Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Rushing Leaders

I haven't looked at the NFL's rushing leaders this season. That's probably due to the unfortunate fact that Adrian Peterson hasn't been a part of the ground gaining fun and the Minnesota Vikings, as a team, have been historically horrible at running the football. Those running difficulties probably have more to do with struggles and injuries on the offensive line than it has to do with Peterson's absence. He would even have troubles running behind this line. How bad have the Vikings been on the ground? Eight running backs have gained more rushing yards than their 782 yards. They are doing this at a 2.8 yards/carry clip. Very sad.

Here are the running backs that are doing a fine job of running with the football.














Rank Player Team Att Yds Avg TD
1 Ezekiel Elliott DAL 243 1,199 4.9 11
2 DeMarco Murray TEN 229 1,043 4.6 8
3 David Johnson ARI 210 921 4.4 10
4 Melvin Gordon SD 234 908 3.9 9
5 Lamar Miller HOU 211 881 4.2 3
6 LeGarrette Blount NE 212 869 4.1 12
7 Jay Ajayi MIA 161 847 5.3 7
8 LeSean McCoy BUF 157 819 5.2 9
9 Jordan Howard CHI 149 766 5.1 2
10 Matt Forte NYJ 202 759 3.8 7
11 Devonta Freeman ATL 161 729 4.5 5
12 Mark Ingram NO 136 721 5.3 3
13 Spencer Ware KC 149 705 4.7 2
14 Le'Veon Bell PIT 151 699 4.6 3
15 Frank Gore IND 178 670 3.8 4


Ezekiel Elliott is having an outstanding first season in the NFL. He's just about locked up the rookie of the year award and is probably on the short list for league MVP and offensive player of the year. He could threaten Eric Dickerson's 33-year old rookie rushing record. Running behind the Cowboys superb offensive line makes it all look so easy for Elliott. He often isn't even touched until he's in the secondary.

A couple of the surprises among the top-15 runners are Jay Ajayi and rookie Jordan Howard. Ajayi's a surprise because he was in the Dolphins doghouse at the start of the season. He got out of that doghouse and he's been a running terror ever since. Howard has simply been a great find for the Bears. As a fifth round pick out of Indiana he was supposed to be a backup to Jeremy Langford. Langford got hurt and now he can't get his job back.

Another surprise is the lofty place of LeGarrette Blount. The surprise is due to the Patriots frequent preference of not featuring a single back. Perhaps that preference has always been due to a single back not stepping up and consistently performing as Blount has done this season. He's been great and his 12 touchdowns stand out.

Another back that doesn't get touched much until he's in the secondary is Devonta Freeman. The line in front of him is terrific. He may not run through as many gaping holes as Elliott but that could be simply because he doesn't get anywhere near as many carries. Freeman and Tevin Coleman make up the league's most dynamic backfield tandem. When they are clicking the Falcons offense is real tough to stop.

Le'Veon Bell might be around 1,000 yards if a suspension hadn't kept him out of the Steelers first three games.

David Johnson is probably my favorite back to watch right now. That choice is made easier with Adrian Peterson sidelined. Johnson is just so good at everything. His nimble feet, subtle speed, and excellent receiving skills are such a fun combination.

It's always fun to see young, exciting players emerge in the NFL. There are several running backs that qualify. Elliott is the newest gem but he's hardly alone. David Johnson is great. Melvin Gordon has given Philip Rivers his first real backfield threat since LaDanian Tomlinson. Johnson and Gordon are only in their second seasons. Lamar Miller, Jay Ajayi, Jordan Howard, Devonta Freeman, Le'Veon Bell. The NFL has a fine group of young runners. And some people say that the running back position has become a disposable one.

The league's leading rushers list is dominated by the youngsters but it's nice to see a couple of grey beards keeping pace. Matt Forte and Frank Gore. They may not be gaining yards in chunks like they once did but they are still grinding it out and moving the chains.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Vikings Injuries

Here's the Minnesota Vikings official injury report in advance of their Thursday night game against the Dallas Cowboys.



This is a big game for a Vikings team that has to shake the funk of losing five of the last six games. They need these players on the field and most of them will be. These ridiculous injury reports are in response to 345 Park Avenue's demand that gamblers and fantasy players be properly informed. Here's how the Vikings injury report really breaks down from my perch.

Center Joe Berger's availability for Thursday's might be the biggest question for the players with new injuries. Concussions are never predictable. He's been in the concussion protocol since Friday so it's wait and see.

Punt returner Marcus Sherels missed the Thanksgiving game against the Detroit Lions. If he can handle the pain of a rib injury, which is often considerable, he can play. Punt returners take some high velocity hits so I put the chances of his playing as better than iffy.

Safety Harrison Smith has been dealing with an ankle injury for nearly two weeks. He has to play. The Vikings are giving him time to rest the ankle just as they did last week before the Lions game.

Nickel corner Captain Munnerlyn is in the same injury boat as Smith. Ankle = rest.

Sharrif Floyd will miss his tenth consecutive game since his week two knee injury. Hopefully, he's close to returning. The Vikings could really use him in their line rotation. At least he'll be well-rested when he does return.

Linebacker Chad Greenway missed practice as he awaits the birth of his fourth child.

Quarterback Sam Bradford is a surprise addition to the injury report. My guess is that he'll be fine. He's on the report simply because the Vikings are mandated to list him because he was rested for a few, or more, snaps.

The rest of the limited participants should be fine. Receiver Stefon Diggs' return is a welcome one. As the Vikings most explosive and productive pass catcher he was sorely missed against the Lions. Corner Terence Newman missed the Lions game as well. Trae Waynes did a fine job in his place. Waynes might even be on the verge of moving past Newman as the starter. Middle linebacker Eric Kendricks has been hobbled with a few injuries for a couple of weeks. His hip injury is a concern for that reason alone. His limited participation yesterday is a pretty good indication that he should be ready to play on Thursday. The coaches might manage his snaps against the Cowboys just as they did against the Lions. Right tackle Jeremiah Sirles hurt his hip in the second half against the Lions. There were rumors that he lobbied to get back in the game. He should be good to go. The Vikings can't afford to lose any more offensive linemen. Rookie corner Mackensie Alexander should be fine as well but muscle issues can be troublesome.

Finally, Adam Thielen shouldn't even be on the report if he was a full participant in practice. What's the point of listing him? Maybe he massaged his shoulder for a moment after a sideline catch and league office got wind of it.

It can be startling to see 13 players on your team's injury report. That's a lot of players for a team that has been dealing with a steady stream of injuries since August. In this particular case the Vikings have 13 players on the report because the league demands that they do so.

Monday, November 28, 2016

Week 12 Thoughts

Is an NFL Sunday without the Minnesota Vikings really an NFL Sunday? I don't think so. It's the same struggle next Sunday as the Vikings host the Dallas Cowboys this Thursday. Oh well, the NFL still plays the games.

More often than not the Atlanta Falcons offense is tough to stop. So much so that it's hard to believe that defenses have stopped them enough to hand them four losses. The Arizona Cardinals were feisty with the Falcons early. They couldn't sustain that feistiness as the Falcons pulled away in the second half. 38-19 Falcons.

Among the lesser known of the Falcons offensive weapons is itty-bitty 5'8" receiver Taylor Gabriel. He triggered his team's offensive explosion yesterday with an elusive 35-yard run off of a screen pass. The play was a treat to watch. He added a 25-yard catch and run touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Cardinals corner Patrick Peterson covering Falcons receiver Julio Jones is one of the league's elite matchups. Peterson got a raw deal in the first quarter and it set up the Falcons first touchdown. The Falcons had a 3rd-and-goal from the 2-yard line. Matt Ryan tried to hit Jones on a quick pass along the goal line. Peterson knocked the ball away with terrific, tight coverage. The officials called it pass interference. It wasn't. The Falcons scored on the next play with their renewed life.

And that leads me to this.

