Week 3 of the NFL regular season is off and running. As we’ve been doing all season, we’ll publish the takeaways Sunday and update them live through Monday morning. So come back again if not all 10 are here yet …
We don’t quite know who the Philadelphia Eagles are yet. They have Vic Fangio running the defense and Kellen Moore running the offense, and that’s a lot of change for a team with an incumbent head coach. They’ve had injuries, too (we’ll get to those), and a funky schedule to start the season (Brazil, then a short week coming out of Week 2).
One thing I think we can say, though, is that they’re a pretty resilient bunch.
You can also call them 2–1 after gutting out a 15–12 win over a red-hot Saints team in New Orleans, and coming off a heartbreaker of a loss at home to the Atlanta Falcons.
“It was tough to lose that game on Monday night,” tight end Dallas Goedert told me over the phone from the postgame locker room. “We just talked about how we got to focus on the details. We can’t hurt ourselves. We got to stay ahead of the sticks. We talk a lot about ball security. We still need to do a better job of that. I don’t think we won the turnover battle today. That’s something we continue to focus on and we have to clean up. Anytime we get to the red zone, we got to score more touchdowns, because that’s what really wins.”
Then, realizing a lot of those things didn’t happen Sunday, Goedert adds, “It was just making sure we all stayed true to each other, stayed true to what we believed in. Good things happen when we do.”
What the Eagles did have Sunday was enough, and Fangio and Moore played a big role in the end, as the players hung in there like a boxer in the 12th round.
Perhaps the game’s biggest play rode on simple stuff—Moore and the Philly coaches knowing that the Saints were heavy on man coverage in critical spots. It paid off big-time with the Eagles on their last legs, in third-and-16 with 11:16 left and the ball at their own 36. The offensive coordinator called for a mesh route, with crossing routes from opposite sides designed to pick defenders.
“Got to give credit to my guy Jahan Dotson,” Goedert says. “He did a great job setting the pick. A couple of the defenders ran into each other. When I caught the ball, I turned and saw green grass and said, I got to get on my horse.”
He rode that horse for 61 yards, after the pick cleared out three Saints, and down to the Saints’ 4-yard line. Saquon Barkley—another one of the afternoon’s heroes with a 65-yard touchdown run—did the rest, covering the remaining four yards on the next step, then running through the guts of the Saints’ defense for the two-pointer and the octopus (shout out to MMQB editor Mitch Goldich).
“He’s a special player, one of the best running backs I’ve ever seen,” Goedert says. “His breakaway speed, he’s got that. He’s got the toughness to run through and get the extra couple yards. He’s got the quickness to make somebody miss at the line and still have positive plays. But the coolest thing about him is just the person he is. He’s a great locker room guy.”
And that’s without even getting to a defense that held a Saints offense that scored 91 points in its first two games to two field goals and a touchdown, just six days after yielding a game-winning drive in the final moments of the loss to Atlanta. Or mentioning that the fourth quarter transpired without A.J. Brown or DeVonta Smith in there with the offense.
All the way around, the Eagles are positioned now to get going. After a trip to Tampa next week to try to avenge its playoff ouster, Philly gets its bye, then a much more normal stretch of five consecutive Sunday games. So while the game against the Buccaneers won’t be easy after Tampa lost Sunday to the Denver Broncos, it does give the Eagles an opportunity to build off this win, reset a little bit, and continue to get used to their offensive and defensive systems.
“I think the defense figured it out today,” Goedert says. “They played great against a team that was averaging 40-plus a game. They were able to hold them, which was incredible by them. It seems like they’re figuring it out. Same thing for the offense. We got to figure out how Kellen’s going to call the game. That’s just something that we’re going to continue to develop and he’s going to continue to develop.”
Which is to say the Eagles will continue to develop, with the hope that some of the most significant bumps are behind them. After the way the past three weeks set up, they certainly have a right to feel that way.
