Tag: takeaways

  • NFL Week 16: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game

    The Los Angeles Chargers beat the Denver Broncos on “Thursday Night Football” to open Week 16. On Saturday, the Kansas City Chiefs bested the Houston Texans 27-19. Then, the Baltimore Ravens rolled over the AFC North rival Pittsburgh Steelers 34-17 to clinch a playoff spot.

    The action continued on Sunday. Indianapolis Colts running back Jonathan Taylor rushed for 218 yards and three touchdowns, and rookie quarterback Michael Penix Jr. performed well in his debut, leading the Atlanta Falcons past the New York Giants.

    Our NFL Nation reporters reacted to all the action, answering lingering questions coming out of each game and detailing everything else you need to know for every team. Let’s get to it.

    Jump to:
    PIT-BAL | DEN-LAC | HOU-KC
    CLE-CIN | LAR-NYJ | NYG-ATL
    TEN-IND | DET-CHI | PHI-WSH
    ARI-CAR

    Panthers

    Will Bryce Young be the Panthers’ starting quarterback going into next season? One hundred percent. Panthers coach Dave Canales was impressed by how Young handled himself following a four-turnover game last week and said before Sunday’s game that Young was his guy for the rest of this season. The top pick of the 2023 draft came through with an impressive performance in beating the Cardinals (two touchdown passes and one rushing score) and proved time and again over the past two months that he can deliver at a high level.

    Describe the game in two words: Building block. The Panthers had nothing to play for but pride, while the Cardinals needed a win Sunday to remain in playoff contention. Even with its porous run defense (the Cardinals had 206 yards rushing), the Panthers showed they can play with anybody. Over the past month, they came close to upending the Chiefs, Buccaneers and Eagles.

    Early prediction for next week: Carolina will continue to play spoiler as they did Sunday and will beat Tampa Bay, a team the Panthers came within a lost fumble in overtime of beating in Week 13. The Bucs are battling with Atlanta for the NFC South title, but the Panthers are showing they won’t be a pushover down the stretch. — David Newton

    Next game: at Buccaneers (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)


    Cardinals

    What will the next two weeks look like for the Cardinals? Now that they’ve been eliminated from playoff contention, the Cardinals will head into the offseason after games at the Rams and at home versus the 49ers. Arizona has already been playing a number of younger players, but that number could increase as it tries to evaluate who it has for the future. Specifically, offensive linemen Christian Jones and Jon Gaines II could see more snaps in the last two games.

    Eye-popping stat: Before he left the game with a knee injury, running back James Conner averaged 6.2 yards before contact per rush in the first half, according to ESPN Research. Entering Sunday, he was averaging 2.3 yards before contact per rush. He had 111 rushing yards in the first half, including 74 before contact.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Containing Bryce Young on the ground. The Panthers quarterback had 68 rushing yards Sunday, 57 of which came within a four-play span in a second-quarter drive. He ripped off a 34-yard run and then scored three plays later on a 23-yard run. — Josh Weinfuss

    Next game: at Rams (Saturday, 8 p.m. ET)

    Commanders

    Does Sunday’s win lock up rookie of the year honors for quarterback Jayden Daniels? It should — by a large margin. It’s hard to imagine a rookie offensive player doing more than Daniels, who started off strong yet is doing more down the stretch. He now has 22 touchdown passes, including five to beat the Eagles and nine over the past three games. He also rushed for 82 of the Commanders’ 114 yards Sunday. Washington’s offense did not have a lot going for it with five turnovers, but Daniels bailed it out with big pass plays, including the 10-yard winning throw with six seconds left.

    Describe the game in two words: Unlikely comeback. The Commanders had no business winning after turning the ball over five times, which led to 13 points for the Eagles. Yet, Daniels made all the difference. And the Commanders also contained running back Saquon Barkley to 27 yards on 16 carries in the second half.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: The run game. Washington’s run game was all or nothing — and the all was its rookie quarterback. The Commanders’ line couldn’t move the Eagles’ front all afternoon. This has become a reoccurring issue, as their running backs rushed for only 34 yards against the Saints last week. — John Keim

    Next game: vs. Falcons (Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET)


    Eagles

    What’s the significance of Jalen Hurts’ injury? Hurts exited the game in the first quarter because of a concussion. Time will tell if he clears protocol for next week. The No. 1 seed is a long shot after the Eagles lost and the Lions won Sunday. According to ESPN Analytics, the Eagles would have a 80% win probability versus the Cowboys and an 84% win probability in the regular-season finale against the Giants with Hurts playing. That drops to 66% against Dallas and 72% against New York with Kenny Pickett as the starter.

    Eye-popping stat: Saquon Barkley rushed for 109 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the first quarter, highlighted by a 68-yard TD scamper down the left sideline late. He is the first player with 100-plus rushing yards and two-plus rushing touchdowns in an opening quarter since the Vikings’ Adrian Peterson in Week 14 of 2012. Peterson won MVP that season.

    What we learned about the QB on Sunday: Pickett had a roller coaster of a day. He helped cap off a touchdown drive on the series Hurts was injured on a four-yard strike to A.J. Brown but then threw an interception that led to a Commanders score. Overall, it was a grind, with some misfires and streaks of low productivity mixed in with some positive plays. — Tim McManus

    Next game: vs. Cowboys (Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:19

    Jalen Hurts leaves game after hitting head on the ground

    Jalen Hurts picks up yards scrambling but the play ends with his head hitting the turf, leading to Hurts leaving the game.

    Lions

    Can running back Jahmyr Gibbs continue to carry the load with David Montgomery out? Certainly. Gibbs and Montgomery could be feature backs for nearly any team in the NFL. But even without Montgomery — who is sidelined with a MCL injury — in Chicago, Gibbs finished with 154 scrimmage yards. He rushed for 109 yards and a touchdown, while catching four receptions for 45 yards. Entering the game, he was prepared for a larger workload and his production showed it wasn’t too much for him to handle.

    What we learned about the QB on Sunday: Lions quarterback Jared Goff wasn’t fazed by the loss to Buffalo or Detroit’s banged-up roster. Instead, he bounced back in spectacular fashion, finishing 23-of-32 with 336 passing yards, three touchdowns and zero interceptions. He also set a career-high mark for passing touchdowns in a season (33) in the win.

    Early prediction for next week: Lions wide receiver Jameson Williams will eclipse the 1,000-yard receiving mark for the first time in his NFL career. Williams, who had a career-best 143 receiving yards Sunday, is 110 yards away from the mark. In last year’s NFC title game against the 49ers, he delivered a rushing and receiving touchdown. — Eric Woodyard

    Next game: at 49ers (Monday, Dec. 30, 8:15 p.m. ET)


    Bears

    How did Ben Johnson’s up-close audition land with the Bears? Sources confirmed to ESPN that Johnson, the Lions’ offensive coordinator, is expected to interview for the Bears’ head coaching vacancy. Detroit put up 400-plus yards of offense for a third time in four games and jumped out to an early 20-0 lead. Conversely, Johnson, who praised quarterback Caleb Williams for how the ball “whistles” when he throws it, got a good look at a strong performance from the rookie.

    What we learned about the QB on Sunday: Williams is playing with confidence amid a lost season. He became the first rookie in franchise history to pass for 3,000 yards and threw the longest touchdown pass of his career, a 45-yarder to receiver Keenan Allen. Williams has completed at least 10 passes to receivers split out wide in three of his past four games after doing so only once in Weeks 1-12.

    Most surprising performance: Allen crossed 100 receiving yards (141 total) for the first time this season after seeing double-digit targets (13) for the fifth time. The 32-year-old veteran scored the longest touchdown of his career and needs two more TD catches to set a single-season career high (nine). — Courtney Cronin

    Next game: vs. Seahawks (Thursday, 8:15 p.m. ET)

    Colts

    Should the Colts have leaned more on their running game? For starters, the Titans played some abysmal run defense in this game. But the Colts’ dominance on the ground was the closest thing they’ve shown to a true identity. Indianapolis stuck with the run even when the Titans knew it was coming. The Colts’ 335 rushing yards was their biggest output since the final week of the 2020 season. With running back Jonathan Taylor and a physical offensive line, this is the brand of football that best suits this team.