In the closing seconds of the San Francisco 49ers-Miami Dolphins game the 49ers were threatening to tie the game. Colin Kaepernick threw a quick pass to Torrey Smith in the end zone. Dolphins corner Byron Maxwell, with tight coverage, prevented the reception. No penalty. Maxwell had far more contact with Smith than Peterson had with Jones. Far more contact. If I was shown each play without knowing the outcome and was told that one was ruled pass interference and the other wasn't, the choice would be easy. Peterson made a great play. Maxwell committed pass interference. The problem that I have with today's officiating is the wild inconsistency in the calls.

The 49ers haven't won since Week 1. The Dolphins have now won six straight. The 49ers had a realistic shot at winning this game. Kaepernick was stopped a couple yards short of forcing this game into overtime. In fact, it looked like he had the corner of the end zone if he had't hesitated and took his run upfield.

In his second start, Los Angeles Rams rookie quarterback Jared Goff threw his first NFL touchdown. He threw his first three NFL touchdowns. It wasn't enough. The explosive New Orleans Saints scored 49 and the Rams only managed those 21 points.

The Saints pulled out some tricks. Drew Brees had a touchdown run and receiver Willie Snead had a touchdown pass.

Saints rookie receiver Michael Thomas is really starting to shine. Actually he's been shining for a few weeks. He was one of my favorite receivers in last spring's draft. Brees has made stars of many of the receivers that he's had in the past but I think that Thomas, Brandin Cooks, and Snead might be the most talented he's ever had. They definitely have the best hands.

The Tennessee Titans are a half-game back of the Houston Texans in the AFC South. A division that's up for grabs for the three teams not named the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Titans look like the team to beat but they have to string some wins together. This win one, lose one, win one pattern might not cut it. Although, it's the AFC South so it might. The Titans were able to hang on against the Chicago Bears yesterday. 27-21.

The San Diego Chargers did their part to keep that AFC South race tight. They defeated the Texans 21-13.

Enough with the AFC South.

Buffalo Bills running back LeSean McCoy didn't look too hobbled on his 75-yard touchdown run against the Jaguars. It was his second of the game. The first one was shorter. The Bills did enough to defeat the Jaguars 28-21.

When the Baltimore Ravens won Super Bowl XXXV they won a bunch of games during the season with field goals and superb defense. Yesterday's 19-14 win over the Cincinnati Bengals was a lot like those wins. At least the field goal part. Justin Tucker kicked four field goals against the Bengals. Most of the long distance variety. He had kicks of 52, 57, and 54 to go with his chip shot of 36. He's a nice little weapon. The Vikings could use a nice little weapon like that.

Tucker was even part of the post game press conference. You don't see that from a kicker too often. He took advantage of his shot at the podium and turned it into a stand-up routine.

The Cleveland Browns lost again. This time it was to the New York Giants. 27-13. The Browns are now 0-12. The Giants have won six straight to stay within sight of the 10-1 Dallas Cowboys at 8-3.

The late games provided some fun. Three games. Three surprisingly close games. One upset.

The Seattle Seahawks usually start soaring at this point in the season. It looked like they were starting to soar this year but they ran into some problems yesterday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Seahawks managed a total of five points. Two of those came on a safety that was awarded to them by a Buccaneers penalty in their own end zone. The Seahawks offense generated a field goal and 245 yards.

Seahawks second half possessions: punt, punt, punt, punt, fumble, interception. Not good. The Seahawks lost to the Buccaneers 14-5.

It sure is fun to see an unhappy Pete Carroll. That gum-chomping little elf.

Usually we see receivers complaining about the physical play of Seahawks corner Richard Sherman. It was a nice twist to see Sherman complaining about the physical play of Buccaneers receiver Mike Evans.

The New England Patriots were supposed to take apart the New York Jets yesterday. Maybe it was because Tom Brady and just about everyone that catches passes from him were hobbled but the Patriots had a tough time putting the Jets away. An 8-yard Brady to rookie Malcolm Mitchell touchdown pass with just under two minutes to play was the difference in the 22-16 Patriots win.

For whatever reason the Patriots seem to have difficulty finding productive receivers in the draft. Was Deion Branch the last one? He was drafted over a decade ago. Aaron Dobson, Taylor Price, Brandon Tate, Chad Jackson, Bethel Johnson were all selected in the first three rounds of their respective drafts. They found Julian Edelman in the seventh round in 2009 but he was a quarterback in college. The Patriots selected Malcolm Mitchell in the fourth round last spring. It's early but they might have finally found another receiver in the draft. His touchdown yesterday was his second in two weeks. Patriots pass catchers have to understand a bunch of complicated route options before they gain the trust of Brady. It looks like Mitchell might be gaining that trust like no other Patriots rookie receiver before him.

A disastrous first half put the Carolina Panthers on the wrong side of things against the explosive Oakland Raiders. 24-7 at halftime. The Panthers responded in the second half with 25 unanswered points. Suddenly it was 32-24 Panthers. But the Raiders haven't let a late deficit disrupt their fun this season. They put up the final 11 points to win 35-32.

A concussion kept Panthers terrific middle linebacker Luke Kuechly out of this game. A.J. Klein is a fine player. He might even be the best backup middle linebacker in the league. It was still an interesting strategy to see Klein covering Raiders receiver Michael Crabtree 40 yards downfield on a critical 3rd-and-nine late in the game. There was probably supposed to be safety help but Klein got none. That shaky defensive play went a long way in allowing the Raiders to scoot down the field and score the game-winning field goal.

Raiders quarterback Derek Carr sure is an excitable/energetic fellow. He's quickly become a team leader, fan favorite, and difference-making quarterback. He's a fun player.

A day of great (despite Vikings-less) football was capped by a classic. It took four quarters and all of overtime for the Kansas City Chiefs to defeat the Denver Broncos 30-27.

Despite the 57 combined points this was a defensive gem. Justin Houston and Von Miller put on a pass rushing clinic. It was Houston's sack-fumble that opened the scoring with a safety. For the game he had 3 sacks, 10 tackles, 5 tackles for loss, 3 QB hits, and a pass defensed. Miller's stat line was nearly identical. 3 sacks, 10 tackles, 4 tackles for loss, 4 QB hits, and a pass defensed.

Chiefs rookie receiver Tyreek Hill is becoming a greater part of the offense with each game. Last night was his breakout game. He was Gale Sayers-like with kick return, receiving, and rushing touchdowns.

Some will criticize Broncos coach Gary Kubiak for sending out Brandon McManus for a 62-yard field goal with about a minute left in overtime. The miss handed the Chiefs terrific field position at the Broncos 48-yard line with more than a minute to play. Kubiak should be praised. Punting would be playing for a tie. Attempting a field goal, even a really long field goal, was playing for the win. Kicks have traveled longer than 62 yards in Denver's altitude and McManus has a strong leg. Coaches should always play for the win. Personally, I would have left the offense on the field. Converting a 4th-and-10 seemed more realistic than making a 62-yard field goal. But, what do I know? I'm watching from a couch.

I haven't seen all of the Broncos games but this was the best that I've seen quarterback Trevor Siemian play. He was terrific. 20/34 for 368 yards and 3 touchdowns. With Siemian playing like he was I definitely would have left him on the field for that fourth down.

A fun football day.

The Philadelphia Eagles host the Green Bay Packers tonight for more football fun.




Sunday, November 27, 2016

Flea Flicker Week 12 Predictions

With three games played on Thanksgiving this is a reduced Sunday slate.

Arizona Cardinals @ Atlanta Falcons
Pick: Falcons
The Cardinals are in a free fall. This is the sort of game that could go to the team that has nothing to lose and the Cardinals have nothing to lose. I'll still go with the Falcons.

San Francisco 49ers @ Miami Dolphins
Pick: 49ers
Despite losing every game since their Week 1 win the 49ers are often feisty. I'll go with the upset.