That was a program win for the Los Angeles Rams. We’ll get to why in a minute. But, first, it’s worth mentioning what the team’s own cameras caught coach Sean McVay saying to Matthew Stafford in the wake of a 27–24 win over the archrival San Francisco 49ers.
“Matthew!” McVay yelled, in the postgame chaos. “You’re such a f—ing stud!”
There were lots of reasons for the coach to say it after this one.
There was the 16-play, 87-yard drive he led at the end of the first half, which gave the Rams hope, and a spark, going into the break. There was the 50-yard bomb to Tutu Atwell that changed everything in this one, with less than three minutes left. There was the awareness to see De’Vondre Campbell Sr. matched up on tight end Colby Parkinson, and throw at that matchup downfield, a pass that drew a 25-yard interference call and set up the 37-yard game-winning field goal for rookie kicker Joshua Karty.
But my sense is that it really wasn’t any of that to cause McVay to let his emotion boil over and deliver the superlatives to his quarterback—he once called him a “bad motherf—-r” in a conversation he and I had—that he’s been known to foist on Stafford every now and then.
This time, as I see it, it was more about a gutsy effort delivered without receivers Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua (his two most trusted targets), or starting linemen Joe Noteboom, Steve Avila and Jonah Jackson (his left tackle, center, and high-paid bodyguard). And it was about instilling belief in the rest of the guys that it could be done, with a similarly banged-up, but still highly formidable Niners team coming to town.
So this is where GM Les Snead and the personnel department join the party, and how this, again, was a real program win for the Rams.
• Kyren Williams, a fifth-rounder in 2022 and 1,000-yard rusher (in just 12 games) last year, absolutely carried the torch, scoring all three touchdowns, while running up 116 scrimmage yards on 26 touches. His first touchdown was spectacular—coming on a full front flip at the end of the first half. His second was easy. Speaking of that …
• Alaric Jackson started at left tackle, Logan Bruss got the nod at left guard, and Beaux Limmer went at center. All three are homegrown—undrafted, a third-rounder and a sixth-rounder, respectively. It wasn’t perfect. But it was hardly the tire fire it is for most teams when line injuries hit that hard.
• Atwell, a 2021 second-round pick, was very clearly ready for his moment, leading the team in catches and yards, and even delivering a downfield dime to Demarcus Robinson on a trick play that wound up being overturned (Robinson bobbled it while falling out of bounds). He, like Bruss, hasn’t quite lived up to his draft position, but is still more than serviceable in a spot such as this one.
• There was also, on special teams, undrafted free agent Xavier Smith’s 38-yard punt return on his first NFL touch. The Rams kept Smith, who was undrafted in 2023, on the practice squad the past two years, and called him up to the active roster Saturday for his first NFL game.
And then, there’s the way the young defensive front, Byron Young, Kobie Turner, Braden Fiske and Jared Verse came up big in the big moments (Young, in particular, was a menace), and in a year when they’re reckoning with the loss of Aaron Donald, here the Rams are.
They’ll get healthier in time. The schedule ahead is manageable. They, clearly, have a lot of guys they can count on. And like McVay said, having that stud at quarterback doesn’t hurt.
It’s time for the Pittsburgh Steelers to roll with Justin Fields. Maybe that’s not fair to Russell Wilson, who’s been sidelined by a calf injury. But that doesn’t really matter—Pittsburgh is 3–0, and the former Chicago Bears first-rounder is a pretty important piece of the puzzle.
And there’s a little piece of evidence of his progress from Sunday’s impressive 20–10 win over the Chargers within the 55-yard touchdown pass he threw to Calvin Austin III.
Look closely at it, and as Tony Romo pointed out on the CBS broadcast, Fields threw that ball with anticipation, as his receiver was breaking into a small window. It’s what, if we’re being honest, he struggled with in Chicago, and it shows the relationship between Fields and new Steelers offensive coordinator Arthur Smith beginning to really sing.