    Describe the game in two words: Unnecessarily difficult. The Colts allowed the Titans to score 23 unanswered points in the second half after taking a 38-7 lead. It didn’t need to be that hard. A clutch third-down conversion with under two minutes remaining iced the game, as quarterback Anthony Richardson connected with wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr. to move the chains.

    Eye-popping stat: Taylor became the third player with 200-plus rushing yards and three touchdowns in a game over the past decade. His 218 rushing yards were the second-most of his career, behind 253 yards against the Jaguars in 2020. — Stephen Holder

    Next game: at Giants (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:16

    Jonathan Taylor scores his 3rd TD of the game

    Jonathan Taylor finds the end zone for the third time vs. the Titans, increasing the Colts’ lead.


    Titans

    Is the late comeback attempt proof the Titans haven’t quit on first-year coach Brian Callahan? The Titans scored on their second drive but got outscored 38-0 until Tyjae Spears’ touchdown run with 3:02 left in the third quarter. Rather than lay down, Callahan’s team fought back to within one score. The overall performance is unacceptable. But the way the Titans kept pushing forward shows they haven’t quit on Callahan. Next week’s matchup with the Jaguars is the best chance the Titans have to add to their three-win total.

    What we learned about the QB on Sunday: Although he has played five more seasons than Will Levis, Mason Rudolph is susceptible to the same mistakes. He threw an interception late in the second quarter that led to the Colts’ third touchdown of the period. The offense was more on schedule, but it’s clear whoever is under center can’t overcome all the reasons the Titans haven’t been winning.

    Eye-popping stat: Entering this week, the Titans’ run defense was 12th in the NFL, allowing 115.2 rushing yards per game. The Colts finished with 335 yards on the ground, which was the second-most allowed by a Titans/Oilers defense in franchise history. The Dallas Texans set the record with 398 rushing yards against the Houston Oilers on Oct. 1, 1965. — Turron Davenport

    Next game: at Jaguars (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Falcons

    How did Michael Penix Jr. do in his first career start? It was only the second time a Falcons quarterback has led his team to a double-digit win in his first NFL start (Matt Ryan, 2008). Ryan, of course, went on to be perhaps the greatest player in franchise history. It’s too soon for any superlatives about Penix. He finished 18-of-27 for 202 yards and an interception that should have been caught by tight end Kyle Pitts. The defense and running back Bijan Robinson were the stars Sunday, but the quarterback’s arm talent, poise and processing were encouraging. It was against the 2-13 Giants, yet Atlanta’s offense looked much better than it had the past five games with Kirk Cousins.

    Eye-popping stat: The Falcons had pick-sixes by safety Jessie Bates III and edge rusher Matthew Judon. It was the first time the team has had two pick-sixes in one game since 1983. Bates now has four interceptions on the season, and Judon scored his first career touchdown.

    Describe the game in two words: Confidence builder. Things could not have gone better for the Falcons, who were 1-4 in their past five games and had benched their starting quarterback much sooner than they expected. Their 34-7 lead in the fourth quarter was their biggest since 2020. The defense also dominated for a second straight game. — Marc Raimondi

    Next game: at Commanders (Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET)


    Giants

    Are the Giants going to win another game this season? The Giants have lost their past two games by a combined 48 points against the Falcons and Ravens. They will be heavy underdogs at home against the Colts and on the road against the Eagles. There is nothing to suggest their season won’t end with 12 straight losses. It might not be the worst thing given the situation. They came into Sunday with a 37% chance for the first overall pick, according to ESPN Analytics. Losing out will only help those odds.

    Describe the game in two words: Record futility. That makes it a franchise-record 10th straight loss for the Giants. Their last victory was on Oct. 6 in Seattle. They haven’t even been competitive in a good chunk of games. They have lost three of their past five games by more than 20 points, which is contrary to general manager Joe Schoen’s bye week claim they were close to winning games.

    Eye-popping stat: After throwing two pick-sixes against the Falcons, quarterback Drew Lock has now thrown three pick-sixes in three starts. That is the second-most pick sixes this season despite his limited playing time in the Giants’ offense. Only Tennessee’s Will Levis (four) has tossed more. — Jordan Raanan

    Next game: vs. Colts (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Rams

    What does this win mean for the Rams’ playoff chances? With their victory over the Jets, the Rams still control their playoff destiny, with home games against the Cardinals and Seahawks to end the regular season. The Rams have made the playoffs in five of their seven seasons under coach Sean McVay.

    Describe the game in two words: December football. Just like they did in a rainy game vs. the 49ers in Week 15, the Rams leaned on their running game in 23-degree weather. Kyren Williams led the way with 122 yards and a touchdown on 23 carries. It was his 13th rushing score this season, the most by a Rams player since Todd Gurley scored 17 in 2018, per ESPN Research.

    Most surprising performance: Sunday saw the season debut for tight end Tyler Higbee, who tore the ACL and MCL in his right knee in last season’s wild-card loss to the Lions. He had only one catch for 11 yards, but it was a touchdown reception that gave the Rams a lead they never gave up in the fourth quarter. It was his first touchdown in 392 days, according to ESPN Research. — Sarah Barshop

    Next game: vs. Cardinals (Saturday, 8 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:18

    Kyren Williams barrels into end zone for Rams

    Kyren Williams runs in a short touchdown to get the Rams on the board vs. the Jets.


    How does an offense with so much talent continue to underachieve? The Jets opened with a 99-yard touchdown drive. They didn’t punt once and still managed only nine points — yet another reminder that the Aaron Rodgers-led offense has been a major bust. Rodgers missed some open receivers and lost a fumble deep in Jets territory, every lineman committed at least one penalty, the red zone efficiency was terrible (1-for-3) and receiver Allen Lazard dropped two passes. The end result was their sixth loss despite holding a fourth-quarter lead (a league high).

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Interim coach Jeff Ulbrich made two questionable decisions on fourth down. The most egregious was going for it on fourth-and-1 from his own 33 in the second quarter when up 6-0. They failed, giving the Rams a short field for an eventual game-tying touchdown (missed PAT). Later, Ulbrich passed up a short field goal on their first drive of the second half and they failed on fourth-and-4.

    Describe the game in two words: Where’s Garrett? Garrett Wilson, already unhappy with the state of the offense, was targeted only three times over the first 55 minutes. Interestingly, he has been a nonfactor for the past six quarters, dating back to his sideline outburst last week in Jacksonville. Davante Adams continued to get the bulk of the targets. Wilson finished with six catches for 54 yards. — Rich Cimini

    Next game: at Bills (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Bengals

    Are the Bengals back in playoff contention? Somehow, yes. After being four games under .500 a few weeks ago, they have their playoff chances still flickering ahead of Week 17. The Bengals have won three straight games. And in their past two victories, they have looked convincingly good against bad teams, something that was an issue for most the season. This win sets up a big home showdown next Saturday.

    Early prediction for next week: The Bengals will struggle with Denver’s pass rush if they can’t get healthy. Cincinnati right tackle Amarius Mims left the game with an ankle injury and Orlando Brown Jr. remains out with a fibula injury. The Broncos are fifth in pass rush win rate (45%) and third in sacks per dropback (8.2%). That could be a handful if Mims and Brown aren’t ready.

    Most surprising performance: Cincinnati’s young defensive linemen had a big impact. The got sacks from rookie defensive tackles Kris Jenkins Jr. (2) and McKinnley Jackson (1). Cedric Johnson, who has been a healthy scratch often throughout the year, forced an intentional grounding late in the game too. It’s a great sign for a group that has relied on Trey Hendrickson all season. — Ben Baby

    Next game: vs. Broncos (Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET)


    Browns

    What else is there for the Browns to accomplish with two games left? The Browns’ 12th loss of the season was filled with more mistakes — three turnovers — and an offense, now led by quarterback Dorian Thompson-Robinson, that couldn’t sustain drives. Cleveland wraps up the season with games against the Dolphins and Ravens before an offseason that will be filled with tough decisions. The team has been increasingly using its younger players, especially on the defensive line, and that could continue in the final two weeks.

