy on that side of the ball.
And so if they don't have him, again, maybe they can still squeak into the wild card and they probably will,
but this is not the team that has the same teeth that I think, you know, they did literally two days ago.
The defense has shown some impressive flashes early on despite how young they are.
I think, you know, Michael Williams had a couple moments.
Upton Stout has had a couple moments.
He's nasty.
So, I mean, they are playing at a really high level.
So far through three weeks, and this is take it with a boulder of salt.
We got three games.
These are all very, very small samples.
They're sixth and defensive DVOA through the first three games of the season.
I think Robert Saul has done a very good job.
But the entire calculus from a season-long perspective for this group was,
you can be as young as you are and as unimproven as you are at so many of these spots
because you're orbiting around this nuclear star power at middle.
linebacker in one of your defense event spots and you take that away and the entire formula
starts to disintegrate a little bit.
I think that's kind of where we might be with the Niners.
They played much better than we probably expected early in the season on defense, but this
really does change what your expectations for them should be over the course of the rest of
the year.
Exactly.
And then like again, especially once they get to January, like their schedule really outside
of the division is not that hard this year.
And so that does help them a little bit.
But again, for a team that is supposed to have some sort of serious, you know, playoff
aspirations once they get there, not having a Nick Bosa caliber pass rushers.
It's pretty tough.
And the other part of it is that Bryce Huff is kind of their third pass rusher.
He's a great third pass rusher.
You can use them situationally.
That's all you need them for.
That's exactly.
And so now it changes the slotting of everybody else.
And it's a really big blow for a defense that really was relying on those stars as they had
some of those younger players come along a little bit slowly.
So three and O for the Niners, but the entire thought about last, when we were talking about
them last night was when they get healthier, what will they look like?
now you don't get healthier on defense.
Now this is something that you'll be dealing with
for the rest of the season.
Let's get into our three games from last night.
Start with the Sunday night game.
The Chiefs beat the Giants, 22 to 9.
Where do you want to start with this game?
You want to start with the Giants side of this or the Chief's side of this?
I want to get the Giants out of the way because I just,
we can have a more considered conversation about what the Chiefs are doing.
Just get this done and then we can get into the Chiefs part of it.
Let's get the giant stuff out of the way.
We already had Brian Daibble kind of coming out today.
pretty much tiptoeing around the quarterback conversation
in a way that he has done increasingly
over the past weeks like he already kind of started in week one
but it's gotten to the point where
we're clearly going to get Jackson Dart by October
and honestly I'm at the point where with it where
I think them playing Dart is probably failing him
and it's probably bad for him with the way the offensive line is set up
and him just being a player that I think is going to need time
but what Russell Wilson is doing out there
is just like I just he's holding onto the ball
it's not making a lot of the right throws like I just
that red zone sequence where he throws the ball away
multiple times, not even giving the team a chance.
Like that type of stuff is just incredibly frustrating.
Yeah, I mean, there are so many plays in this game
where you just get the full-on Russell Wilson experience.
My favorite one is the pick that he throws to Wondell Robinson
and that's a big crosser coming from right to left
and he just never looks at the backside safety
and then there's an inbreaker coming wide open underneath it
and he just doesn't even look at it.
And the Russell Wilson experience, we've always known,
we've known this over the last few years.
There is no more pronounced touchdown to checkdown player in the league right now
than Russell Wilson probably is because the scramble element is completely gone.
All the other guys who play touchdown and checkdown,
the checkdown part is mostly them taking off with their legs.
He does not have that option anymore.
And there were so many moments in this game where you really feel the limitations of playing that way.
And we talked about that coming into the year.
Dart is going to give them some.
limitations in some ways, but are those limitations worse than whatever limitations you're
going to live with with Russell Wilson? After watching this offense again last night, I'm just not
sure how that could be the case. That's the thing. I'm not sure Dart is going to be any better,
but I'm pretty fed up with the Russell Wilson thing. And like, even so in this game,
the Chiefs were playing, the Chiefs play a lot of too high generally, but they were like extremely
willing to play a lot of too high in this game. They played 50% cover two. Yeah. 50% five zero.
Because if you're going to be in this cover two, it's like, all right, you're either going to hit on your
deep shots, which Russ really did not do a.
at all in this game, splitting the
safeties and stuff like that, or underneath,
you're going to be perfect.
And Russell Wilson, even at his best, was
literally never that player. And so, like,
they just dared him to do that. And even
part of why New York, I think, was able to run the ball
is because they were playing a lot of those looks where it's like,
when you play cover two, you're just a little bit lighter in the box.
And when you're lighter in the box with
some of the defensive line personnel that the chiefs
have, you're going to get run on a little bit, but they were
fine with that. They were like, you know what? If you're going to
move the ball and it's going to take you 12
plays to get down there, we don't think you're going to finish
drives and the Giants didn't enough times.
Yeah, the run game was fine over the course of the year, over the course of the game.
And I think that the structure is worth pointing out on that side of it.
But, I mean, I made the joke last night on Twitter.
At this point, Russell Wilson, his entire approach is just that scene from knocked up where
he's doing the dice in the club.
And Joan Hill goes, he's going to the dice too much.
And Jay Baruchel is just like, I think that's all he's got, man.
I mean, that's kind of where we're at with Russell Wilson.
Like, that's all he's got is him just pushing the ball downfield as much as possible.
that's a viable strategy against the Cowboys defense.
It is not a viable strategy against almost any other NFL defense.
And this has always been what teams, I say always,
this has been the modern approach to Russell Wilson,
is you just throw a bunch of junk zones at him,
and he typically has trouble with that.
The Cowboys were the exception to that.
Now I think we're only seeing this push further into the extreme,
where his limitations are more pronounced,
and now you're seeing even more extreme approaches to him.
Like 50% cover two over the course of an NFL,
game is absolutely crazy.
But I think that, this version of Russell Wilson
warrants that sort of approach on defense.
It does.
Again, he's like such a specific style of quarterback.
And to beat a specific style of quarterback,
you play a specific style of defense.
And Spag's just not afraid to do any of that.
I did like some of like that diamond formation to tight end stuff that the Giants were doing.
Some of the run game was pretty cool.
Yeah, that was like the only like the schematic stuff.
I was like, oh, that's interesting.
They had a couple like chunk plays off of that.
Essentially, every time they sent both of the tight ends to the strong side of the run,
they had a chunk gain on the ground.
That's really the only thing I had written down is like,
oh, that's kind of interesting.
Everything else from the Giants offense,
nothing notable in my mind.
And then even on defense,
like they played a ton of man coverage.
And you had some moments from the past rushers in this game.
Like Burns had a couple really nice moments.
And then Dexter Lawrence obviously is still a problem to deal with.
But, you know, the corners are still a concern.
Like Paulson-Adebo gets shook by Noah Gray on a whip route
and man coverage at one point during this game.
And so the front,
has talent, we already knew that,
but this idea that the talent up front
could carry them with,
you know,
forgetable pieces on the rest of the defense,
that was kind of the argument
for why the Giants' defense
was going to be different this year.
And so far,
that just has not really come to fruition.
No, this was finally the game
where to some degree,
the Chiefs found the deep ball a little bit,
which has been a struggle for them
the entire time.
Like, the hit,
it takes multiple tries to hit Thornton
where he, you know, Mahomes does hit him
and he kind of ends up dropping it
and then they hit him again and stuff like that.
But in terms of the New York Giants defensive game play,
and the part of it that I thought was interesting,
and I think this is really more of a cheese point than anything,
they ran like 46% cover one.
Yes.
They just said, even with what our corners being what they are,
we're just going to run with your guys and dare you to beat us.
And honestly, for a lot of the game, they didn't until they were hitting some of those deep shots.
And I actually do think that Kansas City ran the ball a little bit more efficiently
in this game than they had the first couple of weeks, which helped.
But this was a lot of like, hey, man, we're going to dare you to just like beat our guys one-on-one.