The other underlying reality to that throw is that it’s proof positive of his improvement, week over week, and his fit in Smith’s offense, the one that once resurrected Ryan Tannehill’s career. Fields’s efficiency numbers are good—his completion percentage is up, his sack ratio is down and he’s getting the ball out on time—and he’s playing smart football with a real understanding of what the Steelers need from him. Plus, his game fits with what the Steelers are trying to accomplish across all three phases of the game.
The other thing he’s shown the staff is he’s really smart, and he wants to be coached, which is part of why he’s getting the results he has through three weeks. Even the pick he threw Sunday wasn’t really his fault (it was tipped at the line).
Now, I don’t know what’ll happen when Wilson is cleared. But based on the above, I sure wouldn’t be surprised if the baton is officially passed to Fields soon. The Steelers are 3–0. The run game, which Fields is a part of, is rolling, closing out the Los Angeles Chargers in an emphatic way Sunday. Pittsburgh’s defense might be the best in football, too. And Fields is captaining all of that, again, just the way the Steelers need him to.
So in my humble opinion, it’s time to hand Fields the keys.
Speaking of season-saving wins, the New York Giants might’ve gotten one Sunday. And I think you have to give Daniel Jones credit for this, if nothing else: He was largely unaffected by all the noise around his status as the team’s starting quarterback.
That steadiness sure seems to have rubbed off on his teammates, too.
The Giants played well, and Jones played well, too, after laying an egg in Week 1 and putting together an uneven performance in Week 2. The final was 21–15 over the Browns, and it came after a disastrous start, and with 236 yards, two touchdowns, and a 109.4 passer rating from Jones, who (to the surprise of some) will get to keep his job for another week.
As for those calling for someone else to take that job? Jones is doing his best not to listen, even if that can sometimes be an exercise in futility in the big city.
“I don’t seek out any of that criticism or praise when it’s positive,” Jones told me on the way to the airport in Ohio. “It’s just having a solid group of people that you trust in the building, with our coaches and teammates, all those people, leaning on them and their perspective, and where you can improve even the things you’re doing well. That’s the most important piece of it as you think about what you need to do and what you need to focus on.
“I got a good group of people outside the building, of family and friends and former coaches who I’ve leaned on, too, and have helped me through it all. Definitely very grateful and appreciative of all those people. At the end of the day, it comes back down to focusing on what you need to do to improve.”
There was, for sure, a list of such things after the Minnesota Vikings routed the Giants in the opener, and the Washington Commanders edged them out on the strength of seven field goals last week.
But there was also Jones’s personal situation and the situation around him. On the former, he’s still just nine months out from reconstructive knee surgery. On the latter, there’s been a lot of change around him, with three new starting offensive linemen, a new No. 1 receiver (who happens to be a rookie) and no Barkley.
So while the Giants wanted to play well, that was never going to be automatic.
“I certainly don’t want to make any excuses. You gotta be ready to go Week 1,” he says. “This is the NFL. I hold myself to that standard. I think when you look at the big picture and understand, first time playing in a long time and you’ve got some new guys in different spots, and you’re building that chemistry like everybody else is throughout the league, you try to do that as well as you can. How quickly can you improve?
“After that, learn from your mistakes.”
As he saw it, in Week 1, he didn’t see the field well enough, and could’ve made quicker decisions and gotten rid of the ball faster. Whether that was rust or not didn’t matter. In Week 2, he and the offense didn’t finish drives, or make critical plays, to their standard. And, again, there was the tough start to Week 3—the Giants fumbled the opening kickoff, and Deshaun Watson hit Amari Cooper for a 24-yard score on the first play from scrimmage.
After that? Jones threw a pick on his second throw. But that one was negated by a roughing penalty, and the quarterback was nails for the rest of the half, landing at 178 yards and two touchdowns on 17-of-19 passing at halftime. The Giants, along the way, stuck with the run game, and got nonstop pressure. Though the final score was close, the game never felt like it was out of the Giants’ control, and Jones’s even hand was a factor in it.
Now, that doesn’t mean the season is suddenly saved. But it’s definitely better than being 0–3, and it sets up the Giants to get back to .500 on Thursday against a Dallas Cowboys team that’s also sitting at 1–2. Brian Daboll wanted his team to focus on the work last week, and nothing else, regardless of the highs, lows or any narrative attached to them. It’s a good thing his quarterback is a poster boy for that.