    What we learned about the QB on Sunday: Thompson-Robinson isn’t ready to be considered for the Browns’ 2025 starting position. He made his fourth career start but looked like he has for much of his young career: Talented but careless with the ball. He was intercepted twice, including once in the end zone, which brings his career total to nine with just one passing touchdown.

    Early prediction for next week: The Browns will hold Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa to a season-low in passing yards. Cleveland runs Cover 1 at the highest rate in the NFL, and Tagovailoa has struggled against the coverage. He averages 5.4 yards per attempt, which is the second-lowest mark among qualifying passers. — Daniel Oyefusi

    Next game: vs. Dolphins (Sunday, 4:05 p.m. ET)

    Ravens

    Are the Ravens now the favorites to win the AFC North? Not exactly. It’s true that Baltimore and Pittsburgh are both tied atop the division with 10-5 records. But the Ravens have a 45% chance to win the AFC North, according to ESPN Analytics. If Baltimore and Pittsburgh both win out, the Ravens lose the top spot because their record in common games is worse than the Steelers’. So, the Ravens likely need to win out — at Houston and home against Cleveland — and the Steelers need to lose at least one more time. Pittsburgh’s last two games are at home against the Chiefs and the Bengals. But this was a huge victory and confidence boost for the Ravens — who had lost eight of the previous nine games against the Steelers.

    Describe the game in two words: Role reversal. Unlike the previous meetings with the Steelers, it was the Ravens who capitalized on Pittsburgh’s mistakes. Baltimore produced two takeaways — a forced fumble on Russell Wilson inside the Baltimore 5-yard line and a Marlon Humphrey 37-yard interception return for a touchdown. This was the first defensive score of the season for the Ravens. It was a much different story from the previous nine meetings, when Baltimore turned the ball over 19 times.

    Most surprising performance: Running back Derrick Henry. He ran for 162 yards, recording his first career 100-yard game against the Steelers and redeeming himself from his 65-yard performance last month in Pittsburgh. It had been a tough stretch for Henry, who had been held under 70 yards rushing in three of his previous five games. Now, Henry is in an elite group with his fourth 1,500-yard rushing season, which trails only Barry Sanders (who had five). — Jamison Hensley

    Next game: at Texans (Wednesday, 4:30 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:23

    Marlon Humphrey snags pick-six, taunts Calvin Austin en route to the house

    Marlon Humphrey comes up with a big play to snag Russell Wilson’s pass and take it to the end zone to pad the Ravens’ lead vs. the Steelers.


    Steelers

    Can the Steelers still win the AFC North? After dropping Saturday’s game to the Ravens, the Steelers have to win out to clinch their division and a home playoff game. With games against the Kansas City Chiefs and Cincinnati Bengals to finish out the season, that’s not an easy task. While there’s no simple fix to the recent ails of a Steelers team that can’t get off the field on defense or move the ball on offense, the return of S DeShon Elliott and WR George Pickens would go a long way to finishing the season strong.

    What we learned about the QB on Saturday: Wilson had two touchdown passes, but he also directly contributed to 14 of the Ravens’ points. Not only did he fumble the ball 4 yards short of the end zone in the first half, but in the fourth quarter, his pass thrown behind tight end MyCole Pruitt was picked off and returned for a touchdown by Humphrey. The pick-six gave the Ravens a 31-17 lead with 13 minutes to go and all but shut the door on a Steelers comeback. Wilson completed 22 of 33 attempts for 217 yards, but the turnovers were his most costly of the season.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: What happened to Pat Freiermuth? The Steelers tight end came into Saturday’s game with a touchdown in three straight games, but he was a nonfactor against the Ravens. Freiermuth finished with three catches on three targets for 16 yards. — Brooke Pryor

    Next game: vs. Chiefs (Wednesday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Chiefs

    Is Xavier Worthy the Chiefs’ most valuable receiver? Who else could it be at this point? The Chiefs went to Worthy 11 times as a receiver and three times as a ball carrier. He delivered 7 catches, 65 yards and 1 touchdown as a receiver and 10 rushing yards. The Chiefs had some timely contributions from other receivers, most notably Hollywood Brown and DeAndre Hopkins. But Worthy was their go-to receiver.

    What we learned about the QB on Saturday: Patrick Mahomes can be effective with his high ankle sprain. He didn’t have his best game but was good enough for the Chiefs to win. He scored the Chiefs’ first touchdown on a 15-yard scramble and also had a 12-yard scramble on the drive.

    Most surprising performance: Brown had a promising game for a player who hasn’t been in a game since suffering a sternoclavicular injury during the preseason. Brown didn’t play a lot but caught five passes for 45 yards. One catch came on fourth down, another on third down. Both plays delivered the Chiefs a fresh set of downs. — Adam Teicher

    Next game: at Steelers (Wednesday, 1 p.m. ET)


    Texans

    How will the Texans overcome injuries? The Texans lost three starters in right guard Shaq Mason, wideout Tank Dell and safety Jimmie Ward. All appear to be long-term injuries, as Ward and Dell had to be carted off the field. Losing Dell is a bigger loss, as he’s another weapon gone for quarterback C.J. Stroud. Wideout Stefon Diggs already suffered a season-ending knee injury in Week 8 and now Dell is most likely going to be out.

    What we learned about the QB on Saturday: Stroud can and will have to be efficient with Dell out. The only difference-maker he has now is Nico Collins. So whenever teams take him away, Stroud will have to take underneath throws, which he did against the Chiefs, going 10-for-15 for 102 yards.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: In four out of the past six games, running back Joe Mixon has under 60 rushing yards. His low production is a result of the shuffling on the offensive line. The Texans are 5-2 when Mixon rushes for over 100 yards but are 2-3 when he rushes for under 60. — DJ Bien-Aime

    Next game: vs. Ravens (Wednesday, 4:30 p.m. ET)

    Chargers

    Are the Chargers’ defensive issues fixable? After being one of the NFL’s best defenses for much of the season, the Chargers’ defense has fallen off in recent weeks. That continued in the first half Thursday night, as the Broncos scored on their first three possessions, the first time a team has done that to L.A. this season. The Chargers’ biggest issue has been on third down. Through the first 11 weeks, they allowed 32.3% of third down conversions (second in NFL), but from Weeks 12-15, they allowed 47.5% (27th). They adjusted against Denver, allowing six points in the second half and holding the Broncos to 5-of-13 on third down, a sign that their issues could be behind them.

    Describe the game in two words: Opportunistic Chargers. The Chargers took advantage of the Broncos’ penalties; Denver racked up seven penalties for 61 yards, while the Chargers had only two for eight yards. A fair catch interference penalty at the end of the first half, which led to kicker Cameron Dicker making the first fair catch free kick in 48 years, turned the game around for the Chargers. They outscored the Broncos 21-6 from that moment to win the game.

    Early prediction for next week: The Chargers’ defense will get its first shutout. The Chargers seemed to find a spark defensively in that second half against Denver and will face a New England Patriots team next Saturday that is 31st in the NFL in points per game (17). This could be the perfect storm for a defense that has had near-shutouts twice this season and a jolt of momentum ahead of the playoffs. — Kris Rhim

    Next game: at Patriots (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)


    Broncos

    How big of a missed opportunity was Thursday’s loss? It’s more a blow to the Broncos’ psyche than their actual playoff chances, but the loss to the Chargers showed some immaturity in the big moment. The Broncos dropped from the No. 6 seed to the No. 7 (and final) seed with the loss, but they still have a 2.5-game lead on the Cincinnati Bengals, Indianapolis Colts and Miami Dolphins for that postseason spot. The real concern is with how the Broncos lost — a flurry of untimely penalties and an offense that went tepid after scoring touchdowns on its first three possessions. Denver scored 21 points in the first 24 minutes of the game, then six in the remaining 36. The Broncos were ready to end their eight-year playoff drought, which makes the loss, according to coach Sean Payton, “disappointing because there was a lot at stake.”