And outside of like, you know, that route that you mentioned, you know, Paulson Nadeba get shook.
And then like one or two, you know, Kelsey and Noah Gray had like those little pivot routes that they'll throw on one-on-ones.
Other than that, like, the Chiefs really did struggle to be one-on-one coverage for a lot of the game.
I do think that says more about the Chiefs pass catchers that it does about the quality of the giant secondary.
And I think, again, it just feels like that defense is we thought that the past rush might be so overwhelming that whatever holes they had at some of these other spots or question marks at the very least would matter less.
and that just hasn't really been the case.
The Chief's defense is struggling mostly because the Chief's offense has its own set of problems right now.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
So let's get into those.
When you're watching this Chief's offense right now,
what do you think kind of is at the center of why they feel as frustrating down to down as they are at this moment?
They're just not fast or explosive.
Like even the players that are supposed to be or have previously been in this offense are not.
Like I know this has been the case with Kelsey for years now,
But the issue now with Kelsey is I don't think he's actually a worse athlete than he was
like last year or anything like I don't think we're getting more steady to climb there
He's just doing a lot of other weird stuff like the first play of the game
He's supposed to be blocking down on like a gun rollout and he just wants no part of it
It just doesn't want it's supposed it's burns and he just has no interest touching him
Yeah it just doesn't want to do multiple just like no thank you
You locks in this game Kelsey did multiple which like you can't do like it just like that is
As especially one of the guys who is supposed to be the leader for the team I think that is
is pretty tough.
And then he and this to me is less like a, you know,
didn't want to factor.
But him and Mahomes had like a weird miscommunication on like a checkdown where
Mahomes kind of pumps it like he doesn't want to throw it.
I think he's trying to move a linebacker.
Whatever he was trying to get doesn't come open.
And Kelsey keeps kind of shifting a little bit more towards the hash towards the middle of
the field.
Mahomes throws it back to the spot he thought he was sitting on.
And like that's just not a miscommunication that those two used to have.
And I feel like they had a couple in the first two weeks that were like that.
Like they're just whatever is going on.
like Kelsey looks fine athletically, but all the other stuff has been weird.
And then there's just no other speed elsewhere.
Like Worthy is obviously not on the field.
Rishy Rice is not on the field.
And then Hollywood Brown, like, he's not that fast anymore.
Like he's been, he's a smaller guy who's been banged up for a lot of his career.
And like he's, he's not, I think, the burner that he was, you know, four years ago when he was playing for Baltimore in Arizona.
I think the explosiveness of past catcher is part of this.
I think Taekwon Thornton's pretty explosive.
He's helped.
When I watch them play right now,
It just feels like it's, I'm trying to find the right words for this.
Because I think later in the game, they did start pushing the ball down the field.
And they benefited from pushing the ball down the field.
But when I watch them right now, it just feels like an offense and a quarterback to an extent.
That's just very risk averse, right?
I think he's just very aware, even in games like this where the deep, the past rush isn't overwhelming.
He's just aware of it at all times.
Like any little flash of color and he's trying to buy time outside of the,
pocket or he's trying to get rid of the ball.
And if you look at it in this game,
nearly half of his attempts
over the course of the entire game came in under
two and a half seconds.
And that's kind of how they've played over the last couple
years. And listen, the offensive line
still isn't perfect. Tinkly Suamata'i had
a couple moments in this game. Josh Simmons
had a couple moments in this game with Brian Burns.
Joanne Taylor got dumped a couple
different times over the course of this game. I don't think Tray Smith
played his best game in this one either. I don't think he's played his best
throughout the entire season. But
are we at a point where the past protection
needs to be perfect for this team to want to push the ball even into the intermediate part of
the field because that's kind of what it seems like right now.
And even in the moments where they did do that a little bit yesterday, the intermediate
throw specifically, they're having to scheme up these plays.
They're running actual sprint outs and then he tries to throw the ball to, it's a little
corner out to Tyco on a little RPO to the right where he's, they're moving the pocket on
that play.
Like every time they're trying to take shots or even access the intermediate part of the field,
they're not doing it within the normal rhythm of their passing game.
They're actually schemed up attempts to do it.
And the one to Thornton, I really wanted to talk out,
because I think this kind of goes to what you're talking about,
about I think Mahomes is not playing his best ball.
And he feels to me just like antsy a little bit.
That's exactly what I'm getting at here.
And like with that play, they sprint him out to the right.
And Thornton, they're running like basically smash where one guy's running out
to the flat and then Thorne's kind of running that high corner.
You see the RPO on the flat thrown typically.
Yes, exactly.
But he takes the high one on that.
And he, but he throws it.
so quick.
Like he,
the ball's coming out
before Thornton is on the break.
And like on a lot of routes
and in a lot of instances,
that's fine.
But like Thornton is in no position
to get his head around it
and try to catch this ball.
And he's clearly not.
And like it's not the worst location,
but Thornton was just not ready for it.
And there was space.
Like if Mahomes waits a half beat,
there's no defender up above Thornton.
Like he's gonna run into space
and there's plenty of time there for him to make the throw.
And he just like rushes it out
because he's like,
oh, this is the only chance we're going to get
to make a play.
And he misses it.
And like,
He's just, I think Mahomes is not playing some of his best ball right now.
There was even, they ran like a rap concept a little bit earlier in the game where you just have like the little five yard hitch route and you run like that in breaker behind it.
He could have progressed to it and he just like doesn't and he turns it down and scrambles for like four yards and just he's doing more stuff like that than you would typically get from him in his best.
Anse is exactly how I would put it.
And with the ball's not out immediately, they're struggling just because I don't think he's really trusting what's in front of him.
And I don't, I think some of that is maybe you come into the game.
You're worried about that defensive line with the state of your offensive line because it's still an imperfect group.
But I don't think the quality of the past protection should be leading to this approach from the offense and the quarterback.
I think there's a little bit of misalignment there.
I don't think this is last year.
We are constantly terrified about what's going on at left tackle.
You're probably one more worried about what's going on at right tackle right now.
But I don't think it should be this anxiety inducing.
And right now you feel how sped up and just how.
uneasy he is in the pocket.
That play as a perfect example,
a little wrap route.
This might be the same one,
but at the end of the second quarter,
they have like a backside end breaker
where Hollywood is kind of coming into it.
And Trace Smith loses to,
I think it was,
I can't remember who it was.
I think it was Darius Alexander,
maybe.
By the way,
because he had a pretty good game,
actually.
And so Darius Alexander,
but it's not immediate,
right?
Like he's just starting,
Mahomes, I'm sure,
is just starting to see
that little flash of colors he's waiting for.
He has time to hit that thing
on the backside and he just doesn't do it.
And that's what the offense feels like right now.
And then even when they're trying to take shots,
they have these little imperfections
that are kind of torpedoing some of these plays.
There was a play early in the game
where they try to take a play action shot.
Pacheco knocks Simmons off of Tibito.
Oh, that one, dude.
And then he tries to check it down to Pacheco
and ends in completion.
And it's like a lateral, right?
And so that happened once.
It happened again late in the second quarter
where Pacheco actually does chip the defensive end
on that play.
and then turns the wrong way, he turns backwards,
and Mahomes throws it backwards for a fumble.
So even in those moments where they're trying to do everything they can
to add an extra body and protection to give them that extra half beat
to push the ball down the field,
there are these tiny details that are sabotaging those efforts.
And so that's actually the running back room is another point I want to make.
And I know this sounds like we're just like making a lot of excuses for a very good quarterback,
but we've pinned this on him a little bit.
He's not playing up to his level.
He's not.
The running back room, though, they might be the worst in the league.
Like, they, they're all slow for the most part.
They don't do anything well.
They don't do anything well.
Like even like in terms of, you know, trying to get an efficient run game,
the offensive line I think has been playing better than the running backs have gotten.
And then even on like passing downs, the idea is that, okay,
Cream Hunt, he's going to come in, he's going to be a decent pass protector.
He can do that.
But there's zero threat of him being anything as a pass catcher.