“It was a team effort,” he says. “The message from Dabes was, Focus on the work and focus on what we needed to do this week, and understanding we weren’t happy with where we were. It wasn’t the start any of us expected. We’re in a position we didn’t want to be in. It’s about what we did from that point on.
Which at least gives them a chance from this point on.
As for the other side of this game …
It’s fair to be worried about Deshaun Watson right now. The game plan from New York Giants defensive coordinator Shane Bowen was logical. New York wanted to cage-rush Watson, and keep him from extending plays, while continuing to change the picture on him.
The numbers—Watson was 21-of-37 for 196 yards, two scores and a 27.2 QBR—don’t tell the complete story.
Watson took eight sacks, and on a good number of them, he wasn’t feeling the rush or moving in the pocket. He fumbled once when the Cleveland Browns were down just 14–7, when Brian Burns beat Dawand Jones clean off the edge and Watson didn’t step up in the pocket, giving the star pass rusher an easy path to stripping the ball. Watson fumbled again on a botched exchange with Jerome Ford, with the Browns down 21–15 midway through the fourth quarter.
Now, if we’re being fair, things haven’t been perfect around him. He’s working with a new coordinator in Ken Dorsey. He’s gotten only one start from his two starting tackles through three weeks (Jedrick Wills Jr. on Sunday), and things should improve when Wills and Jack Conklin (who also returned to practice this week) are together again. Nick Chubb is working his way back from a catastrophic knee injury.
But you move that treasure chest of picks and guarantee a guy $230 million to fix these sorts of issues, not to become a victim to them. And if we’re being honest, the last time we saw the Watson who starred for four seasons in Houston was when he was actually still donning the Texans’ colors. So the question, then, is whether the Browns can get him back to that—and it’s not like they just started asking it.
In fact, the past two offseasons were dedicated to better working the scheme to fit Watson’s strengths. In 2023, they tried to adjust the offense Kevin Stefanski and OC Alex Van Pelt built, adding elements from Houston and Clemson. Any progress with that was short-circuited by the quarterback’s shoulder injury. This year, they brought in Dorsey to add concepts out of the shotgun and with tempo, and stuff that Bill O’Brien did with Watson in Houston (Dorsey worked in a New England Patriots–centric scheme under Brian Daboll in Buffalo).
The results haven’t been there yet. In talking with Cleveland’s opponents, they concede that, yes, protection is an issue. An inconsistent run game has been, too. That said, his accuracy and footwork have been messy, and, at least to others, there seems to be a confidence issue now, too.
The reality, as I see it, is that Watson’s work ethic—at his best, in Houston, he’d been a constant early in/late out guy—and relationships with coaches will be key here. He needs to hear the truth from the people around him and put the truth to work.
Because the truth of his performance hasn’t been good enough, given the investment.
That was more than just a win for the Baltimore Ravens—in a lot of ways it validated who they can be. We’ve been over this before. There’s a lot of transition happening there this year. Daniel Faalele, Andrew Vorhees and Roger Rosengarten have taken over Kevin Zeitler’s, John Simpson’s and Morgan Moses’s spots on the offensive line. Trenton Simpson is in for Patrick Queen at linebacker. Zach Orr is where Mike Macdonald was as defensive coordinator.
In each of those circumstances, it’s a homegrown talent doing the job for the first time.
Growing pains were to be expected. Accordingly, beating the Dallas Cowboys 28–25 doesn’t mean the Ravens are through those.
But what we saw Sunday was that the Ravens can still be the Ravens. For the first half, at least, Baltimore held Dallas out of the end zone. For the game, the Ravens ran for 274 yards—Derrick Henry wound up with 151 yards and two touchdowns on 25 carries, and Lamar Jackson had 87 yards and a score on 14 carries. And to finish this one off, and stem the tide of a Dallas rally? The Ravens showed, again, they could lean on their MVP.