    Describe the game in two words: Didn’t listen. Payton has written it on his call sheet: “Run It!” And despite the Broncos’ early success on the ground — they ran the ball on seven of 10 plays to score a touchdown on their opening possession, then ran it just 14 times the remainder of the game. Payton continues to struggle to find a rhythm in how he calls the run game even as he continues to say how important it will be for the Broncos. But he’s not following through on his words.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Chargers rookie Ladd McConkey came into the game leading their offense in receptions and receiving yards by a substantial margin. But the Broncos chose not to match Pro Bowl cornerback Pat Surtain II on him and struggled to contain the damage. McConkey repeatedly moved the sticks, catching six passes for 87 yards. “We dropped coverage five different times … you can’t have one of their top receivers not covered,” Payton said. — Jeff Legwold

    Next game: at Bengals (Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET)

  • NFL Week 13: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game

    Week 13 of the NFL season began Thanksgiving Day, as the Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys sent their fans home happy with victories before the Green Bay Packers joined them in the win column against the Miami Dolphins in the final game of the annual holiday showcases. The Lions took down the Chicago Bears thanks to some truly puzzling clock management by Chicago, while the Cowboys used their defense to outlast the struggling New York Giants.

    On Black Friday, the Las Vegas Raiders nearly pulled off a stunning upset against the Kansas City Chiefs before a heartbreaking fumble.

    On Sunday, quarterback Anthony Richardson lifted the Indianapolis Colts past the New England Patriots, and the Pittsburgh Steelers handled the Cincinnati Bengals. Later, the Philadelphia Eagles earned a big road win against the Baltimore Ravens and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers survived in overtime. Sunday night, the Buffalo Bills put on a show in the snow, defeating the San Francisco 49ers 35-10. The Denver Broncos capped things off on Monday night with a frenetic 41-32 victory over the Cleveland Browns.

    Our NFL Nation reporters reacted to all the action, answering lingering questions coming out of each game and detailing everything else you need to know for every team. Let’s get to it.

    Jump to:
    CLE-DEN | SF-BUF | TB-CAR | PHI-BAL
    LAR-NO | SEA-NYJ | HOU-JAX | TEN-WSH
    LAC-ATL | IND-NE | ARI-MIN
    PIT-CIN | MIA-GB | NYG-DAL
    CHI-DET | LV-KC

    Broncos

    How much concern should the Broncos have after their defensive meltdown? In the end, Jameis Winston and Jerry Jeudy had ridiculous numbers — 497 passing yards and 235 receiving yards, respectively — and the Browns rolled up 552 yards overall. That will cause plenty of hand-wringing as the Broncos move into their bye week. Denver coach Sean Payton promised that he would have a critical eye on the defense, though he added that “in the end we did what we had to do”, as the defense also intercepted Winston three times, including two which they returned for touchdowns.

    With cornerback Riley Moss expected to miss additional time with a knee injury, the Broncos might have to consider playing rookie Kris Abrams-Draine instead of Levi Wallace at Moss’ spot. They made that move late against the Browns, as Winston targeted Wallace successfully when he was matched up against Jeudy.

    Describe the game in two words: Great escape. The Broncos had a spirited home crowd and a national audience to play in front of against a team out of playoff contention, but it almost resulted in the messiest of losses. The Broncos had a clunky first half on offense — they had two three-and-out drives in the first half — and the defense was gashed repeatedly. But they pulled out the win and are two games up on the field for the AFC’s final wild-card spot.

    What we learned about the QB today: Rookie Bo Nix finished with his third two-interception game of the season — he threw two in each of the consecutive losses to open the season — but the Broncos got their first win in a game in which Nix threw a pick. He eventually finished with 294 passing yards, his second-highest total of the season, and a 93-yard touchdown to Marvin Mims Jr. — the Broncos’ first pass play of more than 50 yards this season. Nix showed more resilience than he did early in the season and rebounded more quickly from the turnovers than he had in previous games. “We’re a confident bunch,” Nix said. — Jeff Legwold

    Next game: vs. Colts (Sunday, Dec. 15, 4:25 p.m. ET)


    Browns

    How will the Browns salvage another losing season? Cleveland’s heartbreaking loss to the Broncos gives the franchise its 22nd losing season out of 26 since returning to the city in 1999. And the defeat all but dashes the slim playoff chances the Browns had entering Week 13. Now, will Cleveland begin to evaluate more of its young players? “We got to go out there and start spoiling people’s dreams and start making people feel how we’re feeling right now,” defensive end Myles Garrett said.

    Eye-popping stat: In his first game against his former team after being traded in the offseason, wide receiver Jerry Jeudy had a career-high 235 receiving yards, with 198 coming on open or wide-open targets. That represents the most such yardage in a single game since Next Gen Stats developed the metric in 2016.

    Most surprising performance: Garrett, who entered Week 13 with 10 sacks, had one pressure on 26 pass rush snaps. The quiet night came without the Broncos diverting a ton of extra attention to the reigning Defensive Player of the Year. He was double teamed on three pass rush snaps, per Next Gen Stats. — Daniel Oyefusi

    Next game: at Steelers (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Bills

    What’s next for the Buffalo Bills after clinching the AFC East? Working to earn the No. 1 seed in the AFC. The Bills scored 30-plus points for a sixth straight game, the longest streak this season and tied for longest in franchise history, while limiting the 49ers to 10 points. The Bills have shown they can be dominant, and the sky is the limit as the postseason awaits.

    Describe the game in two words: Snow ball. The Bills started the game with a three-and-out and then gave up a field goal. But after that, they controlled the game in all three phases — forcing three fumbles, not allowing a drive longer than six plays in the second half and getting an MVP-like performance from Josh Allen.

    Eye-popping stat: Helped by a wild scoring play on a lateral from Amari Cooper, Allen — who on Sunday passed Jim Kelly for the most touchdowns in Bills history — is the fifth player and the only quarterback since 1970 to score a passing, rushing and receiving touchdown in the same game. He joins Christian McCaffrey, LaDainian Tomlinson, David Patten and Walter Payton. Allen is also the first player in NFL history with multiple games with two passing touchdowns and a receiving touchdown. — Alaina Getzenberg

    Next game: at Rams (Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET)


    49ers

    Is it time to put the 49ers’ playoff hopes to rest? Yes. Although the 5-7 Niners are mathematically in it, there’s no reason to believe this tired, battered team has any sort of final surge in it. Realistically, the 49ers would probably need to win all of their remaining five games to get in, with a lesser chance that nine victories could steal the middling NFC West division title. But San Francisco is now two games behind Seattle while trailing the other two teams in the division by a game. Even if some of the Niners’ injured stars return, it’s difficult to imagine a scenario in which the team can go 4-1 or 5-0 against the Bears, Rams, Dolphins, Lions and Cardinals. For the first time since 2020, the Niners look as if they’ll miss the postseason.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Run defense has been an issue all season for the Niners, but it has been particularly bad the past two weeks. After a promising couple of drives Sunday night, the 49ers allowed the Bills to gash them for 220 rushing yards (5.8 yards per carry) on 38 attempts. It’s the second week in a row they’ve allowed more than 150 yards on the ground, the first time that has happened since 2021.

    Describe the game in two words: Massive mismatch. Even if they were healthy, this was, perhaps, the toughest game on the 49ers’ schedule. But they are nowhere near full strength, and when you add the Bills coming off a bye week, the Niners on their second consecutive long trip and the winter weather, this had the makings of a Buffalo blowout, and it delivered. — Nick Wagoner

    Next game: vs. Bears (Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET)

    Buccaneers

    Did the Bucs just save their season? For most of the game, the Panthers limited quarterback Baker Mayfield’s escape lanes and the Bucs’ receiving corps struggled outside of Mike Evans. It wasn’t until the fourth quarter that things — and Bucky Irving — started to click. It was far from pretty, but they’ll take this one and the 6-6 record. The Bucs were gifted a 17-13 Falcons loss to the Chargers, which dropped Atlanta to 6-6 as well. The Falcons still hold the head-to-head advantage.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Defensively, the Bucs couldn’t pressure or contain quarterback Bryce Young. Young went 6-of-11 for 83 yards, which is his second-most passing yards on play-action this season, according to ESPN Research. But the defense’s inability to close didn’t doom Tampa Bay, as Anthony Nelson forced a Chuba Hubbard fumble that Yaya Diaby recovered in overtime.