So it's like, what is really the value of him being a decent pass protector?
and then Rashard Smith is kind of the opposite.
Like he's not going to be a pass protector for you.
You know if he's on the field, they want to throw him the ball.
But his head's spinning a little bit.
He's a little bit late to see stuff.
He's just like not always in the right, you know,
doesn't have great chemistry yet with Mahomes,
which fine.
He's like a mid-round, you know, late-round rookie.
But it's just they don't have any answer in that room right now.
And it's very frustrating.
Even the big plays that the Chiefs had in this game
were all like kind of fluky place.
Like the 27-yard completion of juju early in the second quarter,
that's a play where Mahomes panics in the pocket.
and somehow manages to slip out
and he finds Juju back over the middle of the field.
The next play, he's got Noah Gray over the middle of the field,
bales from what I would consider like a not muddy pocket.
That might be the play that you're talking about,
which is the short scramble.
And then there was a couple other big plays in this game.
The third and six completion that he has to thwarten down the field
later in the game, he's not even throwing that to Taekwant 3.
He's throwing it to Hollywood Brown on the crosser.
And that one was like, that was the most,
he is just, he got smoked on that play by the way.
And he was just like, I'm going to throw.
Throw it and we'll see what happens.
It probably would have been complete to Hollywood Brown if Tyquan Thornton had not caught it.
It's still a great throw.
But even that is a fluky moment.
And that's kind of what this offense feels like right now.
All the explosives in this game were essentially screens, flukes, or that across his body crazy throw to Taekuan Thornton at the end of the game.
That's it.
You can kind of on one hand.
And even that the throw we're talking about to Thornton where he gets, where Mahomes gets smoked.
The only reason Thornton even ends up open, if you want to call it that.
is him and Kelsey both get jammed at the line of scrimmage,
and they both get beat so bad by the defenders
that they just, like, kind of run into each other
and it creates this mess,
and Thornton just happens to squirt out of it
and get free and then catch that ball.
Like, it was just fluky.
The defense, I want to just point out a couple of guys
that I actually thought played well.
The Giants were okay on the ground in this game,
but I actually thought there was some nice moments
from the Chief's run defense overall.
Like, Chanel continues to be a really useful player against the run.
The fact that they just line him up at the edge
on early downs,
even when they're in four down.
They're in nickel.
And he's just playing that left defensive end on early downs.
Like there are very few linebackers in the league.
I think you'd feel comfortable doing that with.
He does it capably.
I thought that Nick Bolton actually had a really nice game.
He did.
There were a couple moments where he gets a little bit lost,
but he has a PBU on fourth down on the first drive.
He has a run stuff late in the second quarter,
which is also a nice play by Omar Norman Lott.
He snuffs out a Scadabo screen late in the first quarter for a one-yard loss.
And then he just takes scratch.
with about three minutes left in the second quarter
for a TFL they actually had with Chenal.
And so this team still can defend the run.
Like they still have the component pieces to be good at that.
And even though the Giants had a couple slash gains in this game,
I think down to down, the Chiefs run defense,
there's still a lot to like about it.
Yeah, I think given the structure they were playing with,
they actually played like a pretty decent game.
And even some of the ones that they gave up were kind of fluky, like,
or not fluky necessarily.
We were like, though one of the Scatterbo rounds,
I think he got an 11-yard game.
Nick Bolton meets him in the hole.
And he just like misses the,
tackle, which he rarely does.
And like Scatabo just bounced off him.
That was kind of the whole thing with Scatabo to begin with.
And just like, they're at least generally in the right spot.
And like the Bolton play, I really wanted to hit on the PBU he gets where that one is really cool because I think it's a third down.
The Giants only have two receivers to the right hand side.
So it's like, and they call this cover zero blitz.
So it's like all the people on the chief's defense, they know the ball's coming out.
And since all the receiver to the right side, probably coming out that way.
Nick Bolton just does a really good job of instantly like, okay, ball's going to come out.
boom, get my hands up.
He's a very smart player.
I have sometimes issues like,
can he get to the perimeter
when he needs to?
Sometimes he gets lost in space,
but he's a very,
very put together guy mentally.
With the Chiefs offense,
the last thing I want to ask you
just before we move on,
what is your fate
that this gets sorted out?
Do you think we have enough examples
where it's just...
What is sorted out mean?
They get back to like a back
half of the top 10 sort of offense
when it comes to like down and down efficiency.
I think when Rishi Rice is back,
they can be like
the ninth best offense in the league.
again, eighth best offense, something like that.
Why do you think that manifests?
Like, why do you think him coming back is what allows them to get to that place?
Because they would finally...
I'm just having trouble visualizing it.
Because to me, I think the issue with the offense right now is they have zero players
where we say if we find a way to get him the ball, he's going to do something for us.
Rishie Rice is at least that.
And I think it at least forces defense to think about, to think about something in a way that
they don't have to right now, where it's again, right now you are having to bank on some
fluky stuff or our schemed up play is like some, you know, little five-yard BS route to Travis
Kelsey, whereas at least with Rice, it's like we can get him on the move, we can get him running.
He can make a guy miss and he can turn 10 into 25, whereas they just don't have anyone
on the roster who does that right now.
All right, before we move on, we're going to take a quick break.
Get to our next game here.
The Vikings absolutely destroy the Cincinnati Bengals, 48 to 10.
And I think that there was some hope that the Bengals offense with Jake Browning could still be
okay, right?
I mean, we saw this in 2023 where they were still able to be an efficient group with Browning,
given the past catching talent on that team.
I actually thought that was a really nice moment in 23 for the offensive staff for the Bengals.
Not a good opening act if we're trying to do that again because they got dressed down in this game by the Vikings defense,
pretty much the entire outing.
They really did.
And I think there are two parts of this that, like, why it fell apart feels really bad.
One, you've invested enough in the offensive line at this point that you thought it would be better.
Like you've drafted Dylan Fairchild, you, Ameris Mims on the right side,
like you bring in some other different help at guard to see if you can have better depth there and stuff.
And they got mashed in this game.
Jalen Redman looked incredible.
Levi Drake Rodriguez.
And Jaylen Redmond looked incredible in this game.
They looked insane.
And then obviously like Jonathan Grenard gets his, like he's a really good player.
Like they just everyone up front for Minnesota had a really good game.
And like part of what kind of fascinating me too is Flores went back to other than first in 10
On 1st and 10, they were in base defense did a lot of simple stuff.
Anything other than that, they were just like Blitzfront.
Yeah.
Because they go, what are they going to do?
Like, they think the Cincinnati Offense of Lines are going to pick it up?
No, they didn't.
And so even on run plays, just some of the weird funky, you know, the twists and stunts and just weird stuff that they were throwing,
Cincinnati just really never picked it up at any point in this game.
And so that was frustrating.
And then the other element of it to me is like, Jake Browning's a backup quarterback.
I understand that.
He's going to make some mistakes.
But I think part of the reason with why this might be.
okay is like he's done this before in this offense he's very familiar with the with the guys that he's
throwing to you would hope that there would be some degree of like floor and competency here and
I think at least in this game he was all over the place like he just I think made very few correct
decisions in this game and just looked very lost I think that's part of it but I also just think
that when you when you're pressured on 57% of your dropbacks yeah and you cannot run the ball
over the course of an entire game it's hard to do much of anything as a quarterback
and that's what it felt like for them in this game.
He was pressured on 57% of his dropbacks.
The Bengals in this game had a 29% design rushing success rate.
If you look at the stats over the course of the season,
Chase Brown so far this year has a 25% success rate on his runs
over the first three games of the year.
His expected yards per carry is 2.9 yards per carry.
That is dead last in the NFL for all players with at least 40 carries.
the run game has just been completely D-O-A.
And again, this is not Jonathan Allen and Javan Hargrave ruining your day.
This is Jalen Redmond and Levi Drake Rodriguez ruining your day.