Los Angeles Rams @ New Orleans Saints
Pick: Saints
I don't have much faith in the Rams offense can scoring more than 10 points. I know that the Saints can score more than 10 points.

New York Giants @ Cleveland Browns
Pick: Giants
I don't think that the Browns go 0-16 but I don't think is the week that they get that win.

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Buffalo Bills
Pick: Bills
A coin flip decided this pick.

Tennessee Titans @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Titans
The Bears are missing a lot of players. The Titans looked like they were poised to make a run before they stumbled in the first half against the Colts last week.

Seattle Seahawks @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Pick: Buccaneers
Upset! A stunning upset. The Seahawks get caught looking past their weak closing schedule?

Carolina Panthers @ Oakland Raiders
Pick: Panthers
Another upset because the Raiders catch an officiating crew that actually watches the game.

New England Patriots @ New York Jets
Pick: Patriots
This one could get ugly.

Kansas City Chiefs @ Denver Broncos
Pick: Broncos
Here's hoping that both teams play better than they have the last couple of weeks because this could be a real fun game.

Green Bay Packers @ Philadelphia Eagles
Pick: Eagles
If the Packers defense play anything like a capable NFL defense this could be a fun game too.


Saturday, November 26, 2016

Chuck Noll's Place In History

The most recent episode of A Football Life aired last night on NFL Network. Former Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Chuck Noll was the subject and it was excellent. Can anyone, or anything, match the success rate of NFL Films. Everything that the artists in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey do is fantastic. This episode was interconnected with Michael MacCambrige's recent book on Noll's life. A frequent talking point throughout was Chuck Noll's place among the great coaches in NFL history. MacCambridge and others debated the coach's frequent place below peers such as Don Shula and Tom Landry. I've never seen it that way. I always saw Noll as easily above Landry, four Super Bowl titles in fewer years easily outpaces two titles in more years, and about even with Shula.  

Here's the statistics of ten of the best to ever coach in the NFL

Coach Years Wins Win % Titles
Paul Brown 25 213 0.672 7 (4 AAFC)
George Halas 40 318 0.682 6
Vince Lombardi 10 96 0.738 5
Bill Belichick 22 231 0.668 4
Bill Walsh 11 92 0.609 3
Don Shula 33 328 0.677 2
Chuck Noll 23 193 0.566 4
Curly Lambeau 33 226 0.631 6
Tom Landry 29 250 0.607 2
Steve Owen 24 153 0.605 2
Noll's win percentage lags behind the rest. His final seven seasons really did a number on that statistic. That's where Shula scoots past him. Noll could've used his own Dan Marino to follow Terry Bradshaw. That second wave of success is the thing that truly separates the coaches that remained in one place for multiple decades. Shula was a consistent winner throughout his career. So much so that he had only two losing seasons in his 33 years. Maybe he's too low on my thrown together. But, this isn't about Shula. It's about Chuck Noll. If Noll had retired or moved on after ten years like Lombardi he'd probably be grouped with the legendary coaches at the top. Noll's first ten years in Pittsburgh were dynamite. A .637 win percentage and four titles. And he put an end to 37 years of consistent losing in Pittsburgh. 

When there's talk of all-time football greats there's often talk of "Mt. Rushmores." The four greatest at this or that for this or that team. The Mt. Rushmore of coaches was mentioned a few times on Noll's A Football Life. More accurately the mentions were of his place outside the top four. If it's an all-time coaching Mt. Rushmore, Noll is on the outside. An all-time group of four would have to include Paul Brown, George Halas, and some combination of Vince Lombardi, Bill Belichick and Bill Walsh. In my opinion. Some might have Don Shula, and that's hard to argue. I just feel that beyond the wins that they piled up, Walsh, Belichick and possibly Lombardi impacted the game more than Shula. Now, a Mt. Rushmore of the super-fun decade of the 1970s? That Mt. Rushmore probably starts with Chuck Noll. 

Chuck Noll
Don Shula
Tom Landry
John Madden

I'd sure like to force Bud Grant into that group but he's on the outside looking in. Losing three Super Bowls will do that to a coach. 

Chuck Noll's A Football Life was excellent. NFL Films creates nothing less. Beyond his coaching, and playing, career, Noll is one of the most interesting coaches and personalities the game has ever seen. One hour simply isn't enough. As a result, I'm really looking forward to reading Michael MacCambridge's book. Chuck Noll: His Life's Work. Like NFL Films, MacCambrige is terrific too. 

Friday, November 25, 2016

Thanksgiving Game Thoughts

The Minnesota Vikings found a new way to hand the Detroit Lions a win at the end of a close game. Two weeks ago Matt Prater made a 58-yard field goal as time expired to tie the game. The Lions won in overtime. Yesterday, Lions corner Darius Slay intercepted a Sam Bradford pass intended for Adam Thielen on their own 33-yard with 30 seconds to play. Slay returned it to the Vikings 20-yard line. From there, Prater had an easy, game-winning field goal. 16-13 Lions.

I've seen more than I ever want to see of Matt Prater. The Lions have won a lot of close games, they've trailed in the fourth quarter of every game this season, and Prater is a big reason for those wins. Four of their last six wins have been decided by his field goals. He doesn't miss.

The key sequence for the Vikings may have come at the end of the third quarter and start of the fourth. The Vikings were at the Lions 47 with 1:13 remaining in the third. A brilliant run by Cordarrelle Patterson on a reverse gained 22 yards to the Lions 25. From there, the Vikings lined up in a split backfield with both Jerick McKinnon and Matt Asiata lined up behind Bradford under center. Quite frankly, this formation was strange to see. I thought that I was back in the 1970s. It might have been strange for the defense to see as well as Asiata burst up the middle for 15 yards to the Lions 10. These two quick-hitting, gashing plays gave the Vikings offensive momentum that they just hadn't had in the game. It was disappointing to see the quarter end. I feel like the drive might have ended better if the Vikings could've immediately lined up for their next play while the Lions were on their heels. Instead, we had one of those seemingly endless commercial breaks. When that was finally over the Vikings had a first-and-goal from just inside the 10. A McKinnon run gained nothing but T.J. Clemmings was called for a chop block. This is the sort of mind-bending mistake that the Vikings routinely make in these situations and it's a big reason for their five losses. They are an offense that gains yards, when they are gaining them, in five-yard chunks. They are a pretty good offense when they can move the chains with those five-yard chunks. First-and-goal from the 10, even second-and-goal from the 10 is their sort of situation. First-and-goal from the 25 isn't their sort of situation. As for the chop block penalty on Clemmings, it had to be called because he did go low on the defender. But to say that the defender was engaged with Alex Boone on the play is a stretch. He might've brushed against Boone's back but that's about it. Clemmings went low and I really don't understand why any 300+-lb NFL lineman would ever have the need to go low on another player. Man up! For that reason alone the penalty was justified. Anyway, following the penalty the Vikings had a first-and-goal from the 25 and preceded to gain yardage in five-yard chunks and ended up ten yards short of a touchdown. They had to settle for a field goal. I can't help but think that the end of the third quarter commercial break zapped the Vikings offensive momentum. If that didn't do it the chop block penalty definitely did. If the Vikings score a touchdown there they probably win the game.

The Vikings defense played well enough to win. Again. They were especially dominant in the second half. The Lions offense did nothing in the second half until their final, game-tying drive. The defense that had allowed the Lions only 11 plays on three possessions allowed them to move from their own two-yard line with five minutes to play to a game-tying field goal in just over three minutes.

The mode of operation for the 2016 Detroit Lions has been to keep the game close and win it in the end. And they have the kicker to do it. It's worked and the Vikings have played right into it. Twice in the last two weeks.

3rd Downs!
The Vikings converted on two of ten third down situations. It's tough to win games that way.