After the Cowboys cut a 28–6 Ravens lead to 28–25, Baltimore set up shop at its own 21 with 2:44 left. Dallas had all its timeouts. The Cowboys got the Ravens into third-and-6 from the Baltimore 25 with 2:36 left. John Harbaugh, OC Todd Monken and the coaches put the ball in Jackson’s hands and, rather than play it safe, it was to throw it, not run it.
Jackson answered the bell with a strike to Zay Flowers for nine yards and, two plays later, took an option keeper, one that he pulled late to hold the defense, 10 yards to get the Ravens into victory formation.
Harbaugh called the sequence by Jackson “phenomenal” in his postgame presser.
And it was in a lot of ways—mostly in that it showed that, even with all these new parts (Henry being another one), the identity of the team hasn’t shifted much. So with a lot of things the Ravens wouldn’t want happening—obviously, the defense blowing the lead while the offense fell flat, and special teams missing a field goal and losing an onside kick late—they knew what they could count on. It happens to be exactly what they’ve been able to count on forever.
If they can still count on it? That should go a long way toward determining whether their 0–2 start was an aberration.
The Kansas City Chiefs’ goal-line stand is a good example that Kansas City can be what it needs to be on defense. In case you went to bed early: The Sunday nighter had an interesting finish. The host Atlanta Falcons were down 22–17 and in fourth-and-inches from the Kansas City 13. There were 56 seconds left.
The Falcons lined up with split backs, two tight ends, and one receiver out to the right. At the snap, Bijan Robinson looked like he wanted to take the play off-tackle. The problem was the Chiefs lined up six down linemen, with outside linebackers bookending them, and Nick Bolton and safety Justin Reid at the ’backer spots. Which, in turn, made Bolton’s job easier.
From the coaches’ perspective, when the call came, it looked like Bolton was prepared for Robinson to bounce the run outside, once he saw the gap he was running to was all clogged up. And sure enough, that’s exactly how it played out. That Bolton had a bead on it put him in position to beat blocks into the backfield, which is what he did before burying Robinson to end the game.
That’s how you hold a Falcons run game that was hitting its stride to 3.3 yards per carry, and how you’re able to put the reins on Kirk Cousins (89.7 rating) and a passing game that engineered a game-winning drive in Philly six days earlier.
This is also who Chiefs DC Steve Spagnuolo has always wanted in his huddle. He looks for smart guys, so he can do more with them—It’s what L’Jarius Sneed was, it’s what Trent McDuffie is, and it’s Reid and Bolton, too. It’s why one week they’re one thing and next week they’re another.
Add that to an offense that the Chiefs think is better than the last two (both of which won Super Bowls), and especially if they get Hollywood Brown back, and you have a team that could very easily three-peat. Remember, Patrick Mahomes didn’t need to do too much Sunday night to get his team to 3–0.
Now the New York Jets can move on with their season. The three-games-in-11-days thing has been hanging over them since the schedule was released in May. It definitely wasn’t fair. But it also wasn’t going to some football appeals court. So Robert Saleh’s group was going to have to attack the schedule, and they have.
Could it have gone better? Sure. They could be 3–0. But considering the circumstances and the trajectory of the team, the Jets think going 2–1 should serve as a foundation, with a ton of challenges still ahead.
“It’s gonna be every week, to be honest,” Saleh told me from his office Friday morning. “But the messaging has been the same—at the end of the day, we can complain about the schedule or we can attack the schedule. Because the reality is nobody really cares about how you got to game day, they don’t care about what you got going on in your personal life, they don’t care about your body, they don’t care about what’s hurting. They don’t care. Nobody cares.
“All that people care about is how you show up on Sunday, how you perform. So the focus has been, attack every single day to help yourself be your best on Sunday. And I think going through this and understanding the extra that needs to take place to get yourself ready to play, especially on short weeks and traveling back-to-back, and all things that we went through over the first few weeks, I think it’ll help later.”