    Most surprising performance: Irving’s 152 rushing yards is the most by a rookie in a game this season. His 97 rush yards in the fourth quarter alone was the fourth most by any running back this season. He has 1,017 scrimmage yards through 12 games, the second most for a rookie in Buccaneers history. — Jenna Laine

    Next game: vs. Raiders (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)


    Panthers

    Was this a breakout game for Bryce Young? Heck yeah. Since the run game wasn’t working, he had to carry the offense. He had his second career rushing touchdown and a go-ahead touchdown pass with 30 seconds left in regulation. His 298 passing yards was the second most in his career. Had Carolina (3-9) found a way to win in overtime, with a favorable schedule and Young playing well, it had a chance to be a factor in the weak NFC South.

    Eye-popping stat: Young came into Sunday averaging 177.9 yards passing per game in 23 career starts. Just today, he had 186 yards in the first half, the most of any half in his career.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Finishing in the red zone. The Panthers were 1-for-4 in scoring touchdowns inside the 20-yard line a week after going 2-for-6. One of coach Dave Canales’ signature comments is “finishing,” and the inability to do that Sunday made this game closer than it needed to be. — David Newton

    Next game: at Eagles (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Eagles

    Can the Eagles run the table? The Ravens game was their most difficult test on paper, and they aced it for their eighth consecutive win. They have a couple of formidable opponents remaining on the regular-season schedule in the Steelers and Commanders, but there is a chance they’ll be favored in every game the rest of the way — especially considering four of their next five contests are at home.

    Most surprising performance: Edge rusher Nolan Smith Jr. The second-year player stepped up in the team’s first game without Brandon Graham (triceps), posting a sack, eight tackles and a tackle for loss. The Eagles applied steady pressure on quarterback Lamar Jackson and limited the top-ranked Ravens offense to 19 points.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: The Eagles opened the game by mixing in targets to depth receivers and backs before homing in on running back Saquon Barkley and wide receiver A.J. Brown. That played a part in why they got off to yet another slow start offensively. Philadelphia was blanked by the Ravens in the first quarter and has the fewest points leaguewide in the opening frame this season (17). — Tim McManus

    Next game: vs. Panthers (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:22

    Saquon Barkley scores huge 25-yard TD for the Eagles

    Saquon Barkley maneuvers his way for a 25-yard touchdown to extend the Eagles’ lead in the fourth quarter.


    Ravens

    How will kicker Justin Tucker’s struggles impact a championship run for the Ravens? Tucker has gone from the most accurate kicker in NFL history to one of the team’s biggest question marks. He continued his seasonlong struggles by missing two field goals (from 47 and 53 yards) and an extra point. His two failed field goals came in the third quarter, when Baltimore trailed 14-12. This was the first time he has missed three kicks in a game, and he put a major dent in the Ravens’ opportunity to win the AFC North.

    What we learned about the QB today: Lamar Jackson is not infallible against the NFC. Jackson, who entered Sunday with the best interconference record by a quarterback since the 1970 merger (23-1), lost for the second time in 25 games against the NFC. He finished with a solid stat line — 237 passing yards and 79 rushing yards — but he was held to his second-fewest points vs. an NFC team.

    Eye-popping stat: On the Ravens’ first touchdown of the game, Jackson had 5.51 seconds from snap to his 14-yard pass to tight end Mark Andrews in the end zone, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. This was Jackson’s fifth touchdown pass this season with at least five seconds to throw, which is the most in the league. — Jamison Hensley

    Next game: at Giants (Dec. 15, 1 p.m. ET)

    Rams

    Will slow starts prevent the Rams from winning the NFC West? Los Angeles has struggled with slow starts this season — it has scored just two touchdowns in first quarters — but Sunday was its worst of the season. The Rams were shut out in the first half for the first time in the regular season under coach Sean McVay, according to ESPN Research. The only other time that happened was their Super Bowl LIII loss to the Patriots. The Rams overcame the scoreless first half with 21 points after halftime, but that won’t be good enough against better teams, including the Bills next week.

    Most surprising performance: The Rams went 3-for-3 in the red zone, tied for their best in a game with Matthew Stafford at quarterback. This has been an area of weakness this season, as they entered the game tied for 25th in red zone percentage (50%). It’s the second time they’ve done that this season.

    Eye-popping stat: Rams rookie wide receiver Jordan Whittington had 100 kickoff return yards. According to ESPN Research, that’s the most in a game by a Rams player since Pharoh Cooper had 110 in Week 12 of 2017. The sixth-round pick entered the game with 69 kickoff return yards on three attempts. — Sarah Barshop

    Next game: vs. Bills (Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET)


    Saints

    Is the Darren Rizzi magic over? Rizzi seemed to have the Saints back on track, going 2-0 after taking over for fired coach Dennis Allen. But the New Orleans offense struggled for three quarters out of its bye week, and the Saints allowed Los Angeles to pull away. The question now is whether Rizzi can regroup enough to make a stretch run to end the season on a high note.

    Most surprising performance: Defensive tackle Bryan Bresee. He led the team with three pressures and had a key sack, putting him at a career-best 6.5 in his second season. The 2023 first-round pick has 11 career sacks.

    Describe the game in two words: Slow start. While the defense pitched a first-half shoutout, the offense didn’t take advantage and put up only six points. That proved costly in the end when the Saints failed to tie the score with close to two minutes left. — Katherine Terrell

    Next game: at Giants (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Texans

    Can the Texans’ offense build on its second-half performance? After mustering two field goals in the first half, the offense scored two touchdowns in the second half, the most it has netted since Week 6 against the Patriots. Coming into the game, Houston was averaging nine points in second halves and the Jacksonville defense was allowing 28 points per game. The Texans’ offense won the battle, and it could be a building block heading into the team’s bye week.

    Eye-popping stat: Quarterback C.J. Stroud was pressured on only 21.1% of his dropbacks and held the ball for roughly three seconds on average. That was a season low for Stroud, who was under pressure on 41% of his dropbacks coming into Week 13.

    Most surprising performance: Tight end Dalton Schultz. He had five catches for 61 yards and a touchdown, his second-highest receiving yards this season and his first touchdown on the year. Without Stefon Diggs, Stroud needs Schultz as another reliable option in the passing game. — DJ Bien-Aime

    Next game: vs. Dolphins (Dec. 15, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:32

    Joe Mixon ices the game with 1st down for Texans

    Joe Mixon gets the first down to seal the Texans’ win vs. the Jaguars.


    Jaguars

    Have we seen the last of Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence this season? Lawrence was already dealing with a sprained left AC joint and had missed the team’s previous two games, so the concussion he suffered on the late hit by Texans linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair complicates things further. It’s also uncertain at this point whether the hit aggravated the earlier injury. At 2-10, the Jaguars’ season is over, and the team has to decide whether it’s worth the risk to run the battered franchise quarterback out there again.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: There were two bad coverage busts that resulted in wide-open Texans receivers. The first didn’t hurt because Jags cornerback Ronald Darby made up ground on Texans wide receiver Tank Dell to force an incompletion. The second did, though: Tight end Dalton Schultz had nobody within 15 yards of him and walked in for a 22-yard touchdown.

    Most surprising performance: The Jaguars needed wide receiver Parker Washington to step up with Christian Kirk (collarbone) out for the year, and the second-year slot receiver finally did. He tied his career high with six catches and had the first 100-yard game of his career (103). He also had a touchdown and a 2-point conversion. Before Sunday, Washington had just nine catches in the three games since Kirk’s Week 8 injury. — Mike DiRocco

    Next game: at Titans (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Commanders

    What helped the offense bounce back? The Commanders had struggled in the previous two weeks — in losses to Philadelphia and Dallas. A big issue was the run game. In three straight losses, Washington’s running backs averaged 3.3 yards per carry with only three runs for more than 10 yards. On Sunday, the Commanders’ backs rushed for 229 yards with Brian Robinson Jr. recording 16 carries for 103 yards and a touchdown. Washington’s backs had six carries for 10 or more yards. It added up to tying a season high in points.