Like they were complete, the entire interior of the Bengals' offensive line was outmanned
for the entire game against nominal backups for the Vikings.
And then if you extend it to even like the higher paid players on this team,
Orlando Brown had a rough, rough day.
brutal.
Jonathan Grenard in part, but also in the run.
game. And so there's really no one
upfront for the Bengals that is a plus for you right now
along the offensive line. I know you're going to be, you're going to play
worse teams and worse fronts than the Vikings. But yesterday,
they had no one that was a plus for them. And that unfortunately
extends to the tight ends. Like the tight ends are negatives in the run game.
And it was such a, it was such a telling difference when you
watched the perimeter run game of the Vikings in this game versus the perimeter
run game for the Bengals in this game. Dallas, Turner actually did a very good job.
of this, but multiple guys for the Vikings,
just really collapsing the edge
every time that there was a polar,
just setting the edge incredibly well.
Squeezing the air out of it.
Exactly.
That's what you got to do against pullers.
Squeezing out the entire,
everything that was on the perimeter,
they're just squeezing and condensing it,
and then you look at the other side of the ball,
and it was the exact opposite.
The Vikings captured every edge
they wanted to in the run game
throughout the entire day.
And I think it's something small,
but when that is so pronounced on both sides of the ball,
that's how you lead to,
that's what leads to a performance
that feels as lopsided as this one was.
Yeah, I mean, not to jump to the other side of the ball
necessarily, but you mentioned that the Bengals
incredibly low success rate as a rushing offense.
The Vikings had a 50% rushing success rate
in this game. They got whatever they wanted.
They were good in the red zone. They were good on like
goal and short. They were good and again, getting
a lot of these wide zone plays that they were going for,
really getting the edge when they wanted to
the tight ends again blocked really, really well.
Like they just, they did a much better job
of putting this offense together in a way that the Bengals
just really struggled to.
On one more note about the Vikings defense,
I think the front, everybody had a moment in this game.
Have a day, Isaiah Rogers.
My God, I mean, I think people are going to look at the two touchdowns that he had
and think that was a majority of the damage that he did in this game.
He had the three or four other plays over the course of this game.
Like, the argument for we think Isaiah Rogers is a better player than he has been so far
at this point in his career, we think we can get more out of him.
I think that's what the Vikings believe.
coming into this season.
It's why they were willing to go a little bit cheaper a corner.
This is a pretty good point in their favor in that argument,
what Isaiah Rogers put on tape yesterday.
I already trusted Brian Flores a lot,
but I had some concerns about what the secondary would look like this offseason.
I'm getting to the point with Brian Flores where it's like,
if he says the DB is good, then I think the DB is probably good.
And Isaiah Rogers was definitely that.
I actually looked this up too.
I looked this up Sunday and I meant to say it Sunday.
Isaiah Rogers is the first player since Samson Ebbokam in 2018 to have
a pick six and a scoop and score
touchdown in the same game. And Abukam
did that in that ridiculous Chiefs' Rams game
that like a million different things happened.
But he's the first player in a very long time
to have a day like that. So you add that
on top of all the other plays he made, just like
insane. He forces the fumble
what in my opinion is the funniest
play of the day. Okay, that
is easily the funniest play
of the day. The forced fumble from Isaiah
Rogers, that's not his
scoop and score. Just explain what happened
on this play. Because I think that there's no better play to
explain what the Bengals offense was today than that.
This is how you explain a team that lost by 38 points.
So this is just inside the two-minute warning in the first half.
T. Higgins gets illegal motion because they move him over to the right side and then
Jake Browning snaps the ball before he can get fully set.
So T. Higgins,
illegal motion plays already screwed no matter what.
Then they roll with the play.
Jake Browning scrambles out to his right, crosses the line by like two, three yards,
throws the ball still.
So illegal forward pass there.
So you've already like double penalty on.
the Bengals. And then Jamar Chase
catches the ball and then gets it punched out
by Isaiah Rogers and the Vikings recover
it. It was like every conceivable
way that the Bengals could have messed up
the play, they messed it up.
That was the entire day from the Bengals offense and it
infected every single aspect of what they
were on that side of the ball.
And then the other play that it still had not mentioned
that's on me. There's about
five minutes left in the second quarter. This is another
one just like a perfect example of what the Vikings
defense was yesterday. Grinard just
cooks Orlando Brown
off the line of scrimmage. But
Browning still is able to get it off with some pressure
in his face on a vertical route to
T. Higgins in the end zone. And Isaiah Rogers
goes up and gets the PBU on that play. So the touchdowns, obviously,
you're going to stand out. That's what's in the box score. That's what you're
going to see on highlights. But Isaiah Rogers had
plenty of other really nice moments over the course
of this game. Let's get to the other side of the ball.
Obviously, a blowout win for the Vikings.
Carson Wentz, this argument about
how the Vikings really want to build
the machine where their quarterback only has to make like four or five throws.
It was true today.
It was exactly true in this game.
Carson Wentz made like four or five throws where I was like, okay, all right.
Nicely done Carson Wentz.
And then there were another four or five plays where I was like, oh man, that's not
what you want.
Oh, that's Carson Wentz.
Yes.
That's exactly what the experience was on Sunday.
Yeah, there were a couple where he was throwing some like, you know, dig routes,
some of these stop routes, like great timing, just like anticipating it, balls out.
And I think that's a lot of just like Kevin O'Connell's like, hey, man, it's going to be there.
Just throw it.
Yeah.
But like on not those plays, I wrote this in my notes because I felt like this was the best way to in my head how it described how Wentz was playing.
Carson Wentz was moving and acting as if he was like playing a quarterback in a commercial.
He was doing a lot of like pump fakes that seemed a little bit unnecessary to like move a linebacker.
Like the way that he was scrambling outside of the pocket where I don't think he's nearly the athlete that he was like five years ago.
And like it just felt a little bit Russell Wilson coded actually like where he can do a lot of that stuff.
But he like he did what he needed to do in this game given the.
what Brian Flores was doing on the other side.
I mean, the first throw he makes on that little like bender to Jason
Jefferson on a high low, like in the first quarter.
Oh, spins it in there.
I mean, that's like, all right, I'm into that.
He throws a slant to JJ at the end of the second quarter that goes for 36 yards.
Jefferson's way more physical after the catch than he gets credit for.
Like, I think that people think about Jamar Chase as this like force of nature player
and Justin Jefferson is maybe a little bit.
Finesse?
Yes.
I think finesse is the correct word.
And I actually think when Jefferson gets the ball on his head.
hands. I actually do think he is a more physical player than he gets credit for. And that was a
perfect example. It's a slant. And he breaks multiple tackles to get 36 yards on that play.
And then there was like an outbreaker to T.J. Hawkinson on time. It's like, all right, nicely done.
But you can probably count them on one hand, like the nice moments that we have from Carson once.
And then on the other side of it, there were a couple moments where it's like, all right, I really don't
know what to do with this. Like there was a play action shot late in the first quarter. And the Vikings do
an incredible job of this. The Vikings and I think
Ben Johnson with the Lions
over the last couple years I think are the
best examples of this where they do such a good job
on some of these play action concepts. Whether it's
the tight end or the back, they're going to get
a little piece of the defensive end
and then they're going to leak out late as the checkdown.
They're going to be there. And on this play,
it's a boot.
All the down the field routes are not there.
Jordan Mason is just standing there in the flag.
And Carson Wentz is looking at him and just
takes the sack and it's like the checkdown's right there
man. And so you had
at both sides of the coin with the Carson Wentz
experience in this game, but they were so good
in every other area where it just didn't matter.
Exactly. Like, I think you kind of
I mean, this was the case last year where the quarterback
is going to make like five plays where you're like,
come on man, but can you make enough of them on
the other end where it all kind of comes out
in the wash? And I think like, Wenz did not play
well. I don't even think he played like as well
as Sam Darnold's like mediocre
games last year, but he didn't need to.
