Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Justin Jefferson’s Statistics Climb

Justin Jefferson is just over half through his fifth NFL season. He’s jetting past the receiving numbers of the great receivers that came before him. In Sunday’s game against the Tennessee Titans, he passed Torry Holt’s NFL record for most receiving yards through five seasons. 


1

Justin Jefferson

6811

2

Torry Holt

6784

3

Randy Moss

6743

4

Jerry Rice

6364

5

Julio Jones

6201



Jefferson passed Holt with seven games still to play in his fifth season. Jefferson reached 6811 yards in 70 games. It took Holt 80 games to reach his five-year total. If one was to factor in the 7+ games that Jefferson missed last year to a hamstring injury, Jefferson is nearly a full season ahead of the numbers put up by Torry Holt, Randy Moss, and Jerry Rice. 

Randy Moss has the NFL record for most yards through six seasons with 8375 yards. At his current pace of 97.3 yards/game, Jefferson should reach that total at about this point next season. 

Watching Justin Jefferson play football is a wonderful treat.

Jefferson is a big part of the incredible receiver tradition of the Minnesota Vikings. Cris Carter and Randy Moss are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. One could argue that Ahmad Rashad and especially Anthony Carter should join them. Jefferson is on pace and hell-bent on earning first-ballot induction. Here’s where he ranks in the Vikings great receiver tradition for receiving yards. 


Rank

Player

Yards

Games

1

Cris Carter

12383

188

2

Randy Moss

9316

113

3

Anthony Carter

7636

133

4

Justin Jefferson

6811

70

5

Adam Thielen

6682

135

6

Jake Reed

6433

134

7

Sammy White

6400

128

8

Steve Jordan

6307

176

9

Ahmad Rashad

5489

98

10

Stefon Diggs

4623

70



Jefferson could pass Anthony Carter and move to #3 this season. 

It’s great to see Steve Jordan and his very underrated career earn a spot in the Top 10. He also has an argument for Canton inclusion that has yet to be had. 

Cris Carter and Randy Moss are two of the greatest receivers to ever step on a football field. I truly believed that no Vikings receiver could ever step into their orbit. Then, along came Justin Jefferson. Jerry Rice and his ridiculous career numbers are in danger of being reached. 


Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Minnesota Vikings Week 11 Superlatives

The Minnesota Vikings ground out a gritty ten-point win over the Tennessee Titans, 23-13. The offense put the ball in the end zone three times. That was an improvement over last week’s four field goal affair. The defense was terrific again. Here are some of the players that stood out in the Week 11 win. 

Offensive Players of the Game
Sam Darnold, QB

20 completions
32 attempts
246 yards
2 TDs

8 carries 
18 yards
1 TD

After last week’s three-interception outing, Sam Darnold needed an efficient game. Not only was he on target throughout the game, he had a few magician-like escapes of certain sacks. The victory margin and his stat line would’ve been more impressive if Jalen Nailor had held on for a 46-yard touchdown. The pass was a beauty and right on Nailor’s hands. It should’ve been a catch.

Justin Jefferson, WR

Justin Jefferson gets special mention as he again put his name in the NFL record book. His 81 receiving yards gives him 6,811 yards for his career. That’s the most receiving yards through five years in NFL history. He still has seven more games to play in his fifth season. 

Defensive Player of the Game
Patrick Jones II, OLB

As with most games this season, the defensive player of the game could go to nearly any number of players. This Vikings defense is very much a team defense. Patrick Jones II gets the nod in this game. 

His stats:
5 tackles 
2 sacks
3 tackles for loss

Several Vikings pass rushers spent most of the afternoon in the Titans backfield. They tallied five sacks and 10 tackles for loss. Jones, as much as anyone, was rarely slowed by the Titans offensive line.

Special Teams Player of the Game
Ryan Wright, P

Ryan Wright stepped on the field for his first punt in the second half. That punt went for 66 yards. Due to a sputtering offense, he punted five times in the second half. Three of those pinned the Titans inside their 20-yard line. His second punt was inside the five-yard line and wonderfully downed by Trent Sherfield Sr. at the two-yard line. It was perfect team work and execution. 