We’ll get to what’s later—because that’s a doozy, too—but first, we can dive into a little more about how the Jets prepared themselves for this unprecedented start.
For the coaches, attacking it really started in earnest during training camp. The staff would always work ahead on early-season opponents. But this circumstance, plus the fact that two of the three teams they would face through it have entirely new coaching staffs, including defensive coordinators, led the Jets’ staff to go the extra mile. So on every players day off during camp, they’d chip away on planning for the San Francisco 49ers, Tennessee Titans and New England Patriots. They supplemented it by doing Titans work on the Niners trip, and Patriots work on the Titans trip.
From there, there were subtle adjustments. After arriving back from the West Coast at 7 a.m. ET Tuesday Sept. 10—after the 32–19 loss to the Niners—the players had the rest of the day off, then returned Wednesday for Titans week, with what normally would be a padded practice Thursday switched to a no-pads workout. The coaches also paced the players through the week, knowing a trip to the humidity of the South was ahead.
Then, after grinding out a 24–17 win over the Titans, the Jets sequenced Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday meeting-walkthrough work in four-hour blocks: 8 a.m. to noon, noon to 4 p.m. and 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. They had Monday walkthrough at dusk, giving players a little extra recovery time, and had another quick walkthrough at 10 a.m. Thursday to simulate what they’d get Saturday. All week, it was blocked off in a way that players could get extra regeneration time with massage therapists and acupuncturists provided by the team.
“The thought was how to do the best and still reach all the meeting time that they would traditionally get in a week, without the wear and tear on their bodies,” says Saleh, who credited chief of staff Kevin Anderson, coaching operations coordinator Maddie Johnson, strength coach Mike Nicolini and head trainer Dave Zuffelato for their work in planning all of it. “When we tried to check all those boxes, we tried to come up with a schedule that was best for us.
“And it’s been different than what we’ve done in the past.”
Which is also good, since Saleh came into this week 0–3 on Thursdays as Jets coach, having lost those games by a combined score of 101–53. Of course, having a better team helps, too.
And it’s hard to argue the Jets don’t, seeing how they looked against the Patriots.
The scheduling challenges aren’t done, by the way. They have a road Sunday night game in Pittsburgh after a Monday night showdown with the Buffalo Bills. They’ve also got Sunday night games after another Thursday nighter, and a trip to London. And all of that’s before Thanksgiving. But, as Saleh says, the Jets aren’t going to get anyone’s sympathy. So it’s up to them to keep handling these things as they did the past two weeks.
“I felt like we did what was best for the players,” Saleh says. “It just happened to work out.”
Drake Maye’s time is coming. The Patriots’ rookie quarterback saw his first game action Thursday night, and it was, well, not all that telling. The third pick in the 2024 NFL draft played 16 snaps, and the only possession he got accounted for four of New England’s 11 first downs. He finished 4-of-8 for 22 yards, and took two sacks, so it was a mixed bag for Maye personally. But he certainly didn’t look overwhelmed.
I also believe it is another step toward Maye becoming the starter.
My understanding is that the plan is for that to happen at some point in 2024—this won’t be a full-on redshirt year. They’ll be patient. But Maye’s progress has gotten to the point where the expectation is he’ll earn his way on to the field relatively soon, with the one caveat being that the Patriots’ offense will have to show (as it did against the Cincinnati Bengals, then didn’t against the Jets) that it can play the way it needs to in order to support a rookie quarterback.
As for where the progress has come, it’s really shown up across the board. The area where he’s made his biggest jump is with his footwork, since Maye hadn’t had much training with his feet previously, making that the place where he had the most room to grow. He’s also played better in rhythm, quickened the pace getting through progressions, and was getting rid of the ball faster as the summer transitioned to the regular season.
So to get him ready, the Patriots have been creative in giving him practice work. Jerod Mayo told reporters that Maye is taking about 30% of the first-team reps in practice, and that’s a result of the coaches giving him snaps on plays they know Jacoby Brissett doesn’t need work on (an advantage of Brissett having played for offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt in Cleveland in 2022). They’ve also split scout-team reps between Maye and fellow rookie Joe Milton, so Maye can work against a real NFL defense, and get some time to work to the side with QBs coach T.C. McCartney.