    Describe the game in two words: Desperately needed. After three consecutive losses, Washington was 2½ games behind the Eagles in the NFC East race — and its lead in the wild-card race was down to half a game. The Commanders, on a bye next week, have winnable games against New Orleans, Atlanta and Dallas coming up.

    What we learned about the QB today: Washington’s offense is better when Jayden Daniels can use his legs. He finished with 34 yards rushing; Washington is 8-2 when Daniels rushes for 33 or more yards. It also helped that he involved receiver Terry McLaurin early in the game — they connected for two touchdown passes in the first quarter. — John Keim

    Next game: at Saints (Dec. 15, 1 p.m. ET)


    Titans

    What happened to the Titans’ run defense? Defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons boldly proclaimed “Nobody runs on the Titans” in September. That statement couldn’t have been further from the truth Sunday when the Commanders gained 267 yards and three touchdowns on the ground. Tennessee’s run defense was averaging 106 rushing yards allowed per game entering this week, but its defensive front continually allowed holes to open for Washington’s running backs. Poor pursuit angles didn’t help on the back end, either. Jacksonville is among the bottom 10 rushing teams in the league, so next week is a good opportunity to bounce back.

    Describe the game in two words: Slow start. The Titans’ longest play in the first quarter was 6 yards. The Commanders had 10 plays go for more yards than that. Washington scored touchdowns on its first four drives of the game. Tennessee allowed 21 points in the first quarter, which is the most it had allowed in the first quarter of a game since 2012 against the Bears (28).

    Eye-popping stat: The Titans were penalized 11 times in the first half and fell into a 28-0 hole before finally getting on the board in the second quarter. That’s the most since 2011, when the 49ers had 11 accepted penalties in the first half against the Lions. The Titans were penalized a total of 12 times for 93 yards. — Turron Davenport

    Next game: vs. Jaguars (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Seahawks

    What changes could be coming to Seattle’s special teams? The Seahawks won despite a nightmarish first half from their special teams, which lost two fumbles on kickoffs, allowed a 99-yard kickoff return for a touchdown and had a PAT blocked. The Jets scored a touchdown after cornerback Dee Williams coughed the ball up, yet another miscue on top of his two muffed punts earlier this season. It’s a mystery as to why special teams coach Jay Harbaugh hasn’t benched Williams given that the undrafted rookie isn’t providing nearly enough in the return game to make up for his gaffes. The good from Seattle’s special teams was two long field goals by Jason Myers and a blocked PAT.

    Early prediction for next week: Defensive tackle Byron Murphy II will be used as a fullback. They’ve got to do something different in short-yardage situations, a season-long issue that hurt them again versus the Jets. They came away empty-handed despite running five plays from the 1-yard-line in the third quarter. Murphy, the rookie first-round pick, played some fullback in college.

    Eye-popping stat: Leonard Williams’ 92-yard pick-six was the longest by a defensive lineman in NFL history, per ESPN Research. That topped Grant Wistrom’s 91-yard score in 1999, when the former Seahawk was still with the Rams. Williams also had two sacks, three tackles for loss and blocked a PAT. — Brady Henderson

    Next game: at Cardinals (Sunday, 4:05 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:32

    Leonard Williams intercepts Aaron Rodgers, goes for 92-yard pick-six

    Leonard Williams intercepts Aaron Rodgers’ pass and takes it the distance for a 92-yard pick-six for the Seahawks.


    Jets

    How did quarterback Aaron Rodgers fare in his first ‘healthy’ game since September? Not well. Rodgers, not listed on the injury report for the first time since Week 4, didn’t silence those who believe he’s washed up. He was dreadful for much of the game, failing for the fifth time to pull out a potential win on the final possession. His worst sequence came in the second quarter when he missed a wide-open Garrett Wilson in the end zone and threw a pick-six on the next play. Rodgers has gone three straight games with under 200 passing yards and 34 straight under 300 yards. He turns 41 on Monday, and he’s playing like it.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: A total lack of discipline. The Jets gave away the game in the fourth quarter, committing eight of their 12 penalties — their most in a fourth quarter since 2013. It was a total meltdown, continuing a season-long trend. Players such as Rodgers, Wilson, Davante Adams and Quinnen Williams — some of their best players — were among the guilty parties.

    Most surprising performance: Running back Kene Nwangwu went from the practice squad to the end zone in a 24-hour span. Elevated on Saturday, the former Minnesota Vikings draft pick scored on a 99-yard kickoff return, which was the Jets’ first since 2021. He also became the first player since 2019 with a kick-return touchdown and a forced fumble in the same game. — Rich Cimini

    Next game: at Dolphins (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Steelers

    Did the Steelers fix their offensive woes? After weeks of a boom-or-bust offense quarterbacked by Russell Wilson, offensive coordinator Arthur Smith opted for a safer, more efficient scheme predicated on establishing the run and a quick passing game. And it worked. With well-executed screens and early Najee Harris touches — plus a handful of Wilson’s moon balls — the Steelers found an offensive balance that had long escaped them. But will it stick? Next week’s rematch with the Browns — who held the Steelers to 19 points in Week 12 — will be a crucial measuring stick.

    What we learned about the QB today: Wilson can adjust to the game plan. He wants to air it out, but he averaged 3.2 air yards per attempt in the first half. Of his 257 first-half passing yards, 191 were picked up by receivers after the catch. Part of Wilson’s undoing in Denver was deviating from the game plan, but he showed Sunday that he can stay on schedule.

    Describe the game in two words: All gas. Not only did the offense move the ball at will, but the Steelers defense forced three turnovers, including a fourth-quarter scoop-and-score by rookie Payton Wilson. — Brooke Pryor

    Next game: vs. Browns (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)


    Bengals

    Is it time to shift to developmental mode? Fire up those mock drafts! At 4-8, the Bengals’ playoff hopes are at 4.9%, according to ESPN’s FPI. And after quarterback Joe Burrow said he didn’t want to consider the outlook for 2025 and beyond until later in the season, that might be the best use of the team’s time for the remaining five games of the regular season. Sunday’s loss punctuates a disappointing year for a team that started the season with Super Bowl aspirations.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Zone defense. The Bengals had no answer for Russell Wilson, which is not something that has been said often this season. At one point, Wilson was 22-of-25 passing for 312 yards and three touchdowns against zone coverage. There will be a lot of soul searching for Cincinnati’s defense the rest of the way.

    What we learned about the QB today: As things currently stand, the Bengals aren’t constructed well enough around Burrow, who has had the best season of his career. The offense just couldn’t keep pace with a defense that was torched too often, which has been the case throughout the year. Cincinnati has to take a hard look at its roster, at minimum, if it wants to maximize Burrow’s championship window. — Ben Baby

    Next game: at Cowboys (Monday, Dec. 9, 8:15 p.m. ET)

    Vikings

    What happened to the Vikings’ offense? Minnesota didn’t have 100 yards of offense until late in the third quarter and finished with 272, its second-lowest total of the season. But quarterback Sam Darnold caught fire in the fourth quarter, and he threw the first go-ahead touchdown pass in the final two minutes of a game in his career. All told, the Vikings scored 17 points in the final 16:17 of the game.

    Describe the game in two words: Stepped up. That’s what the Vikings’ defense did after appearing to be worn down by the methodical Cardinals offense. Despite being on the field for a whopping 76 plays Sunday, the Vikes held Arizona without a net yard or a first down on its final possession.

    Most surprising performance: Running back Aaron Jones fumbled twice, losing one, and also dropped a sure touchdown pass in the fourth quarter before catching the go-ahead score with 1:13 remaining. Usually reliable, Jones has now tied his career record for most fumbles (five) and most fumbles lost (three) in a full season. — Kevin Seifert

    Next game: vs. Falcons (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:37

    Aaron Jones’ TD proves to be winner as INT clinches win

    After Aaron Jones’ touchdown puts the Vikings up late, Shaq Griffin gets the interception to clinch the win.