The successes 
3rd-and-7 at Vikings 30: Sam Bradford 10-yard pass to Cordarrelle Patterson

3rd-and-1 at Vikings 29: Zach Line 2-yard run

The failures
3rd-an-8 at Vikings 14: Bradford 6-yard pass to Adam Thielen

3rd-and-9 at Lions 48: Bradford 7-yard pass to Adam Thielen

The Vikings went for on fourth down after Thielen was stopped two yards short of the yard to gain.

4th-and-2 at Lions 41: Bradford pass incomplete to Thielen

3rd-and-14 at Vikings 45: Bradford 5-yard pass to Rudolph

3rd-and-9 at Vikings 39: Bradford 2-yard pass to Jerick McKinnon

3rd-and-5 at Lions 15: Bradford 3-yard pass to Matt Asiata

3rd-and-goal at Lions 16: Bradford 6-yard pass to Rudolph

3rd-and-3 at Vikings 38: Bradford 2-yard pass to McKinnon

3rd-and-2 at Vikings 33: Patterson illegal formation penalty wipes out Bradford 7-yard pass to McKinnon.

That penalty set up the interception by Darius Slay, conveniently in field goal range, that sealed the win for the Lions.

Every one of those third down failures have a couple things in common. Other than not working. Each was a pass and each was thrown short of the yard to gain. Conversion was dependent on the receiver making at least one defender miss on the tackle. The Vikings have some players with some nice run-after-the-catch skills (Patterson and McKinnon in this game) but depending upon that talent on every single one of their third down attempts just doesn't seem wise. It strikes me as predictable. The Lions defenders could sit back and wait for the pass because they knew that it would be in front of them. All they had to do was come up, in control, and make the tackle.

That offensive predictability probably went a long way in setting up the interception. Slay and safety Glover Quin spoke after the game of how they'd been working on their particular trick, Slay coming off of his man, to dupe an unsuspecting quarterback. Well, it's easy to succeed when Thielen had been running that exact same route repeatedly throughout the game. It's unfortunate that Bradford was so committed to getting the ball to Thielen as it looked like rookie Laquon Treadwell, the receiver that Slay was initially covering, was open deep.

Injuries have forced the Vikings to go with their fourth and fifth offensive tackles. The injury-thrashed offensive line was further thrashed yesterday. Center Joe Berger left in the first half with a concussion. Nick Easton replaced him. Right tackle Jeremiah Sirles left in the second half with a possible hip injury. Rookie Willie Beavers replaced him.

The Lions now lead the NFC North with a 7-4 record. The Vikings are second at 6-5. That one-game lead doesn't look like much with five games to play but the season sweep of the Vikings gives the Lions a two game cushion. It's really no stretch to say that the Vikings probably have to win their remaining games to take the division title. A single loss might still do it. It's unlikely that the North will have a wild card team so the division title is the only path to the playoffs. The Vikings start their five game season with the Dallas Cowboys next Thursday. That's a tough start. At least the game is at home.

A(nother) Vikings loss and Thanksgiving kept me from being all that interested in paying particular attention to the other games of the day. One little nugget that did grab me about the Washington Redskins-Dallas Cowboys game was this.

Redskins offense: 505 yards, no turnovers, no sacks.

Knowing only those numbers one would think that the Redskins took the Cowboys apart. The Redskins defense held Cowboys rookie running sensation Ezekiel Elliott to under 100 yards (barely, 97 yards). The Redskins defense held the Cowboys rookie passing sensation Dak Prescott to under 200 yards (barely, 195). How did the Cowboys win 31-26?

In the nightcap the Pittsburgh Steelers took care of the Andrew Luck-less Indianapolis Colts 28-7. The Steelers offensive stars played well but this game felt closer than the three-score game that it was. That's thanks to a sometimes heroic effort from Scott Tolzien in place of Luck.

On to Sunday. Well, there's some terrific rivalry games in college football before then.





Thursday, November 24, 2016

Throwback Thursday: Thanksgiving Football

Thanksgiving and football have been a wonderful combination pretty much since the ball starting bouncing funny. Thanksgiving football has been a thing in the NFL since the league's inaugural 1920 season. The Detroit Lions made the Thanksgiving Day game their own in 1934. That was their first year in the Motor City and new owner George Richards wanted to bring some attention to his team. He had an extremely talented team, a team that won the NFL title in 1935, and that team started a Thanksgiving Day tradition. Other than a six-year gap from 1939-44, football in Detroit has been an NFL staple on Thanksgiving ever since.

The Dallas Cowboys joined the Thanksgiving show in 1966. Since then, they have missed playing on the holiday only in 1975 and 1977. The NFL muscled a third game into the tradition in 2006.

The All-America Football Conference were professional football rivals of the NFL from 1946-49. The American Football League did the same from 1960-69. Both leagues challenged the established league on the field and on Thanksgiving.

Here are the results of the NFL, AAFC, and AFL games played on Thanksgiving.

Nov. 25, 1920
AKRON PROS 7, Canton Bulldogs 0
Decatur Staleys 6, CHICAGO TIGERS 0
ELYRIA (OH) ATHLETICS* 0, Columbus Panhandles 0
DAYTON TRIANGLES 28, Detroit Heralds 0
CHICAGO BOOSTERS* 27, Hammond Pros 0
All-Tonawanda (NY) 14, ROCHESTER JEFFERSONS 3
* Non-league team. Games between league teams and non-league teams counted in standings in 1920.
Nov. 24, 1921
Canton Bulldogs 14, AKRON PROS 0
Buffalo All-Americans 7, CHICAGO STALEYS 6
Nov. 30, 1922
Buffalo All-Americans 21 ROCHESTER JEFFERSONS 0
CHICAGO CARDINALS 6, Chicago Bears 0
RACINE LEGION 3, Milwaukee Badgers 0
Oorang Indians 18, COLUMBUS PANHANDLES 6
CANTON BULLDOGS 14, Akron Pros 0
Nov. 29, 1923
CANTON BULLDOGS 28, Toledo Maroons 0
CHICAGO BEARS 3, Chicago Cardinals 0
GREEN BAY PACKERS 19, Hammond Pros 0
Milwaukee Badgers 16, RACINE LEGION 0
AKRON PROS 2, Buffalo All-Americans 0
Nov. 27, 1924
AKRON PROS 22, Buffalo Bisons 0
Chicago Bears 21, CHICAGO CARDINALS 0
FRANKFORD YELLOWJACKETS 32, Dayton Triangles 7
CLEVELAND BULLDOGS 53, Milwaukee Badgers 10 (at Canton, Ohio)
Green Bay Packers 17, KANSAS CITY BLUES 6
Nov. 26, 1925
CHICAGO BEARS 0, Chicago Cardinals 0
Kansas City Cowboys 17, CLEVELAND BULLDOGS 0 (at Hartford, CT)
Rock Island Independents 6, DETROIT PANTHERS 3
POTTSVILLE MAROONS 31, Green Bay Packers 0
Nov. 25, 1926
New York Giants 17, BROOKLYN LIONS 0
Los Angeles Buccaneers 9, DETROIT PANTHERS 6
CHICAGO BEARS 0, Chicago Cardinals 0
FRANKFORD YELLOWJACKETS 20, Green Bay Packers 14
POTTSVILLE MAROONS 8, Providence Steam Roller 0
CANTON BULLDOGS 0, Akron Pros 0
Nov. 24, 1927
Chicago Cardinals 3, CHICAGO BEARS 0
POTTSVILLE MAROONS 6, Providence Steam Roller 0
Green Bay Packers 17, FRANKFORD YELLOWJACKETS 9
Cleveland Bulldogs 30, NEW YORK YANKEES 19
Nov. 29, 1928
Providence Steam Roller 7, POTTSVILLE MAROONS 0
DETROIT WOLVERINES 33, Dayton Triangles 0
FRANKFORD YELLOWJACKETS 2, Green Bay Packers 0
CHICAGO BEARS 34, Chicago Cardinals 0
Nov. 28, 1929
New York Giants 21, STATEN ISLAND STAPLETONS 7
FRANKFORD YELLOWJACKETS 0, Green Bay Packers 0
Chicago Cardinals 40, CHICAGO BEARS 6