Like when the defense was doing what it was doing
and the run game was doing what it was doing, which
that was kind of like, I don't
don't know if I want to say you could give Donald a pass for some of his bad plays last year,
but like they weren't a lot of tougher down in distances and the pass protection wasn't as good.
In this game, for the most part, like the pass protection was very good and they were
infavorable down in distances and moving the ball regardless of whatever the quarterback was doing.
Yeah, and I think the run game was really good in this game.
I think that a lot of what they were doing on the perimeter, we mentioned getting Christian
Derasaw back, I think was big.
He didn't play the entire game, but you saw the difference that he can make.
And the other guy that I was really impressed with
considering he came off the bench,
I thought Michael Juergens, their backup center,
actually had some really nice moments
as a run blocker and in space over the course of this game.
Him and Donovan Jackson,
who I think actually started this game off pretty tough.
Obviously, he has like a little bit of a wrist thing now
and he ended up leaving this game a little bit later on.
The Vikings checked some guys out when it was clear that things were over.
It was like, we're going to put some guys on ice right now.
They were like, ah, if you're struggling a little bit,
we're going to take you out.
And so, but him and Jackson, I think on maybe Jordan Mace's,
since like first goal line touchdown,
him and Juergens just move Slayton out of the way.
Like completely just like move, buddy.
And that was one of those ones where I was like,
all right, you know,
Juergens wasn't perfect because he's your backup center.
Like he got beat one time on like Chris Jenkins for a sack.
But like otherwise I thought like in the run game,
it was like this is what you want from your backup center.
And that was kind of the whole bargain, right?
A little bit with the Vikings as it was like,
you've invested so much in your starting lineup now
that you've bumped some other guys who were maybe would
have started a lot more games for you last year.
Now they can just like be guys who you get by with for a little bit.
And Juergens did that.
Yeah, I thought he did some really nice work in space.
The last couple guys, the last unit I want to mention just very briefly before we get to
the next game, I actually thought that there were members of the Bengals defense in the back end.
The devs are solid.
Like I thought DJ Turner on Justin Jefferson had a couple really nice moments over the course
of this game.
And it just didn't really matter because of their inability to defend the run.
I think that was in part on the edges specifically.
Like, Trey Hendrickson, I think you can take advantage of him in that area.
I think they consistently did that.
And then any time they needed a DB, whether it was a safety or a nickel,
to do anything on the edge in this game, it was a non-starter.
And so I think that kind of sabotaged what were some pretty nice moments in past coverage
from the corner specifically in this game for Cincinnati.
I wanted to least acknowledge that there were some flashes that you can be a little bit encouraged by.
I mean, I agree.
And I think that's even kind of been true for a lot.
of the year.
I think those guys have been playing well.
And even like Jordan Battle, not necessarily this game, but like I think last week had played
a pretty decent game.
So like they are the secondary looks better than I thought.
The front is mostly as bad as I thought it was going to be.
I thought the interior.
The interior is not bad actually.
Chris Jenkins has been better.
Slaten is for the most part pretty good.
B.J. Hill had a couple of the interior.
The detackles on when it comes to defending the run are actually okay.
They were having all of their issues on the edge in this game.
And I think the Vikings knew exactly where to pick at it.
it and they were successful throughout because of that.
We're going to take one more quick break and then come back with our third and final game
of the day.
Last game here, the Washington commanders beat up on the Las Vegas Raiders 41 to 24.
You mentioned we had two defensive touchdowns for the Vikings in this game and then
the special teams for Washington.
Typically, it takes a lot for me to mention the return game and the gap and return quality
between two teams, whatever the Raiders are doing during the special teams portions of their
practices needs a little bit of tweaking.
That's what I'll say coming out of this one.
It needs a little bit of help.
And what's frustrating is like this game was not that out of hand.
It was 10 to 10 with four minutes left in the second quarter.
Yeah.
Like it was a close game.
And even before you get the, I think the kickoff return touchdown, it was only like a 10 point lead for Washington,
which is like, you know, you're going to have a tough one trying to get back into the game.
But that is not like undoable by any means, especially with a quarterback like Gino who, you know,
efficacy of what he's going to do, you know, can kind of go up and down, but he's at least
going to try to throw you back into the game.
But the fact that after that touchdown, they ended up so far behind it, it was just like
kind of impossible after that point.
Well, even the end of the half, again, with four minutes left in the second quarter, it was
10 to 10. Immediately after the Raider score to tie it up at 10, that Jeremy McNichle's run
where he gets hit three yards past the line of scrimmage and somehow scores like a 60-yard
touchdown.
That should be an unsuccessful run if that place stops where it should stop.
and I think that was
yeah that was like
Jeremy Chin just like
smokes him in the hole
and then Landon Roberts
Roberts comes over to help
and they just like
don't bring him down
and Nichols
or McNichols like ends up spinning out of it
Germain Pratt like
McNichols kind of squeezes out
to the left side and like
Germain Pratt is kind of in the area
but I think it was one of those things
for like he assumes the play is dead
because it should be like that should be a tackle
100% of the time
and McNichols just takes off for it
for a 60 yard touchdown so like
that was honestly more.
my frustration in this game than anything is that this is just a very sloppy football team,
which is that has frustrated me more than anything.
I think that's totally fair.
And then on the next possession for the raid, or the next possession for Washington,
Malcolm Coons gets a sack with like 14 seconds left in the half that should have ended the half,
but he gets dinged for a 15-yard face mask penalty.
And so Washington kicks a field goal.
And so what was 10 to 10 with four minutes left of the second quarter is now 20 to 10
coming into the half, and then you get the kick return touchdown.
and the game is suddenly over.
It's just like that was again, one of those were like,
it's funny because like score-wise,
this and the Bengals game doesn't look that different,
especially with like the Raiders scoring,
you know,
a lot of their points kind of there at the end.
But this was a very competitive game for a lot of it
until those oopsies,
whereas like Bengals Vikings was never a football game.
Washington had a couple flubs in the first half that kept it close.
Mario to fumbles in plus territory.
The Raiders get the ball back.
And then that game is the 37-yard field goal.
Yeah.
So it's almost, the 20 to 10 thing is almost kind of a ball, don't lie.
This is actually an accurate representation of the half.
But that doesn't change the fact that it was 10 to 10 with four minutes left in the second quarter.
I will say, down to down, I think Washington was a significantly better team in this game.
If you watch what their offense was doing to the Raiders, the Raiders linebacker room leaves a lot to be desired.
I think that we all know this.
I'm trying to be generous here.
The way that that thing was constructed, it's like they signed all those guys in July.
You know, this was a whatever veterans are left on the street, that's how we're going to make up this room.
Washington, even without Jaden Daniels, they're going to put those guys in hell for four quarters.
I mean, all of the misdirection in the run game, all of the quarterback keeps stuff that you have to worry about,
all of the tight end action, whether it's slicing back across the formation, some of the arc stuff that they do.
It is going to be a long day for your linebackers against this Washington team, no matter who that group is.
and the fact that the Raiders have the guys that they're trotting out,
you felt that a lot over the course of this game.
Yeah, they were really targeting, like,
just the discipline of this defense.
And I think that linebacker core can struggle with that a lot.
Obviously, you mention a lot of the,
this is a team that is going to do a lot of, like, split zone,
and they're going to marry that with some of the arc read stuff
that they're doing where the tight end kind of leads out in front of the quarterback
on some of this read stuff.
And they did that multiple times.
On the Mario to fumble, it's an arc read out of like a full house.
A 25-year gain on the fumble that he gets.
It's a great, like, they schemed it up exactly the way they wanted it.
And that was one where, too, I think they are attacking Max Crosby's side.
And, like, Max Crosby is a phenomenal player.
Every now and then he can get, like, cat chasing a laser.
But I think against this offense, it's easy to get that way.
Exactly.
And I think with this, the construction of this defense specifically,
I would leave him unblocked all the time.
That's what I would do.
I'd be like, we're going to leave you unblocked.