Monday, November 18, 2024

Vikings - Titans

The Minnesota Vikings completed a season sweep of the AFC South. After earlier wins against the Houston Texans, Indianapolis Colts, and Jacksonville Jaguars, the Vikings defeated the Tennessee Titans 23-13. While there were some nervous moments, the game never really felt that close. The Vikings benefited greatly from an incredibly undisciplined Titans team. 

The penalties.

Titans
13 accepted penalties
91 yards lost

Vikings
3 accepted penalties
35 yards lost

That’s a one-sided penalty ledger. Even more one-sided is that seven of those 13 penalties gave the Vikings a first down. One in particular was quite painful for the Titans. On fourth-and-goal from the one, Titans safety Mike Brown launched into the facemask of Vikings receiver Jordan Addison. This looked like a momentum-changing and score-altering play by the Titans. Instead, the personal foul gave the Vikings a new set of downs from inside the one. After Titans head coach Brian Callahan threw a tantrum and earned another personal foul penalty, the ball was inched even closer to the goal. Sam Darnold dove over for the score on the next play. The game’s commentators debated the initial personal foul but Brown did launch into the neck-facemask-head area of Addison. That’s a penalty. If the teams were reversed, Callahan would’ve been arguing for the penalty. 

The penalties were a significant factor in this game. It was a two-score game in part because of them. The Titans were horribly undisciplined in this game. That’s on Callahan. He should be looking in a mirror rather than railing on the officials. Offensive tackle Isaiah Prince was called for lining up off the line on three occasions. One of which took a Titans touchdown off the board. Three times! It’s a mental error on the player but it’s also horrible coaching. Vikings fans notoriously rail about being on the wrong side of the official’s calls. It feels a little odd to be on this side of them.

Enough with the penalties. 

After a week of settling for four field goals against the Jaguars, it was refreshing to see the Vikings offense get in the end zone. They did so on three occasions. Darnold threw a beauty to Addison for 47 yards to open the scoring. Darnold dove in for #2 and tossed a short and easy one to Cam Akers for #3. Darnold should’ve had a third touchdown throw. He threw another beauty from midfield. It should’ve been caught by Jalen Nailor in the end zone. Instead it went through his hands. This was an opportunity that shouldn’t have been missed. 

Replacement kicker John Parker Romo added a 40-yard field goal to go with his two of three extra points. 

The 23 points, and three touchdowns, was definitely an improvement over last week’s four field goal offensive performance. It was still a sputtering performance. The first Vikings punt didn’t come until the second half. They proceeded to punt four more times in the second half. They had seven possessions over the final 30 minutes. All but two went for only 3-5 plays. One of the two “productive” possessions was the final touchdown drive. The other was eight plays and a punt. That sputtering offense gave the Titans some hope that they really never should’ve had. 

The Vikings defense has been mostly terrific all season. Other than the stunning 98-yard touchdown throw from Will Levis to Nick Westbrook-Ikhine, the Vikings defense dominated the Titans offense. That stunning play was an outlier and it skews the final statistics. Other than that single play, the Titans rarely threatened the Vikings end zone. That play. Vikings punter Ryan Wright put a wonderful punt inside the five-yard line and Trent Sherfield Sr. downed it at the two-yard line. First play, the Vikings nearly tackled Tony Pollard in the end zone. Second play, Will Levis dove back to the two-yard line. Third play, the Vikings loaded up on a blitz. Stephon Gilmore left Westbrook-Ikhine for the safety. Joshua Metellus’ angle was a little off and the Titans had a stunning 98-yard score. That lone play gave the Titans hope in an otherwise one-sided game. With that play, they have hope and momentum in a 16-10 game. 

Fortunately, the Vikings lone productive possession of the second half followed that stunning play. A nice 35-yard kick return by Ty Chandler gave the offense decent starting position. Darnold guided the offense the remaining 65 yards. The short 3-yard catch and run by Akers put the much-needed touchdown on the board and bumped the Vikings lead to 23-10 with about three minutes left in the third quarter. The pesky Titans could only add a field goal over the final 18 minutes. 