Nov. 27, 1930
STATEN ISLAND STAPLETONS 7, New York Giants 6
BROOKLYN DODGERS 33, Providence Steam Roller 12
Green Bay Packers 25, FRANKFORD YELLOWJACKETS 7
CHICAGO BEARS 6, Chicago Cardinals 0
Nov. 26, 1931
Green Bay Packers 38, PROVIDENCE STEAM ROLLER 7
STATEN ISLAND STAPELETONS 9, New York Giants 6
CHICAGO BEARS 18, Chicago Cardinals 7
Nov. 24, 1932
CHICAGO BEARS 24, Chicago Cardinals 0
Green Bay Packers 7, BROOKLYN DODGERS 0
STATEN ISLAND STAPELETONS 13, New York Giants 13
Nov. 30, 1933
Chicago Bears 22, CHICAGO CARDINALS 6
New York Giants 10, BROOKLYN DODGERS 0
Nov. 29, 1934
CHICAGO CARDINALS 6, Green Bay Packers 0
Chicago Bears 19, DETROIT LIONS 16
New York Giants 27, BROOKLYN DODGERS 0
Nov. 28, 1935
New York Giants 21, BROOKLYN DODGERS 0
CHICAGO CARDINALS 9, Green Bay Packers 7
DETROIT LIONS 14, Chicago Bears 2
Nov. 26, 1936
DETROIT LIONS 13, Chicago Bears 7
New York Giants 14, BROOKLYN DODGERS 0
Nov. 25, 1937
Chicago Bears 13, DETROIT LIONS 0
BROOKLYN DODGERS 13, New York Giants 13
Nov. 24, 1938
DETROIT LIONS 14, Chicago Bears 7
BROOKLYN DODGERS 7, New York Giants 7
Nov. 23, 1939#
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 17, Pittsburgh Steelers 14

Nov. 28, 1940#
Pittsburgh Steelers 7, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 0
# In 1939 and 1940, President Roosevelt moved Thanksgiving one week earlier. Various states celebrated on the date declared by the President, while other states recognized the traditional fourth Thursday of the month. In 1941, Thanksgiving was sanctioned by Congress to be celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November which it has been ever since.
Nov. 22, 1945
Cleveland Rams 28, DETROIT LIONS 21
Nov. 28, 1946
Boston Yanks 34, DETROIT LIONS 10
(AAFC) - New York Yankees 21, BROOKLYN DODGERS 7
Nov. 27, 1947
Chicago Bears 34, DETROIT LIONS 14
(AAFC) - San Francisco 49ers 21, BROOKLYN DODGERS 7
(AAFC) - Cleveland Browns 27, LOS ANGELES DONS 17
Nov. 25, 1948
Chicago Cardinals 28, DETROIT LIONS 14
(AAFC) - Cleveland Browns 31, LOS ANGELES DONS 14
(AAFC) - Buffalo Bills 39, CHICAGO ROCKETS 35
Nov. 24, 1949
Chicago Bears 28, DETROIT LIONS 7
(AAFC) - Cleveland Browns 14, CHICAGO HORNETS 6
(AAFC) - Brooklyn-New York Yankees 17, LOS ANGELES DONS 16

Nov. 23, 1950
DETROIT LIONS 49, New York Yanks 14
Pittsburgh Steelers 28, CHICAGO CARDINALS 17
Nov. 22, 1951
DETROIT LIONS 52, Green Bay Packers 35
Nov. 27, 1952
DETROIT LIONS 48, Green Bay Packers 24
DALLAS TEXANS 27, Chicago Bears 23 (at Akron, Ohio)
Nov. 26, 1953
DETROIT LIONS 34, Green Bay Packers 15
Nov. 25, 1954
DETROIT LIONS 28, Green Bay Packers 24
Nov. 24, 1955
DETROIT LIONS 24, Green Bay Packers 10
Nov. 22, 1956
Green Bay Packers 24, DETROIT LIONS 20
Nov. 28, 1957
DETROIT LIONS 18, Green Bay Packers 6
Nov. 27, 1958
DETROIT LIONS 24, Green Bay Packers 14
Nov. 26, 1959
Green Bay Packers 24, DETROIT LIONS 17

Nov. 24, 1960
DETROIT LIONS 23, Green Bay Packers 10
(AFL) - New York Titans 41, Dallas Texans 35
Nov. 23, 1961
Green Bay Packers 17, DETROIT LIONS 9
(AFL) - NEW YORK TITANS 21, Buffalo Bills 14
Nov. 22, 1962
DETROIT LIONS 26, Green Bay Packers 14
(AFL) - New York Titans 46, DENVER BRONCOS 45
Nov. 28, 1963
DETROIT LIONS 13, Green Bay Packers 13
(AFL) - Oakland Raiders 26, DENVER BRONCOS 10
Nov. 26, 1964
Chicago Bears 27, DETROIT LIONS 24
(AFL) - Buffalo Bills 27, SAN DIEGO CHARGERS 24
Nov. 25, 1965
DETROIT LIONS 24, Baltimore Colts 24
(AFL) - SAN DIEGO CHARGERS 20, Buffalo Bills 20
Nov. 24, 1966
San Francisco 49ers 41, DETROIT LIONS 14
DALLAS COWBOYS 26, Cleveland Browns 14
(AFL) - Buffalo Bills 31, OAKLAND RAIDERS 10
Nov. 23, 1967
Los Angeles Rams 31, DETROIT LIONS 7
DALLAS COWBOYS 46, St. Louis Cardinals 21
(AFL) - Oakland Raiders 44, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 22
(AFL) - SAN DIEGO CHARGERS 24, Denver Broncos 20
Nov. 28, 1968
Philadelphia Eagles 12, DETROIT LIONS 0
DALLAS COWBOYS 29, Washington Redskins 20
(AFL) - OAKLAND RAIDERS 13, Buffalo Bills 10
(AFL) - KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 24, Houston Oilers 10
Nov. 27, 1969
Minnesota Vikings 27, DETROIT LIONS 0
DALLAS COWBOYS 24, San Francisco 49ers 24
(AFL) - KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 31, Denver Broncos 17
(AFL) - San Diego Chargers 21, HOUSTON OILERS 17

Nov. 26, 1970
DETROIT LIONS 28, Oakland Raiders 14
DALLAS COWBOYS 16, Green Bay Packers 3
Nov. 25, 1971
DETROIT LIONS 32, Kansas City Chiefs 21
DALLAS COWBOYS 28, Los Angeles Rams 21
Nov. 23, 1972
DETROIT LIONS 37, New York Jets 20
San Francisco 49ers 31, DALLAS COWBOYS 10
Nov. 22, 1973
Washington Redskins 20, DETROIT LIONS 0
Miami Dolphins 14, DALLAS COWBOYS 7
Nov. 28, 1974
Denver Broncos 31, DETROIT LIONS 27
DALLAS COWBOYS 24, Washington Redskins 23
Nov. 27, 1975
Los Angeles Rams 20, DETROIT LIONS 0
Buffalo Bills 32, ST. LOUIS CARDINALS 14
Nov. 25, 1976
DETROIT LIONS 27, Buffalo Bills 14
DALLAS COWBOYS 19, St. Louis Cardinals 14
Nov. 24, 1977
Chicago Bears 31, DETROIT LIONS 14
Miami Dolphins 55, ST. LOUIS CARDINALS 14
Nov. 23, 1978
DETROIT LIONS 17, Denver Broncos 14
DALLAS COWBOYS 37, Washington Redskins 10
Nov. 22, 1979
DETROIT LIONS 20, Chicago Bears 0
Houston Oilers 30, DALLAS COWBOYS 24