We're going to throw six different misdirection elements at you
because we know that the 10 other guys on this defense,
offense, it's over. We're going to
absolutely going to take advantage
of whatever that looks like and that is the problem
for the Raiders right now. It is Max Crosby
and absolutely no one else that you were
consistently afraid of. Yeah, and even in
the passing game, I thought they did a good job of like targeting
the middle of the field. Like one of
maybe to me, Marriota's like
best over the day is like a little bit
later in the first quarter. It was first, they got back to
him in a first and 20 for some sort of penalty
and Mariotta splits the
two hook defenders with a really nice
digrat to Debo Samuel who dropped. He dropped
it, which is kind of unfortunate, but like even he was willing to target some of that.
And then I also thought the corners for the Raiders, I thought had a pretty rough day.
And like this was again, this is not necessarily a receiving core that is always going to punish you for that.
But Jalen Lane did get Kube Blue Kelly on the seven or eight man protection shot play that they took down the left side where it's just a little bit of an out and up.
And he just, Jalen Lane just flies right by him.
And he ends up getting tackled at the one.
So it's technically not a touchdown for Lane.
but when you're able to do what Washington was able to do in the run game
and then block it up the way that they were able to block it up
on a lot of their past protection stuff,
again,
Mariotto only has to make like two or three throws and not make that many mistakes,
and that was really what he did in this.
I mean, they only threw the ball,
I believe 23 times over the course of this game.
I don't think this was ever going to be like a pass-happy approach with Mariotta in there.
It's actually a very good way to approach a backup quarterback with his skill set
is we're going to add him to the run game and just make things very difficult for you
in that specific area.
A couple backoff offense alignment in the game for Washington,
didn't really notice that.
You know, I think that's, you mentioned the Vikings going out and getting some guys
and that bumping everybody down the depth chart.
That was part of the argument for Washington's strength on offense coming into the year is
they would be able to endure a couple offensive line injuries and be fine.
And they're without Sam Cosmy in this game.
They're without Brandon Coleman in this game.
They bump Andrew Wiley into guard.
Chris Paul, who's played a decent amount in the NFL, comes into the other guard spot,
and they were able to consistently run the ball.
And so their ability to handle some attrition up front because of how that room is built,
I think you're already seeing some of the benefits of that.
Yeah, definitely.
Chris Paul actually had there were a couple decent moments of him against Adam Butler specifically,
who like I think is generally a pretty solid, like especially run defending player.
But he had a pretty tough day against, you know,
what is, again, mostly a backup offensive line for Washington.
Speaking of offensive lines, going to the other side of the ball,
that's really the only thing that's work talking about.
I don't think Gino played great.
I think that there were a couple times where he invited pressure
because he turned down some throws.
Which that is unusual for him.
That I will pin on him.
I think when Gino's playing at his best,
when foot hits the back of his dropback,
he's ripping it.
And he's just not doing as much of that the past couple of weeks.
He did week one against England,
but I think the past couple of weeks he's a little bit struggled with that.
And that's like,
I understand some of that because guys are not always open
and they would be tough throws.
But that on top of how poorly the offensive line is playing,
that's how you end up in the spot there.
It's a cascading effect.
And I think that people are going to look at some of the plays he made out of structure
and having to create a little bit and be like,
oh man, you know,
Gino was under siege the whole game, and that was true.
But I think a couple of those moments, he's inviting some of that and having to wiggle himself out of it.
So I think that Gino didn't play a perfect game.
I think, you know, he's, it has not been his best couple weeks.
But the offensive line definitely is the bigger culprit and why this team continues to struggle.
56% pressure rate for Washington in this game.
Gino finishes 7 of 14 for 74 yards on those pressure dropbacks, not pressured in this game.
12 of 15 for 215 yards.
So it really was
Every time they dropped back to pass
Washington had some sort of answer or advantage
When it came to the pass rush
And I think they had a really good plan
Like there were a decent amount of simulated pressures in this game
Bobby Wagner has an unblocked sack
He has an unblocked pressure
I think they did a really good job of just figuring out
Where they could pick on this front for the Raiders
And this is an issue because coming into the season
I think and this is true I think with a lot of offensive lines in the league
What the Raiders did up front last
year. There were enough moments where I was like, okay, like I can understand moving forward
this group, let's see how it goes, and then you kind of rise and fall, if you build it like that,
where it's like, we have a certain floor with the offensive line. You're going to rise and fall
because of what the infrastructure looks like offensively and what the coaching looks like. And I think
when you look at the Raiders offensive line this year, you're getting the worst versions of every
single one of these guys. DJ Glaze, as a third round pick last year, it's like, all right,
you saw some flashes. Like, you can build on this. He is not.
been good. And he struggled on Sunday against
Dorrance Armstrong specifically, but it was a
tough day overall for him. Colton Miller,
especially in the run game, like
really getting very little done
when they're asking him to pull, even trying to get
the second level. The one way is Durant Payne just like
they dumps him. He's supposed to trap
Durant Payne on that play and Durant Payne
just dumps him in the backfield. And then you
combine that with the fact that you come
into the year, you drafted Jackson Powers
Johnson. Well, you didn't. Maybe that's part of the issue here.
The previous regime drafted Jackson
Powers Johnson in the second round. He misses
last week at the concussion. He doesn't play
this week because it's a short week and they
wanted to maintain the continuity they
had at front and Alex Kappa is your right
guard and it's just a tough day
at the office for Alex Kappa and considering the last
couple years and how they've gone, I'm not sure
why that's necessarily surprising. And so
I think that this offensive
wine, I understood coming
into it this season with this personnel
and thinking, okay, there was enough last year
to lead us to believe that if this
group continues to grow and develop
we could be fine here. And I just
think that, again, you haven't had any positive growth or development from anybody among that
group, which is comprised of a lot of young players.
Exactly.
It's comprised of a lot of young guys.
And again, none of these guys are playing, I think, up to their level.
Like, even Colton Miller, who is supposed to be the, this guy is fine.
And we know that he's a decent starter.
Like, he, I think, did not play a very good game.
We mentioned the play against pain.
But I think even in past protection, he had a couple of rough moments in this game.
Like, it was just, he was not at his best.
I also think, too, this Washington defensive line is.
is kind of built exactly to beat an interior like Las Vegas.
And what I mean by that is like,
I think the Las Vegas interior guys move well.
Not Alex Kappa necessarily at this part in his crew,
but I think Meredith moves well.
And I think Dylan Parham moves well.
But they're a little bit undersized.
And they are, if you fly off the ball and just put a hand in their chest,
they're going to have a tough time.
And like, Javon Kinlaw gets off the ball well.
Dron Payne gets off the ball well.
This entire group plays with a lot of energy attitude.
They fly off the ball.
And like, that is this interior.
It's like, once you get a hand in their chest,
they're going to fly three yards back
and that you saw a lot of that in this case.
Yeah, if you were a tepid group, right?
If you're not playing with a lot of authority
coming off the ball on offense,
you're going to feel it against this defensive line.
It almost reminds me a little bit of
that what we said about the Chargers defense
where if you're below the line,
they're really going to take advantage of you.
If you're a below the line,
offensive line in terms of approach and mindset,
you're going to feel it against this Washington defense.
And Payne had a couple moments with that.
Armstrong had a couple moments with that.
And then Von Miller took advantage
of DJ Glaze multiple times
in one-on-one pass-or situations in this game.
And so it's a group that, again, no stars necessarily,
but collectively you can feel them over the course of the game
when the talent level just kind of outmatches
whoever they're playing against.
And that was absolutely the case on Sunday.
And I'm glad you mentioned really quickly the plan too.
It seemed like any time Gentie was not in the game for a passing down,
they were just like throw Bobby Wagner at it.
Because they just, the other backs just were not picking up well.
Yeah.
Yeah, there was one where Wagner just...
He just absolutely dumps him in the backfield.
Takes him out.
And Bobby Wagner, credit to Bobby Wagner,
I mean, he obviously does not move sideline to sideline
the way that he did earlier in his career,
but he is still a very good, very dangerous blitzer.