Bottom line: Maye’s time is coming. We’ll get to know a lot more about him, and how he fits into the NFL game, soon.
We are 14 games into Week 3, and we’ve got quick-hitters covering things all over that slate …
• So this wound up being the week when Aaron Rodgers would be Aaron Rodgers again, and Robert Saleh told me over the weekend that, “the affirmation is great, to see it on game day. But we’ve been seeing it [in practice], we saw it all last year before he got hurt.” And as for the awkward exchange between coach and quarterback we all saw? “It’s so funny. I talk a lot of smack with him about two-score leads—Give this defense a two-score lead and watch what happens,” Saleh says. “And so it was his way of letting me know the two-score lead happened. But Aaron and I, we’re good. Too bad there’s no cameras in the locker room. He’s a big hugger, believe it or not.”
• The quarterbacking in the Chicago Bears–Indianapolis Colts game wasn’t good, but there was a rookie that stood out—Laiatu Latu’s strip sack of Caleb Williams more or less finished off Chicago. It gave Indy possession at the Bears’ 16, with 6:46 left, leading 14–9. Four plays later, the Colts scored on a Jonathan Taylor run to go up 21–9, and effectively end the Bears’ bid for a road win. Latu’s motor runs hot, and his relentless rush style has already been a factor for the Colts.
• While we’re there, anyone looking to give up on Williams or Anthony Richardson needs to reference the stories of Sam Darnold, Baker Mayfield and Geno Smith. Those three are now a combined 8–1 on the year.
• But the one loss came this week, with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers coming out flat and getting beat all over the field by the Denver Broncos, who got to 1–2. Bo Nix looked a whole lot more comfortable, and like the guy from Oregon who plays the position like a point guard—his 25 completions were spread out among nine different receivers.
• And that brings us to Carolina, where the Panthers got Dave Canales his first win as a head coach, and Andy Dalton added another layer of context to the Bryce Young saga, going 26-of-37 for 319 yards, three touchdowns and a 123.6 passer rating. The Las Vegas Raiders, of course, aren’t the 1985 Bears. But at least we know now that the situation around Young wasn’t completely hopeless. And that if Dalton keeps playing this way, it’ll be hard to put a timeline on when Young’s next shot comes.
• The line of the week came from Raiders coach Antonio Pierce after their 36–22 loss. “As the game went on, I think there was definitely some individuals that made business decisions,” he told reporters after the game. “And we’ll make business decisions going forward, as well.” So if someone loses their job in Vegas Monday morning, we’ll know why. Examples may be made.
• Good for Malik Willis beating his old team, and good for Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur—who’s coached his team through Jordan Love’s absence, somehow scheming up an attack that’s rushed for 449 yards on 90 carries the past two weeks while everyone had to know Green Bay would try to run it. Going through this should be good for LaFleur’s group in the long run, too, building a different set of muscles they can flex when it counts.
• I’m not going to draw final conclusions on Will Levis (see: above examples of why not to). But I will say if the goal for him is to play well enough so the Tennessee Titans don’t take a quarterback in the first round in April … he’s not there right now.
• The Detroit Lions’ first drive Sunday said everything about their bounceback from their home loss to Tampa—nine plays, 70 yards, with six of the nine plays being handoffs to David Montgomery. It mirrored the drive they beat the Rams with two weeks ago and, yes, it’s still very much who they are. Detroit, for the most part, kept Arizona at bay all afternoon, en route to a 20–13 win.
• And, finally, next week’s Seattle–Detroit Monday nighter is shaping up as a bit of a surprise big game in the NFC, with Seattle coming in at 3–0. Mike Macdonald’s group is playing smart, resourceful football, and it’ll get a nice measuring stick playing against the Lions. For Detroit, meanwhile, it’ll be another example of how this team has gone from the hunter to the hunted.
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