A win is a win. The Vikings are now 8-2 on the season. They visit the Chicago Bears next week. The offense must play better as the Vikings enter the final stretch of the season. There are too many empty possessions. Against better teams, that can’t happen. The defense just has to keep doing what they’ve been doing. I feel like they’ll get even better with better offensive efficiency leading to hopefully bigger leads. 8-2 is a very good place to be. 


Sunday, November 17, 2024

Flea Flicker Week 11 Predictions

It’s already Week 11. Here are some guesses at the games. 

Byes: New York Giants, Arizona Cardinals, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Carolina Panthers 

Minnesota Vikings @ Tennessee Titans
Pick: Vikings
After relying on four field goals against the Jaguars, the Vikings must get their offense untracked. 

Green Bay Packers @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Bears
Despite what many continue to say, this is the league’s third oldest rivalry. It’s the most contested rivalry but it is not the oldest. Bears-Cardinals and Packers-Cardinals are older. 

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Detroit Lions
Pick: Lions
I wish that I could pick the Jaguars.

Las Vegas Raiders @ Miami Dolphins
Pick: Dolphins
With Tua Tagavailoa knocking off the rust, the Dolphins are getting back to their explosive ways. 

Los Angeles Rams @ New England Patriots
Pick: Rams
Rematch of Super Bowl XXXVI and Super Bowl LIII. Unlike those bigger games, the Rams take this one.

Cleveland Browns @ New Orleans Saints
Pick: Saints
This one required a coin flip.

Indianapolis Colts @ New York Jets
Pick: Colts
The Jets are a mess.

Baltimore Ravens @ Pittsburgh Steelers
Pick: Ravens
The Ravens knock down the soaring Steelers.

Atlanta Falcons @ Denver Broncos
Pick: Falcons
Kirk Cousins makes Sean Payton sad. Again.

Seattle Seahawks @ San Francisco 49ers
Pick: 49ers
The 49ers continue their quest to get back on track.

Kansas City Chiefs @ Buffalo Bills
Pick: Bills
The Bills hand the Chiefs their first loss.

Cincinnati Bengals @ Los Angeles Chargers
Pick: Bengals
This should be a real fun QB duel. 

Houston Texans @ Dallas Cowboys
Pick: Texans
The Texans get right against the Cowboys. 


Saturday, November 16, 2024

Tennessee Titans All - Time Team

The Minnesota Vikings travel this weekend to Tennessee to play the Titans tomorrow. In another iteration, the Tennessee Titans were the Houston Oilers and an original member of the American Football in 1960. The Oilers were an immediate hit as they won the rival league’s first two championships. After nearly a decade of competing for players and fans, the Oilers and the rest of the AFL’s teams agreed to a truce in 1966 and fully merged with the NFL in 1970. The Oilers fielded wildly entertaining teams in the late 1970s and early 1990s. Led by the remarkable running of Earl Campbell and a strong defense, the 1970s Oilers had the great misfortune of playing in the same division as the Pittsburgh Steelers. The 1978 and 1979 seasons were ended by those Steelers in the AFC Championship game. The 1990s Oilers were a high-flying, high-scoring offensive juggernaut led by Warren Moon. Unfortunately, those entertaining teams were repeatedly confounded in the playoffs. The wild popularity of those fun teams made the departure in 1997 for Nashville heartbreaking. The team played as the Tennessee Oilers in 1997 and 1998 and became the Titans in 1999. The Tennessee Titans have had spotty success. The highlight of their time is easily the 1999 season that ended in Super Bowl XXXIV. Led by Steve McNair, the Titans were a yard short of either tying the St. Louis Rams and forcing overtime or winning in regulation. Instead, they lost the big game 23-16. Over their 27 years in Tennessee, the Oilers/Titans have made the playoffs ten times and won their division five times. On the eve of the big game, here is a look at some of the best players in the occasionally fun history of the Houston Oilers/Tennessee Oiler/Tennessee Titans. 