Nov. 27, 1980
Chicago Bears 23, DETROIT LIONS 17 (OT)
DALLAS COWBOYS 51, Seattle Seahawks 7
Nov. 26, 1981
DETROIT LIONS 27, Kansas City Chiefs 10
DALLAS COWBOYS 10, Chicago Bears 9
Nov. 25, 1982
New York Giants 13, DETROIT LIONS 6
DALLAS COWBOYS 31, Cleveland Browns 14
Nov. 24, 1983
DETROIT LIONS 45, Pittsburgh Steelers 3
DALLAS COWBOYS 35, St. Louis Cardinals 17
Nov. 22, 1984
DETROIT LIONS 31, Green Bay Packers 28
DALLAS COWBOYS 20, New England Patriots 17
Nov. 28, 1985
DETROIT LIONS 31, New York Jets 20
DALLAS COWBOYS 35, St. Louis Cardinals 17
Nov. 27, 1986
Green Bay Packers 44, DETROIT LIONS 40
Seattle Seahawks 31, DALLAS COWBOYS 14
Nov. 26, 1987
Kansas City Chiefs 27, DETROIT LIONS 20
Minnesota Vikings 44, DALLAS COWBOYS 38 (OT)
Nov. 24, 1988
Minnesota Vikings 23, DETROIT LIONS 0
Houston Oilers 25, DALLAS COWBOYS 17
Nov. 23, 1989
DETROIT LIONS 13, Cleveland Browns 10
Philadelphia Eagles 27, DALLAS COWBOYS 0

Nov. 22, 1990
DETROIT LIONS 40, Denver Broncos 27
DALLAS COWBOYS 27, Washington Redskins 17
Nov. 28, 1991
DETROIT LIONS 16, Chicago Bears 6
DALLAS COWBOYS 20, Pittsburgh Steelers 10
Nov. 26, 1992
Houston Oilers 24, DETROIT LIONS 21
DALLAS COWBOYS 30, New York Giants 3
Nov. 25, 1993
Chicago Bears 10, DETROIT LIONS 6
Miami Dolphins 16, DALLAS COWBOYS 14
Nov. 24, 1994
DETROIT LIONS 35, Buffalo Bills 21
DALLAS COWBOYS 42, Green Bay Packers 31
Nov. 23, 1995
DETROIT LIONS 44, Minnesota Vikings 38
DALLAS COWBOYS 24, Kansas City Chiefs 12
Nov. 28, 1996
Kansas City Chiefs 28, DETROIT LIONS 24
DALLAS COWBOYS 21, Washington Redskins 10
Nov. 27, 1997
DETROIT LIONS 55, Chicago Bears 20
Tennessee Titans 27, DALLAS COWBOYS 14
Nov. 26, 1998
DETROIT LIONS 19, Pittsburgh Steelers 16 (OT)
Minnesota Vikings 46, DALLAS COWBOYS 36
Nov. 25, 1999
DETROIT LIONS 21, Chicago Bears 17
DALLAS COWBOYS 20, Miami Dolphins 0

Nov. 23, 2000
DETROIT LIONS 34, New England Patriots 9
Minnesota Vikings 27, DALLAS COWBOYS 15
Nov. 22, 2001
Green Bay Packers 29, DETROIT LIONS 27
Denver Broncos 26, DALLAS COWBOYS 24
Nov. 28, 2002
New England Patriots 20, DETROIT LIONS 12
DALLAS COWBOYS 27, Washington Redskins 20
Nov. 27, 2003
DETROIT LIONS 22, Green Bay Packers 14
Miami Dolphins 40, DALLAS COWBOYS 21
Nov. 25, 2004
Indianapolis Colts 41, DETROIT LIONS 9
DALLAS COWBOYS 21, Chicago Bears 7
Nov. 24, 2005
Atlanta Falcons 27, DETROIT LIONS 7
Denver Broncos 24, DALLAS COWBOYS 21 (OT)
Nov. 23, 2006
Miami Dolphins 27, DETROIT LIONS 10
DALLAS COWBOYS 38, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 10
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 19, Denver Broncos 10
Nov. 22, 2007
Green Bay Packers 37, DETROIT LIONS 26
DALLAS COWBOYS 34, New York Jets 3
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 31, Atlanta Falcons 13
Nov. 27, 2008
Tennessee Titans 47, DETROIT LIONS 10
DALLAS COWBOYS 34, Seattle Seahawks 9
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 48, Arizona Cardinals 20
Nov. 26, 2009
Green Bay Packers 34, DETROIT LIONS 12
DALLAS COWBOYS 24, Oakland Raiders 7
DENVER BRONCOS 26, New York Giants 6

Nov. 25, 2010
New England Patriots 45, DETROIT LIONS 24
New Orleans Saints 30, DALLAS COWBOYS 27
NEW YORK JETS 26, Cincinnati Bengals 10
Nov. 24, 2011
Green Bay Packers 27, DETROIT LIONS 15
DALLAS COWBOYS 20, Miami Dolphins 19
BALTIMORE RAVENS 16, San Francisco 49ers 6
Nov. 22, 2012
Houston Texans 34, DETROIT LIONS 31
Washington Redskins 38, DALLAS COWBOYS 31
New England Patriots 49, NEW YORK JETS 19
Nov. 27, 2013
DETROIT LIONS 40, Green Bay Packers 10
DALLAS COWBOYS 31, Oakland Raiders 24
BALTIMORE RAVENS 22, Pittsburgh Steelers 20
Nov. 27, 2014
DETROIT LIONS 34, Chicago Bears 17
Philadelphia Eagles 33, DALLAS COWBOYS 10
Seattle Seahawks 19, SAN FRANCISCO  49ERS 3
Nov. 26, 2015
DETROIT LIONS 45, Philadelphia Eagles 14
Carolina Panthers 33, DALLAS COWBOYS 14
Chicago Bears 17, GREEN BAY PACKERS 13
HOME TEAM IN CAPS
(AAFC) - All-America Football Conference, 1946-49
(AFL) - American Football League, 1960-69


Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Early Moves On A Short Week

Did some team swoop in and try to pluck a player from the Minnesota Vikings practice squad? On Monday, the Vikings signed defensive end Stephen Weatherly from their practice squad to the active roster. The move was a surprise partly because it happened so early in the week but mostly because it came at the expense of running back Ronnie Hillman. The Vikings now have only have Jerick McKinnon and Matt Asiata handling the carries. Fullback Zach Line can carry the ball if needed and receiver Cordarrelle Patterson has some fine running skills. So, it's not the two-man position that it appears to be. The release of Hillman also increased talk that Adrian Peterson might be returning soon. While I do think that Peterson will return soon I really think that some team wanted to sign Weatherly and the Vikings didn't want that to happen. They had to add him to their active roster so that another team couldn't add him to theirs. A player had to go and that player was Hillman. He wasn't out of work for long. The San Diego Chargers grabbed him as soon as he hit the street.

When head coach Mike Zimmer was asked if a team wanted to sign Weatherly, he simply replied "possibly."

This Monday move also may have happened when it did due to a ridiculously short work week. The Vikings play the Lions in Detroit on Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving football is a wonderful tradition but playing two NFL games with only three days to recover and prepare is just stupid. A human body wasn't built to do such a thing. It probably wasn't built to play football in general but that's a whole other story. Everything that a team does to prepare for a game is condensed for a Thursday game. No rest. Two practice days rather than three. The Vikings even had to release an injury report on Monday for a practice that they didn't even have. They had to go through these motions so that the media, gamblers, and fantasy players can have three injury reports before the Thursday game. The Vikings had to guess the participation levels of their players for that mythical practice. I bet that's a chore that coaches enjoy while they have to slam together a game plan. It's a short week and it's an even shorter week for the team that has to travel. At least the Vikings don't have to travel far.

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Vikings' Top Five Plays Of The Year

It might be a little early for this as a "top plays" project is probably best done at the end of the season. I'll do it then as well. The two long touchdown returns by the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday had me thinking about their big plays. So, here are the Vikings' Top Five Plays of the Year. So far...