    Cardinals

    What cost the Cardinals after giving up a 13-point lead? Sunday would’ve been a proverbial walk in the park for the Cardinals had they been able to score a touchdown on any of their three trips to the red zone in the first half. Arizona kicked field goals from the 13-yard line twice and from the 6 once. Its three-point halftime lead could have been seven or more had it converted one or two of those trips into touchdowns.

    Early prediction for next week: Wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. will parlay his 60-yard, one-touchdown afternoon this Sunday into his third 100-yard game of the season. He is due for another one and showed again versus the Vikings that he can make the big plays, securing his seventh touchdown catch of his career.

    Most surprising performance: Tight end Trey McBride. He caught all 12 of his targets for 96 yards, tying for his third-best yardage output of the season. He continued to prove he is an elite playmaker for Arizona, with seven of his catches going for first downs. — Josh Weinfuss

    Next game: vs. Seahawks (Sunday, 4:05 p.m. ET)

    Colts

    What does coach Shane Steichen’s 2-point decision say about the season? Steichen’s decision to go for two points following what could have been a game-tying extra point suggests he knows the Colts have no margin for error as they chase a postseason berth. Indianapolis entered the game with a 25% shot at making the playoffs, per ESPN Analytics, and risking a loss in overtime — with a defense that struggled all day — could have been risky. Steichen is an aggressive coach, but this might have been the most aggressive call he has made in two seasons. The Colts’ playoff hopes improved to 31% with the win.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: The Colts needed to be more aggressive on defense. Patriots rookie quarterback Drake Maye showed the discipline required to take the quick, short passes against the Colts’ zone coverage. New England did not punt until 5:43 remained in the game, and the Colts also made infrequent use of blitzes, which creates other questions.

    What we learned about the QB today: Anthony Richardson has shown in two of his past three games that he can show up big in the fourth quarter. He has now led game-winning drives against the Jets and Patriots. And in both of those games, his powerful running was a factor — a game-winning TD run against New York and a 2-point conversion run against New England. — Stephen Holder

    Next game: at Broncos (Dec. 15, 4:25 p.m. ET)


    Patriots

    Did the Patriots squander their best chance to win a game the rest of the season? This is a heartbreaking result for the Patriots, who had a chance to match last season’s win total (four) and instead couldn’t stop the Colts on a 19-play drive that resulted in a game-winning touchdown and 2-point conversion with 12 seconds remaining. Now they go into their bye before road games against the Cardinals and Bills. Then, they have home games against the Chargers and Bills. So yes, this was absolutely their most winnable game the rest of the way.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Red zone offense. The Patriots scored just two touchdowns in six trips inside the 20-yard line, which included an interception when a tight-window goal-line throw bounced off of veteran tight end Hunter Henry. Joey Slye also missed a 25-yard field goal.

    Eye-popping stat: Drake Maye’s 41-yard run in the first quarter is the second longest by a Patriots quarterback over the past 25 seasons, trailing only Cam Newton’s 49-yard run against the Jets in Week 17 of 2021. He reached a speed of 19.4 mph, per NFL Next Gen Stats, which is his second-fastest scramble this season. — Mike Reiss

    Next game: at Cardinals (Dec. 15, 4:25 p.m. ET)

    Chargers

    Should the Chargers be concerned about their offensive line? Entering Sunday, Atlanta’s 10 sacks were seven fewer than the next-closest team’s (the Panthers). But against the Chargers, the Falcons dominated the Chargers’ offensive line, sacking quarterback Justin Herbert five times. That’s the second-most sacks he’s taken in a game this season. Herbert has been sacked nine times over the past two games, which is a point of concern for Los Angeles as it tries to make a push for the AFC playoffs.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Rushing offense. With running back J.K. Dobbins (MCL sprain) on injured reserve, the Chargers’ rushing offense stalled and was ineffective Sunday. Running backs Gus Edwards and Kimani Vidal combined for just 52 yards, and Hassan Haskins fumbled on his only carry of the game.

    Most surprising performance: Cornerback Tarheeb Still. The fifth-round rookie finished with two interceptions, including one he returned for a 61-yard touchdown. Still became the first Chargers rookie with multiple interceptions in a game since cornerback John Hendy, who did it in 1985. He has three interceptions in total. — Kris Rhim

    Next game: at Chiefs (Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET)


    Falcons

    Can quarterback Kirk Cousins rebound from three straight poor performances to lead the Falcons to the playoffs? Atlanta went into its bye worried about a defense that gave up 38 points to the Broncos in Week 11. Now, the big concern is at quarterback. Cousins had four interceptions Sunday — his most in 10 years — and has not thrown a touchdown pass since Week 9. The NFC South title that once seemed like a lock could slip away. Cousins and the Falcons’ coaching staff need to figure out what’s going wrong before it’s too late.

    Most surprising performance: The Falcons’ pass rush, the worst in the NFL, came to play Sunday. Atlanta had five sacks, its most since Week 16 of 2023. It came into the game with a league-worst 10 sacks and had a combined five in the past six games. Linebacker Arnold Ebiketie had a breakout game with a pair of sacks.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: It was a main point during the bye week that the Falcons become more efficient in the red zone. That did not come to fruition. Atlanta was 1-of-4 inside the 20, including a missed field goal by Younghoe Koo and a costly fourth-quarter interception by Cousins. Koo is now 50% on field goals since Week 7. — Marc Raimondi

    Next game: at Vikings (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:25

    Kirk Cousins’ fourth INT doom Falcons to third straight loss

    Derwin James Jr. picks Kirk Cousins on a pass over the middle, the QB’s fourth interception of the game to seal a Falcons loss.

    Chiefs

    Should the Chiefs be concerned about their inability to finish off the Raiders and (last week) the Panthers? In a word, yes. It’s one thing to have to go deep into the fourth quarter to outlast two of the NFL’s worst teams. But the Chiefs had sizable leads on both. They led the Raiders by 13 points late in the third quarter, this after holding a 14-point edge against the Panthers in the first half. This doesn’t bode well for the playoffs, when the competition gets much tougher.

    Early prediction for next week: Newly signed D.J. Humphries will start at left tackle next week against the Chargers. Wanya Morris, who started against the Raiders, played so poorly that he was benched. Rookie Kingsley Suamataia, who began the season as the starting left tackle, isn’t an option. He, too, was benched earlier in the season.

    Eye-popping stat: Patrick Mahomes’ second-quarter touchdown pass to Justin Watson had a completion probability of 26.6%, according to Next Gen Stats. That’s his lowest completion probability on a touchdown pass since 2021, a fourth-quarter TD to Darrel Williams in Week 10 against the Raiders (22%). — Adam Teicher

    Next game: vs. Chargers (Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET)


    Raiders

    Are the Raiders the worst team in football? Not after the scare they threw into the two-time defending Super Bowl champs. Raiders coach Antonio Pierce got tongues wagging when he acknowledged the narrative that the Black Friday game was “the best team in football against the worst team in football.” And yes, the Raiders, having lost their eighth straight game, are tied with the Giants for the worst record in the NFL at 2-10. And if you are what your record says you are, well, that should settle the debate, right? Yet, few staffs could win with the Raiders’ injury-plagued roster and QB struggles. Las Vegas, heading to Tampa Bay, is playing for more than pride with elite talents in defensive end Maxx Crosby, tight end Brock Bowers and punter AJ Cole.

    Describe the game in two words: Not enough. The Chiefs were simply too deep and too good for the weary and injured Raiders, who were game but just did not have enough to pull off a second consecutive holiday week upset in Kansas City.

    What we learned about the QB today: Aidan O’Connell is who we thought he was. Making his first appearance since breaking the thumb on his right (passing) hand Oct. 20, O’Connell was comfortable in the pocket and throwing deep but also displayed his trademark lack of mobility. He passed for 340 yards, completing 23 of 35 passes, but took 3 sacks, including one that knocked the Raiders out of field goal range. He outplayed Mahomes, though, on this day. — Paul Gutierrez

    Next game: at Buccaneers (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Packers

    Exactly how good are the Packers? We’re about to find out when they go to Detroit to face the NFC North-leading Lions on Thursday night, but the last time the two teams met it was a major mismatch, with the Lions jumping out to a 24-3 lead and never really looking back. Even if the Packers can’t catch Detroit or the Vikings — they still have to go to Minnesota in Week 17 — they look like a dangerous team. This much we know: The NFC North now has three teams with at least nine wins: Detroit (11-1), Minnesota (9-2) and Green Bay (9-3). It’s the first division to have three nine-win teams through Week 13 since the AFC East in 1985.