Offense

Quarterback
Warren Moon

Running Backs
Earl Campbell
Derrick Henry

Wide Receivers
Charley Hennigan
Kenny Burrough

Tight End
Frank Wycheck

Offensive Tackles
Brad Hopkins
Michael Roos

Offensive Guards
Bruce Matthews
Mike Munchak
                               
Center
Carl Mauck

Defense

Defensive Ends
Elvin Bethea
William Fuller

Defensive Tackles
Ray Childress
Curley Culp

Linebackers
Robert Brazile
Gregg Bingham
George Webster

Cornerbacks
Chris Dishman
Samari Rolle

Safeties
Ken Houston
Blaine Bishop

Special Teams

Kicker 
George Blanda

Punter
Brett Kern

Returner
Billy “White Shoes” Johnson


Friday, November 15, 2024

Minnesota Vikings 53-Man Roster

Fortunately, injuries haven’t forced the Minnesota Vikings to tweak their roster this week. Knock on wood. Here’s hoping that continues through the season and playoffs. Losing a kicker AND long snapper in one game was unusual and ridiculous. How often does a kicker get placed on injured reserve? Across the NFL, it’s happened twice in the last week. Unfortunately, one of those is the Vikings. Get well soon, Will Reichard. The Vikings also lost their long snapper for a few weeks. Andrew DePaola injured his hand against the Indianapolis Colts. That injury required a surgical procedure. As a result, he was placed on injured reserve. Currently, the Vikings have no long snapper on the active roster. Veteran Jake McQuaide was signed to the practice squad. As long as DePaola is out, McQuaide will apparently live a gameday yo-yo existence between the practice squad and active roster. Other than a rather unusual special teams situation, this week’s roster looks just like last week’s. That’s a good thing. Hopefully, the only roster changes moving forward are injured players being activated. In advance of their Week 11 game against the Tennessee Titans, here’s the Minnesota Vikings 53-man roster. 

Minnesota Vikings 53 - Man Roster

Offense (25)

Quarterbacks (3)
14 Sam Darnold
12 Nick Mullens
19 Brett Rypien

Running Backs (3)
33 Aaron Jones
32 Ty Chandler
27 Cam Akers

Fullback (1)
30 C.J. Ham

Receivers (5)
18 Justin Jefferson
  3 Jordan Addison
83 Jalen Nailor
  4 Brandon Powell
11 Trent Sherfield

Tight Ends (3)
87 T.J. Hockenson
84 Josh Oliver
86 Johnny Mundt

Offensive Linemen (10)
74 Cam Robinson
64 Blake Brandel
56 Garrett Bradbury
67 Ed Ingram
75 Brian O’Neill
76 David Quessenberry 
78 Walter Rouse
66 Dalton Risner
65 Michael Jurgens
69 Dan Feeney

Defense (26)

Defensive Linemen (5)
97 Harrison Phillips
90 Jonathan Bullard
99 Jerry Tillery
61 Jalen Redmond
50 Levi Drake Rodriguez

Outside Linebackers (6)
58 Jonathan Greenard
43 Andrew Van Ginkel
15 Dallas Turner
91 Patrick Jones II
52 Jihad Ward
98 Bo Richter

Inside Linebackers (4)
  0 Ivan Pace Jr.
51 Blake Cashman
  6 Brian Asamoah
54 Kamu Grugier-Hill

Cornerbacks (6)
  2 Stephon Gilmore  
  7 Byron Murphy Jr.
  1 Shaq Griffin
21 Akayleb Evans
23 Fabian Moreau
29 Dwight McGlothern

Safeties (5)
22 Harrison Smith
24 Camryn Bynum
44 Josh Metellus
26 Theo Jackson
20 Jay Ward

Special Teams (2)

Kickers (1)
96 John Parker Romo

Punter (1)
17 Ryan Wright

Long Snapper (0)


Practice Squad
47 Jake McQuaide, LS
37 Myles Gaskin, RB
36 Zavier Scott, RB
25 Nahshon Wright, CB
28 Bobby McCain, S
55 Andre Carter II, OLB
68 Henry Byrd, G
  8 Trishton Jackson, WR
81 Lucky Jackson, WR
82 Jeshaun Jones, WR
89 Thayer Thomas, WR
72 Julian Pearl, T
48 Calvin Munson, LB
85 Robert Tonyan, TE
45 Max Tooley, LB
95 Travis Bell, DL
35 Sammis Reyes, TE