1. Eric Kendricks' 77-yard interception return against the Titans
The Vikings started slow in their Week 1 game against the Tennessee Titans. They were trailing 10-0 at the half. The offense got a little something going to start the second half but they had to settle for field goals. Everything changed late in the third quarter when Eric Kendicks stepped in front of a Marcus Mariota pass in the flat and returned it 77 yards for a touchdown. The play ignited the team and really ignited the defense.

2. Stefon Diggs' 25-yard touchdown catch against the Packers
The Week 2 game against the Green Bay Packers was a big game for several reasons. It was the grand opening of the spectacular, new US Bank Stadium. It was Sam Bradford's debut as the Vikings quarterback. And it's the Packers. It may have been Bradford's first game but it was Stefon Diggs that stole the show. 9 catches for 182 yards. The Packers had no answers for him. The 25-yard touchdown was a beauty. Fantastic throw by Bradford. Fantastic catch by Diggs.

3. Danielle Hunter's sack of Cam Newton for a safety
Much like the Titans game the Vikings started slow in Week 3 against the Carolina Panthers. They were quickly down 10-0 and it looked the Panthers were starting to roll. The Vikings biggest play of the first ten minutes was a Jeff Locke punt that pinned the Panthers inside their own 10-yard line. Two plays later Danielle Hunter brought Cam Newton down in the end zone. The play flipped the momentum and the Vikings controlled the final three quarters of the game.

4. Adam Thielen's 36-yard touchdown catch against the Texans
The Vikings were undefeated when they hosted the Houston Texans in Week 5. Despite winning all four of their games the Vikings had a troubling tendency to start slow. They didn't start slow against the Texans. It took only 3:37 for the Vikings to score. Sam Bradford hit Adam Thielen on a 36-yard to ignite a suddenly explosive offense. The Vikings were up 24-0 before the second quarter was half done.

5. Xavier Rhodes' 100-yard interception return against the Cardinals
The Vikings entered their Week 11 game against the Arizona sliding on a four-game losing streak. Unlike the other big defensive plays on this list the Vikings actually had a lead when Xavier Rhodes intercepted Carson Palmer on the goal line. The 13-10 lead suddenly became 20-10 after Rhodes' 100-yard dash. The play was as much as a 14-point swing in a game that the Vikings absolutely had to win.

The plays are listed chronologically rather than ranked. If I were to rank them, Diggs' touchdown would be #1 simply for the historical significance of that win over the Packers. The Vikings absolutely could not lose to that team in the first game played in US Bank Stadium. That would be followed by Kendricks' interception, Rhodes' interception, Hunter's safety, and Thielen's touchdown.

Hopefully there will be a bunch of offensive plays to choose from when considering the Vikings top plays of the final six games of the season. It's great that the defense is making a lot of big plays but the offense has to make more than they have been making.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Week 11 Thoughts

The Minnesota Vikings' losing streak is over. Finally. Their fifth win was on October 9. Their sixth win was 42 days later. Four losses in between. Painful.

The Vikings hosted and defeated the Arizona Cardinals 30-24.

The Vikings sixth win was highlighted by a couple of long returns. Cornerback Xavier Rhodes returned an interception 100 yards for a touchdown. Cordarrelle Patterson opened the second half with a 104-yard kick return. Those were the highlights but the key to this Vikings win was their defense in the second half.

The Cardinals offense didn't do much in the second half. They couldn't do much in the second half. This was a great turn of events for the Vikings as the Cardinals offense did just about anything they wanted in the first half. The Vikings were fortunate to lead 20-17 at the half. A lead due mostly to that long interception return by Rhodes.

During the five-game winning streak to open the season the Vikings defense was dominant. During the four-game losing that followed the defense was still pretty good but there were some struggles. The second half against the Cardinals was more like the first five games. The Cardinals second half possessions looked like this:

1. 3 plays, 3 yards, punt
2. 3 plays, -5 yards, punt
3. 1 play, interception
4. 5 plays, 19 yards, punt
5. 6 plays, 27 yards, touchdown
6. 3 plays, -20 yards,
7. 8 plays, 6 yards, turn over on downs

That offensive explosion on the Cardinals fifth possession was ignited by their defense. Chandler Jones sacked Sam Bradford and forced a fumble. Deone Bucannon recovered that fumble on the Vikings 27-yard line. It was the only time in the second half that the Cardinals had any sort of opportunity to score. They took advantage and made it a one-score game with over seven minutes to play.

It looked like the Cardinals were going to get an excellent opportunity to threaten the Vikings lead with over two minutes to play. The Vikings had to punt from their own 15-yard line. That's when and where punter Jeff Locke became one of the heroes of the game. His punt was 52 yards in the air. Cardinals returner John Brown waived for the fair catch but opted not to catch it. The football bounded another 20 yards for a 72-yard boomer by Locke. Instead of excellent field position the Cardinals were forced to start from their own 13-yard line. The game should have been over four plays later when Carson Palmer threw incomplete while dealing with a heavy pass rush. Instead the Cardinals had some life when the officials called Tom Johnson for roughing the passer instead of allowing the football play that he made. It was a ridiculous call. Fortunately for the officials and my sanity the Cardinals desperate efforts ended five plays later on their own 34-yard line.

Speaking of the officials. The Vikings had a second half field goal drive that was supported largely by Cardinals penalties. It was the sort of penalty-fueled drive that looked like it could do serious damage to the continued heath of Cardinals head coach Bruce Arians. The three most significant penalties were personal fouls.

1. Roughing the passer, low hit by Markus Golden
2. Unnecessary roughness, Patrick Peterson hit Sam Bradford
3. Unnecessary roughness, Tony Jefferson hit to the head of Stefon Diggs

The most curious of these penalties was the unnecessary roughness call on Peterson. The Vikings lined up with running back Jerick McKinnon taking a direct snap from center. Bradford was split very wide of the formation and very much out of the action. Peterson took this opportunity to give the Vikings quarterback a little bit of business. By the letter of the rule book this might not be a penalty and it probably shouldn't have been called. The quarterback should be treated like any other player when he's lined up at another position. The reason that I can understand the official calling the penalty is the hit wasn't necessary and I really doubt that Peterson roughs up any other player in such a situation. He hit Bradford simply because he's the quarterback. There was no football reason for it. If the tables were turned and Xavier Rhodes was across from Carson Palmer, I'd rather see Rhodes involved in the play than taking an unnecessary shot at Palmer. Still, I can see why the color of Arians' face matched that of his jacket.

This was an entertaining, defensive game. There were some nice offensive moments in the first half, especially for the Cardinals, but the best performances came from the respective defenses. The Cardinals had 290 total yards. Nearly all of that was gained in the first half. The Vikings offense ran only 19 plays in the first half. The Cardinals had about twice that many.

Last spring the Vikings decided not to pick up the fifth-year option on Cordarrelle Patterson's rookie contract. They picked up those options on fellow 2013 first-round picks Sharrif Floyd and Xavier Rhodes but not Patterson. I have little doubt that the Vikings will try to re-sign Patterson before he becomes a free agent next offseason. He's been dynamite on kick returns for all of his 3.5 years with the team but until this season that's all that he's done. He's been helping the team in so many more areas this season. He's probably their most explosive offensive player. Good things tend to happen when the ball is in his hands. His 30-yard catch and run on third-and-short in the first half was their most explosive offensive play of the game. It set up their second touchdown a few plays later. Defenses have to pay particular attention to him so he's a factor even if he doesn't touch the ball. He's also been a terrific, sometimes game-changing, gunner this season. The Cardinals were particularly focused in not letting him change the game in that capacity.

Xavier Rhodes has played at a high level but under the radar for a couple of seasons. This is the sort of game that can change the "under the radar" part. Two interceptions, five tackles, a couple of passes defensed. The media loves big plays and that 100-yard touchdown return certainly qualifies. He's been shutting down top receivers all season. Actually he's been doing that for a couple of seasons.