And this team is absolutely willing to deploy and unleash him that way.
He is a bowling ball now.
Yeah.
Whereas, like, again, the sideline to sideline stuff,
it's a little tough sometimes.
He's not carrying overrots anymore,
but he still can give you what you need when you put him in the right position.
If he's moving full,
and hitting somebody.
It looks about as good as it ever has.
All right.
It is time to get to our final segment
on these hangover shows.
On Sunday nights,
we like to solicit some calls from you guys.
If you're going through something,
if you had a tough day watching your team,
if your football fandom has been trying
for you on a specific Sunday,
we want to hear from you,
and we want to help you work through it a little bit.
We asked for some suggestions about what this should be called,
and somebody in our Discord mentioned this as a name,
And this is one that I had kind of thought of and was like, all right, that's it.
If other people like this is what we're going with.
Moving forward, we're calling this Monday morning with the you.
So this is our Monday morning segment for week three.
Bell, are you got like three voicemails for us?
Let's see if we can help these people maybe a little bit.
Hey, Robert, this is Vij.
My team didn't break my heart.
I'm a Dallas Cowboys fan.
I have died numerous times.
And today, just died a little bit more.
the Cowboys are the worst organization I have ever seen in my life,
and they bring nothing but misery to Cowboys fans,
but joy to just about everyone.
Also, Iber Flus finally fixed Caleb.
For some reason I thought there would be more after that.
I'm glad that that's where it ends.
I don't really know what to say about the current state of the Dallas Cowboys.
It's frustrating to me because a lot of,
of the elements of the Cowboys offense.
And obviously you lose CD-LAM at the beginning of that game and you're going to be
without CD-Land for an extended period of time now.
And that kind of chips away to what I'm about to say.
But when this group was fully healthy over the first few weeks, it was everything I had
ever really wanted out of a Dallas Cowboys offense.
Nothing crazy.
But we're getting two legitimate receiving options on the perimeter.
You have league average rates of like motion, play action.
every time I complained about the lack of how static the Dallas offense felt.
For the first three weeks, I don't think Brian Schottenheimer is Kyle Shanahan,
but I think they're doing what is necessary to get to a place
where you are dangerous to deal with with Dak Prescott as your quarterback.
And so I was really enjoying it.
I was really enjoying watching the offense.
And then at the same time, that is happening,
the defense completely collapses.
And I think some of the plan on offense going out and getting Clayton Adams,
trying to just be a little bit more dynamic.
on that side of the ball.
Fully supported.
And it ended up working out.
They have,
do you know who has the best rushing success rate in the league right now?
It's the Dallas Cowboys.
Yes.
And I think, again,
this is exactly what I wanted the Cowboys offense to feel like this year.
And then on defense,
when you're trying to figure out a coordinator,
you go out and get a guy who wants to play a ton of zone
when you have constructed your entire DB room
over the last four or five years to be this sticky man coverage team.
And then in order to,
at the same time, while you're doing that, you trade away one of the best defensive players in the league.
And so on multiple different fronts, you're just sabotaging whatever this was supposed to be on that side of the ball.
And this is what you're left with as the Dallas Cowboys.
Like legitimately, if they had Micah Parsons and someone who was calling defensive plays that at least made more sense for the secondary, they would still have issues.
It's not a very good secondary right now.
It's not a talented group, but it is constructed in a way that is not set up to play this way.
Exactly. And like, I had this.
this issue with Iber Flues, especially back in Indianapolis, where like, if his defensive
personnel is not exactly what he wants, he kind of falls back into this mode of like,
we're just going to put a lid on anything, we're not going to do anything, we're going to play
a lot of cover two and we're going to hope it doesn't go wrong. Except it's not working,
but it's like didn't work that well in Indianapolis and it's definitely not working now
when you don't have enough pass rushers to make it work like that.
So the defensive plan, I think just never really made sense. And I think you're seeing some
of the limitations of that. And then I don't need to go on like another Jerry rant, but I will
just acknowledged something he said yesterday
that's absolutely hilarious. Did you see
that he said that if there was a special
like difference making player
that was available, they would consider trading
away the Packers picks to go get that player?
Did you see him say that yesterday? You were making this
up. There's no way. I swear to a guy
I swear to God said that.
It's just I just don't understand
like how as a Cowboys fan you could look at anything
they're doing and have any sort of faith
in this organization. Like period.
That is like completely
incoherent thinking. It's all
been incoherent thinking lately.
And even with,
and we were talking about this on Saturday,
and me and you and Dave
were hanging out watching college football.
And just previously,
and previous areas of the Cowboys,
when Jerry was actually the one
like pulling the strings
and making a lot of the personnel decisions,
it was haphazard, it was scattershot.
It was not rooted in any sort of logic
most of the time.
But at least there was a level of ambition to it.
Right?
Like they were trying something.
He was making moves.
He was trying to go get talent.
They were trying to win.
And even if you did,
didn't, even if you could argue with the effectiveness of it, I think you at least had to appreciate
the fact that he was trying to get stuff done. Now, it's all of the incompetence and incoherence
with none of the ambition. And that's why to me, it's just like, screw this. Like, I, like,
there's no part of me that has any sort of respect for how they're approaching this. The old part of it,
the old method, at least it was like, all right, I don't agree with this, but at least I can appreciate it.
here there's absolutely none of this.
It used to be a spectacle because it was aggressive.
And again, they were trying stuff.
And again, a lot of it was bad.
But when it worked out, it was incredibly cool.
And they did some stuff that was good and fun.
And now it's like it's a spectacle because they don't do any of the things, right?
And they're not taking any of the risks that they were supposed to.
And they still kind of present themselves as this like Hollywood-esque team,
but they don't do any of the stuff that would like actually support being that kind of team.
And now we have to watch this team that can't stop anybody,
try to keep up with opposing offenses without CD-Land for the next like month.
So I really wish I had some sort of solace to offer you as a Cowboys fan.
The offense should still be fun to watch when C.D. Lamb gets back.
That's pretty much all I can give you at this point.
For about 31 other fan bases, I think I could twist myself into a pretzel and give you a little bit of optimism.
I'm the wrong person to ask when it comes to like talking you into the Cowboys right now.
All right, Bell, what's our next one?
This is Josh.
It's made the last eight years a special type of insufferable.
It was this game against the Chargers where the rug came.
fully out from underneath me.
I try so hard
to not fall
for it and I let
myself get gaslit
by the local media
and by Sean Payton
into thinking that
I had hope at the quarterback position
again.
It wasn't until Justin Herbert
was melting my face
with this performance against
a defense that
is every bit as good as I thought it would be really contrasted against Bo Nix in this game
trying to put on his big boy pants that I just I'm just numb I'm just numb and I'm resigned
to a life of being the team that everybody always says is a QB away from serious contention
that's my lot in life now and it is what it is I guess I completely
understand where he's coming from because if you are a fan of the Broncos and if you're trying to
talk yourself into Bo Nix, there are two guys on the other side of the ball that would be the worst
possible people to play against. One is Josh Allen, which they had to do in the playoffs last year.
So you got like that fun house mirror effect of this is our quarterback, this is their quarterback.
And that game was immediately over. Yes. And then the other one is Justin Herbert.
Because the entire argument for Bo Nix is, you know, he's maybe a little bit limited in terms of the physical
talent that he's bringing to the position, but he could be accurate.
He can do a little bit off schedule, but like, yes, like there are limitations to
Hubo Nix is.
He has to be put in positions to succeed, but we trust Sean Payton to put him in those
positions to succeed.
That's what the last half of the 2024 season felt like.
When you watch a quarterback like Justin Herbert, who makes that play to Keenan Allen at
the end of the game where it's like he does not need to be put in a position to succeed.
There are a few guys where it would be more of a stark contrast and harder to stomach than the guy that they had to watch Sunday.
So I deeply empathize with where he's at right now.
It's real easy to talk yourself into a quarterback until you remember what the top like five or six guys look like.