Injured Reserve
  5 Mekhi Blackmon, CB
  9 J.J. McCarthy, QB
71 Christian Darrisaw, T
36 NaJee Thompson, CB
63 Jeremy Flax, OL
45 Jordan Kunaszyk, LB
34 Nick Muse, TE
16 Will Reichard, K
42 Andrew DePaola, LS
94 Taki Taimani, DL 

Injured Reserve/Designated To Return
59 Gabriel Murphy, OLB


Thursday, November 14, 2024

Throwback Thursday: All-Time HBCU NFL Team

 This Flicker was originally posted on 7/5/18. 

The NFL's history is filled with players from Historically Black Colleges and Universities. The talent that's come out of these schools rivals, even exceeds, that of the "big time" conferences. Some of the best of that talent can be seen in this All-Time NFL Team of players from HBCUs.

Quarterback
Steve McNair, Alcorn State

Running Backs
Walter Payton, Jackson State
Leroy Kelly, Morgan State

Receivers
Jerry Rice, Mississippi Valley State
John Stallworth, Alabama A&M

Tight End
Shannon Sharpe, Savannah State

Offensive Line
Roosevelt Brown, Morgan State
Art Shell, Maryland-Eastern Shore
Jackie Slater, Jackson State
Rayfield Wright, Fort Valley State
Larry Little, Bethune-Cookman

Defensive Line
Deacon Jones, South Carolina State/Mississippi Valley State
Willie Davis, Grambling State
Buck Buchanan, Grambling
Michael Strahan, Texas Southern

Linebackers
Robert Brazile, Jackson State
Willie Lanier, Morgan State
Harry Carson, South Carolina State

Defensive Backs
Willie Brown, Grambling State
Mel Blount, Southern
Ken Houston, Prairie View A&M
Donnie Shell

***

The talent on this team is ridiculous.

22 players. 21 are honored in Canton.

The one player not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame is the quarterback. Steve McNair.

Black colleges have sent an abundance of talent to the NFL at all positions but quarterback. That has more to do with the league's coaches and owners being so unwilling for so long to give a black quarterback a shot. Many think that Warren Moon was the first great black quarterback. Even he was forced to start his throwing career in Canada due to the racial prejudices of the league’s white decision-makers. Doug Williams and James Harris had some fine moments. Maybe they would've had more if their path was less rocky. Maybe Parnell Dickinson could've been the first great black quarterback if he'd been given a chance. Joe Gilliam? Eldridge Dickey? Charles Brackins? Willie Thrower? None had the opportunities routinely and repeatedly given to modestly talented white quarterbacks.

HBCUs have sent much more football talent than the above All-Time Team to the NFL. Here are some of the players that I had to reluctantly leave on the bench.

Lem Barney
Elvin Bethea
Richard Dent
Bob Hayes
Charlie Joiner
Emmitt Thomas
Aeneas Williams
Ken Riley

That's eight Pro Football Hall of Famers sitting on the bench. The talent doesn't end there. Here are a few players that have a strong case for Canton induction.

Roger Brown
L.C. Greenwood
Otis Taylor
Everson Walls

Just silly with talent. The talent was at these "small" schools because it wasn't welcome at the "big" schools. The smart NFL teams sent scouts to these schools in the 1960s and early 1970s. The 1960s Kansas City Chiefs benefited greatly. So did the 1970s Pittsburgh Steelers. It's really no surprise that the rise in the scouting of the HBCUs coincided with the escalating AFL-NFL wars. There were more professional teams and it resulted in a hotly contested race for talent. The AFL had the edge at these long-neglected schools and it helped catch the NFL and force a merger in only seven years. Despite being loaded with talented players and greatly impacting the NFL the Historically Black Colleges and Universities have long been over there on the periphery of college and professional football. It's well past time to celebrate these schools and the players that played there. The Black College Football Hall of Fame has been inducting players since 2010. It's a grassroots effort that's slowly gaining traction and now they're getting support from the Pro Football Hall of Fame. They deserve more support and attention. Just look at the players. Silly with talent.