Terence Newman usually starts opposite Rhodes. Trae Waynes got the start yesterday and played most, if not all, of the game. He was called for a couple of penalties in the first half that kept a Cardinals drive alive. Fortunately for the Vikings, and Waynes, that drive ended with Rhodes' interception return. Waynes still has some contact issues (he gets his hands on receivers a little too much) but his coverage is always tight. He's also makes a lot of plays against the run. He's played well when he's had opportunities. A lot of fans are down on him because Newman has been starting ahead of him. A first-rounder on the bench! That's inconceivable! Newman starting says far more about Newman than it does about Waynes. An illness caused Newman to miss some practice time last week. He played yesterday but it remains to be seen whether Waynes starting was due to that illness/missed practice time or whether there's been a change at the corner position. Waynes was going to start eventually. Maybe that time has come.

The Vikings offensive line certainly isn't fixed but they weren't terrible against a very good Cardinals front seven. Bradford had time to throw and there were some holes for the run game. There were still too many negative runs. On a few occasions a nice first down gain was followed by a loss of a few yards. Those sorts of plays can kill a drive before it starts. Overall, the offensive line play was improved. The Vikings even converted some third-and-shorts!

It's impossible to review a Cardinals game without gushing about running back David Johnson. He's so good. With his playing at Northern Iowa I didn't know much about him in college. It took a single run in a college all-star game to know that he had a bright NFL future. That's all it took. It was a 10-15-yard touchdown run. Over those 10-15 yards he showed subtle speed, incredible feet, and surprising power. The Cardinals might have found an all-time talent in the third round. There were stretches in the first half in which the Vikings defense looked helpless against him. He makes a significant impact in both the running game and the passing game. He's an incredible football player. One of the truly bright, young stars in the league.

Larry Fitzgerald is still great!

It's such a relief to finally get that sixth win. Now, the Vikings have to regroup quickly and get ready for a Thanksgiving date with the Detroit Lions. A game for first place in the NFC North.

***

There were some other games. 

The Cleveland Browns are 0-11. 

The Pittsburgh Steelers handed the Browns that 11th loss. The Steelers really needed this win. They had lost their previous four. Despite sitting at a modest 5-5 the Steelers are sitting in first place in the suddenly mediocre AFC North.

The Browns simply can't keep a quarterback healthy. So many have taken a snap this season. Cody Kessler started but didn't finish this game. He sustained his second concussion of the season. Browns head coach Hue Jackson said that Kessler's season could be over. Josh McCown, back from injury himself, replaced Kessler. Fortunately, maybe, for the Browns is that season-opening starter Robert Griffin III might be close to returning. 

Speaking of streaks, the Dallas Cowboys won their ninth straight game. A 27-17 win over the Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens kept it close in the first half. 10-10 at the half. The Cowboys took over in the second half. Running back Ezekiel Elliott has been the Cowboys engine for most of the nine game win streak. The Ravens did a decent job against him yesterday. They kept him under 100 yards. That's something! Elliott had 97 yards on 25 carries. A 3.9 average. No defense has come close to doing that sort of thing recently. Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott more than made up for Elliott's "modest" day. Prescott completed 27 of 36 passes for 301 yards and three touchdowns.

A couple of milestones were hit in this game. Ravens receiver Steve Smith Sr. made his 1,000th career catch. Elliott broke Tony Dorsett's Cowboys rookie season rushing record. With six games to play Elliott should put quite a bit of distance between his record and the old record. 

The 2016 Detroit Lions hold the remarkable stat of winning five of their six games despite trailing in the fourth quarter. This time they trailed the Jacksonville Jaguars 19-16 in the fourth quarter. Unlike most of their other unlikely wins this late deficit was very early in the fourth quarter. 

The Lions are a puzzle. They are 6-4 and tied for first in the NFC North but they are so close to being 0-10. The main reason they aren't is quarterback Matthew Stafford. He's often had some spectacular moments in his career but this season is by far his best. 

In recent weeks the Tennessee Titans had been playing like the team to beat in the AFC South. The Indianapolis Colts had something to say about that yesterday. The Colts jumped out to a 21-0 lead before the game was 20 minutes old. Then they hung on for a 24-17 win. 

This was the Colts 11th-straight win in their series against the Titans. 

The Cincinnati Bengals entered this season with Super Bowl dreams. If it wasn't for the fact that they play in the surprisingly sad AFC North those dreams would only be dreams now. After their 16-12 loss to the Buffalo Bills the Bengals are now 3-6-1. That's quite a drop for a team that had made the playoffs the last five seasons. 

The Bengals lost receiver A.J. Green to a hamstring injury on the first possession of the game. That didn't help. Neither did two missed extra points. Make those and the Bengals could have won with a field goal at the end rather than a touchdown. They had that chance. 

The upset of the day goes to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Kansas City Chiefs have quietly been one of the best teams in the league this season. Offense, defense, special teams. They were doing just about everything right. Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston played one of his best games of the season. If he had led his team to touchdowns rather than field goals it would have easily been his best game. Winston completed 24 of 39 passes for 331 yards and a touchdown. The Buccaneers had to settle for four field goals. All four of which came from within the Chiefs 25-yard line. Three from inside the 20. 19-17 Buccaneers.

The New York Giants struggled to their fifth straight win with a 22-16 decision over the Chicago Bears. No other team in the league has struggled so much and had so much success. The Bears had a shot at the end but Giants safety Landon Collins put an end to that threat with an interception of Jay Cutler. 

Speaking of Landon Collins, he's been the best player on a solid Giants defense this season. His game-sealing interception of Cutler was his fifth in the last four games. 

Jared Goff, the first pick in the 2016 NFL Draft, got his first start for the Los Angeles Rams against the Miami Dolphins. The Rams defense didn't allow the Dolphins offense to do anything until their final two possessions. The Dolphins offense gained 240 yards in the game. 152 of those yards came on those final two possessions. Both ended in touchdowns. The Dolphins spoiled Goff's first start with a 14-10 win. 

The San Francisco 49ers probably thought that they had a shot against the New England Patriots. It was 13-10 Patriots at the half. It was still 13-10 entering the fourth quarter. The Patriots turned it on at the end. 30-17 Patriots. Tom Brady threw four touchdown passes. LeGarrette Blount ran for 124 yards. Rookie receiver Malcolm Mitchell really stepped up with four catches for 98 yards including a 56-yard touchdown catch and run. 

The Seattle Seahawks are starting to roll. They took care of the difficult Philadelphia Eagles 25-15. The Eagles are a solid team but they really haven't been that difficult on the road. They are 1-5 away from Philadelphia. That represents all of the losses in their 5-5 record.

Under Pete Carroll the Seahawks have routinely started turning up their level of play about this point in the season. They seem to be doing just that this season. The scary thing about this season is that they had a fine start to lead up to their annual late surge. A fine start that was helped significantly by some fortunate breaks in several games. Charmed and good is a scary combination. 

The Washington Redskins put together another solid game in the Sunday nightcap. They handed the Green Bay Packers their fourth straight loss. 42-24.

Redskins quarterback Kirk Cousins was terrific. He completed several beautiful deep throws throughout the game. Several of which were into a stiff wind. A 44-yard touchdown to Jamison Crowder. A 70-yard touchdown to Pierre Garcon. And a 53-yarder to Crowder that was stopped on the 1-yard line.

Despite the Redskins big plays, this game was still within the Packers with just over three minutes to play. The Packers hopes for a comeback ended when Redskins corner Josh Norman punched the ball out of tight end Jared Cook's hands. The Redskins recovered the loose ball. Three plays later the Redskins put the game out of reach with a touchdown.

The Cowboys might be the hottest team in the league but their division rivals aren't far behind. The Redskins are 6-1-1 since their 0-2 start.

Week 11 closes tonight in Mexico City with the Houston Texans and Oakland Raiders.