And you're like, man, those guys, especially physically are just different like Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen, Justin Herbert, just like Bo Nix could end up a perfectly fine quarterback.
Physically he'll just never be able to do the stuff that Justin and Herbert do it.
It's like, it is a stark reminder of that.
You know what I also think is fascinating about this game?
Justin Herbert barely completed half of his passes.
He had 6.4, 6.4 yards per attempt.
He had one touchdown, one pick.
He was sacked five times.
Everyone I've heard talk about this game was like he was unbelievable.
He was.
Like, that's how good he was.
The stat line can be that.
And for once, we all finally agree that he actually played like a million times better
than what the stats look like.
Here's what I will say.
And I do think that there is some solace to be honest.
here for somebody that is a fan of the Broncos.
Even if Bo Nix is never going to be that guy,
where we're talking about top five elite sort of quarterbacks
when you're comparing to a guy like Justin Herbert,
we still have two more very cheap years of Bo Nix.
The defense is going to be good.
They are going to be a problem.
I should have mentioned this on the recap show last night
because it really did strike me in the moment,
but there were multiple plays yesterday where Riley Moss is like looking at Patrick
Stanton, he's like, what am I supposed to do?
Right?
Like, what am I supposed to do in this situation?
That is not going to happen every single week.
So you played a buzzsaw quarterback yesterday.
You played a bus saw offense the week before.
I do think that there will be much better days ahead for the Broncos defense specifically.
That is going to come.
And I do think that there will be better days ahead for Bow Nix.
We've already seen them, right?
Like, even if there are going to be some limitations.
And Bonix is already 25, but 25 isn't fully formed as a quarterback.
This is somebody who has started 20 games, not even, over the course of his NFL career.
it's still very early in Bo Nix's time,
even if he is a little bit older.
And so I think take a breath.
The defense is going to be very good.
The defense is going to keep you in games.
I do think that Sean Payton still has it,
even if it's been a little bit rockier to start this season,
than it looked for most of last year.
So this is one of those moments where it's like,
it's only three weeks.
You're still not out of it in the AFC.
That second tier of like wildcard AFC teams still very much in play.
And so we're only three weeks into the season.
and it's a long, long way to go before you start freaking out
when you have a roster as talented as the Broncos do.
Good to Alasemba.
This is a dejected Bengals fan calling in, man.
This is about time.
I've been saying it honestly since the Super Bowl run.
Zach Taylor is not an NFL head coach.
And this performance on Sunday just proves it.
You've got to go.
There's no way with what you think is on this offensive.
line, it's as bad as what is on the field. There are other coaches who are supposed to be
offensive gurus who do more with less. If you look at the Rams offensive line, even Mike McDaniels
with the Dolphins office of line, it's always a question, oh, they got to do more on the
offensive line, but they still manage to have a functional past game and a run game. Zach Taylor,
he cannot put together an offense. And I
I understand, hey, Joe Burrow wants to run these certain things or, you know, this is what he wants, he wants five out in the route so he can just sit back and diagnose.
Hey, coach is coach.
Hey, hey, we're going to run these concepts and it's going to make your life easier and you won't get hit as much.
But guess what?
Even when he does those things, this offense is not functional.
He's got to go.
I think it's a really good argument.
I think it's actually like there's a lot of sobriety in that con.
considering what the Bengals looked like yesterday.
I have been a defender of Zach Taylor at times
because I do think that the way the Bengals organization operates
puts him in a tough spot just overall.
Like what the personalities he has to manage,
all of that, like the personal elements of being an NFL head coach,
I think he does those very well.
And I think for the most part,
there have been stretches for the last three or four years
where I think some of the offensive design elements
of what the Bengals have done have been underrated.
And I go back to a couple of things,
specific moments. I think it was a 22 season where they really tapped into like a specific kind
of gun run game that was very efficient. They understood how it tied into the way they wanted to
play their passing game in the gun. It was like, oh, that's a really nice like trial and error
approach to offense figuring out who you need to be and making it work. In 23, and I think this is
the stretch that to me has earned a lot of equity for Zach Taylor as we like make arguments for what
kind of coach he is. When Jake Browning had to play in 2023, they changed the construction
of the offense to fit what Jake Browning needed to do for them to be successful.
And so I think even if I've been a defender of Zach Taylor in some areas, if this keeps going
at this rate, now you're having a lot of evidence on the other side of it.
Where while the first Jake Browning experience, I think, was some evidence that even without
Joe Burrow, this staff could create a functional offense.
If it's going to look like it looked on Sunday for the rest of this season and you truly
might bottom out on that side of the ball, then I think what, what?
he's saying starts to carry a lot more weight. And so I do think that is the scenario where
Zach Taylor could be in a little bit of trouble. Yeah, I think like I pretty much agree with
almost everything that he was saying, like, I understand that Joe Burrow is a fantastic
quarterback and that leaning into a lot of what he does well and what he wants makes sense.
At the same time, I've been calling for like the entirety of Joe Burroughs career. Like you need to
do some more of the run a normal offense stuff. And I think some of that may be a different coach
would be able to draw that out of Joe Burrow.
And again,
Zach Taylor has done some really interesting stuff
with the offense,
but that is still a part of it
that I really wanted.
You mentioned the Jake Browning thing.
We have evidence that they can do this with him.
And like the offensive line really now
is not worse than it was at that time, I don't think.
And so like they should be able to be something together here.
So the fact that they haven't done that.
And then also remove anything about like Bengals specific,
if you have a head coach who has not made the playoffs two years in a row,
and then even with losing the star quarterback,
bottoms out and let's say they win six games.
this year. That guy's getting fired
most of the time, almost
regardless of who it is. And so
whatever we want to say about the Bengals specifically,
Zach Taylor specifically, like that would just be
a resume that like it probably
gets you fired. I think the argument for keeping
Zach Taylor outside of again, some of the
things that you have to deal with as the Bengals head coach, is that
for the most part, I do think the
offensive structure thinks a little bit underrated
given the constraints that they have to work with.
Those constraints are now gone because Joe Burrow
is not there. And so if you can't
build a functional offense with those two receivers,
and an offensive line that you've invested heavily into,
then I think the conversation around Zach Taylor changes
and a lot of what that person just said is completely valid.
And you started starting to see over the last couple of years,
like the choices that they're making from a staffing perspective
is a lot of like, well, this was the problem.
So they move on from Lou, they go get Al Golden,
and so the defense was the problem.
And they fire the offensive line coach Frank Pollock last year.
They get Scott Peters, who was the Patriots offensive line coach.
Well, the offensive line coach was the problem.
That's why we're struggling in the run game.
That's why the offensive line hasn't played well.
Well, now the offensive line coach is new, and the offensive line continues to struggle.
And so if that kind of stuff, when you're moving all those pieces around and nothing really changes,
that's another reason that we start to reframe the conversation a bit.
And so I hear you, Bengals fans, about how frustrated you are right now.
And I think that that chorus is only going to get louder if we have more performances like the one than we saw on Sunday.
All right.
That is all we've got for the week three hangovers.
Sincerely appreciate all of you guys tuning in.
Tomorrow on the athletic football show feed,
Building the Beast with Dane Bruegler and Dave Hellman is back.
If you're looking for a weekly draft shows,
we're getting deeper into the college football season.
I highly encourage you guys to check that out.
If you're watching this on YouTube,
please like and subscribe to the channel.
If you did not check out the new film series that Derek is kicking off,
we had our first episode come out on Saturday,
breaking down a sequence of plays from the Lions offense against the bears.
We've got a lot of new toys in this studio.
access to highlights and NFL footage that we have never had before.
And so the YouTube channel is just going to look and feel a lot different this year than it has in years past.
And so encourage you guys to go check that stuff out, like and subscribe if that is where you are watching.
If you're listening, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, wherever you happen to listen.
We would sincerely appreciate that.
For now, that is all we've got.
Appreciate you all listening.
We'll talk to you very soon.