    Describe the game in two words: Jacobs again. A week after Josh Jacobs dominated the 49ers on the ground, the running back showed he can do it as a receiver out of the backfield, too. While he was held to 43 yards rushing on 19 carries (with a 1-yard touchdown), he caught four passes for 74 yards — including a 49-yard catch-and-run on a dump-off pass that wound up as the longest reception of his career. The Packers might keep riding Jacobs as far as he can take them.

    What we learned about the QB today: Maybe Jordan Love has fixed his interception issues. It was his second straight game without a pick after throwing at least one in his first eight games of the season, and unlike the previous game against the 49ers when he was nearly picked off several times, this time Love did not put the ball in harm’s way. He finished 21-of-28 for 274 yards and two touchdowns. — Rob Demovsky

    Next game: at Lions (Thursday, 8:15 p.m. ET)


    Dolphins

    What does this loss do to the Dolphins’ playoff chances? It certainly doesn’t help, but they’re not mathematically out of the running just yet. The goal after a 2-6 start should have been to return to a .500 record as quickly as possible; Miami could still do so with wins against the New York Jets and Houston Texans over the next two weeks. The Dolphins will likely have to win their final three games of the season against the San Francisco 49ers, Cleveland Browns and Jets — none of whom is playing well. Playoffs are still possible, but this season is on life support.

    Describe the game in two words: Wake up. The Dolphins sleepwalked through the first half and were thoroughly beaten down by a Packers team that came ready to play. Miami outscored Green Bay 14-6 in the second half, but it was far too little, far too late.

    Eye-popping stat: According to NFL Next Gen Stats, the Dolphins missed 20 tackles, directly leading to 132 additional yards for Green Bay — which finished with 388 yards of offense. Miami appeared unwilling to tackle a physical Packers team for most of the game, and it showed on the stat sheet. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

    Next game: vs. Jets (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Cowboys

    Has the Cowboys’ defense taken a turn for the better? After a slow start in Mike Zimmer’s first year as defensive coordinator, the unit has put together some of its best work recently. The Giants are not exactly the best of measuring sticks, starting their third quarterback of the year, Drew Lock, on Thursday, but there are positive signs. The Cowboys had two more takeaways, including a pick-six by DeMarvion Overshown. After New York gained 70 yards on its first drive, it got just 33 yards on its next 21 plays in the first half. The true test for the defense, however, comes Dec. 9 against the Cincinnati Bengals with Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins.

    What we learned about the QB today: Four days after an efficient performance against Washington, Cooper Rush was more erratic, especially in the second quarter, when he completed just 5 of 14 passes for 52 yards. He rebounded with a third-quarter touchdown pass, but a lost fumble was overturned because of replay and he had a botched handoff with Rico Dowdle that he was able to recover. But Rush did not give the ball away for a second straight game, which is what matters most to Mike McCarthy.

    Most surprising performance: It has been trending in this direction recently, but the Cowboys had their first running back go for more than 100 yards since Week 3 last year as Rico Dowdle picked up 112 yards, a career high, on 22 carries. He also scored his first rushing touchdown of the season and had a season-long 22-yard run in the first half. The last time a Cowboys running back went for more than 100 yards was Tony Pollard against Arizona in 2023. The 26-game span was the longest 100-yard game drought in franchise history. — Todd Archer

    Next game: vs. Bengals (Monday, Dec. 9, 8:15 p.m. ET)


    Giants

    How hot is the seat getting for Brian Daboll after seven straight losses and a second straight blowout? Scorching. It doesn’t matter if owner John Mara gave him vote of confidence last month. The Giants haven’t won since. And they aren’t just losing (seven straight now), they’re getting embarrassed, this time on national TV. Daboll is running out of excuses. It’s no longer Daniel Jones’ fault. The results were similar — or worse — with Tommy DeVito, and then with Drew Lock in this one. Daboll and the Giants are 8-21 since the start of last season.

    What we learned about the QB today: It’s not Lock’s fault. He made some mistakes, but he also never really stood a chance. Lock took 13 quarterback hits and six sacks while throwing for 172 yards with an interception and a fumble, to go along with 57 rush yards and a touchdown on the ground. The results with Lock looked similar to those with Jones and DeVito. The Giants’ problems go well beyond just the quarterback.

    Eye-popping stat: 0 INTs in 11 games. The defense’s 11 games without a pick sets an NFL record. Its only interception this season came by rookie linebacker Darius Muasau on a tipped ball in Week 1. It’s almost hard to imagine that a ball hasn’t clanked off a receiver and fallen accidentally into a defensive back’s arms this season. — Jordan Raanan

    Next game: vs. Saints (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Lions

    Will the Lions target tight end Sam LaPorta more going forward? It depends on the matchup and situation. With so many offensive weapons in Detroit, it’s almost pick your poison. LaPorta didn’t reach his second receiving touchdown this season until Week 8 versus the Tennessee Titans. However, he connected with Goff for two touchdowns versus the Bears. LaPorta has 15 receiving touchdowns over the past two seasons. That’s the most by any tight end over that span, per ESPN Research.

    Most surprising performance: The Lions’ running game. Thursday was first time this season Detroit failed to score a rushing touchdown. The Lions had scored one in 25 straight games — including the playoffs — which is the longest streak in NFL history. Running backs Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery combined for 175 rushing yards against Chicago.

    Early prediction for next week: Lions kicker Jake Bates won’t miss a field goal. Against the Bears, Bates missed a 45-yarder in the fourth quarter. The Lions had been the only team in the NFL to not miss a field goal this season, as Bates was 19-for-19 to start his career, including game winners at Week 7 in Minnesota and Week 10 at Houston. — Eric Woodyard

    Next game: vs. Packers (Thursday, 8:15 p.m. ET)


    Bears

    Can Bears coach Matt Eberflus survive this loss? Eberflus defended the Bears’ disastrous clock management that led to their sixth straight loss and solidified his 5-19 record in one-score games, which is the worst by any coach with at least 20 such games in NFL history. Whether it’s a tipped Hail Mary, blocked game-winning field goal attempt, losing on a field goal in overtime or letting a timeout go to waste in Detroit, the Bears continue to find confounding ways to get beaten. Late-game decisions continue to squander quarterback Caleb Williams’ efforts to put his team in position to win, which ultimately falls on the head coach. (Note: Eberflus was fired Friday, with offensive coordinator Thomas Brown elevated to interim head coach).

    Describe the game in two words: Furious comeback. The Bears turned a first-half shutout and 16-point deficit into a three-point game that they were in position to tie or win outright in the final 36 seconds. Williams led the Bears on three touchdown drives in the second half as the Chicago defense held the Lions to one touchdown after allowing nearly 6 yards per play in the first half.

    What we learned about the QB today: In the second half, Williams converted in nearly every category he struggled with in the first half. He was 8-for-11 on passes outside of the numbers (0-for-7 in first half), 4-for-7 on passes with at least 15 air yards (0-for-6 in first half), 5-for-8 on third down (0-for-6) and 3-for-5 on throws when pressured (0-for-3). The quarterback set a single-season rookie franchise record at 15 touchdown passes. — Courtney Cronin

    Next game: at 49ers (Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET)

  • College football Week 14 highlights – top plays, games, takeaways

    We all have baggage. It’s the cost we pay for choices made, experiences endured, a life lived. For some, it might be the girl who got away. Maybe it’s the job they didn’t get. Or perhaps it’s the time you pretended to pee like a dog in the end zone during an Egg Bowl. The point is, to live life to its fullest is to understand that regret is part of the package.

    The good news, however, is there is always a chance to do better, to set down that baggage and find something approaching redemption.

    That’s what Saturday was supposed to be about for Ryan Day, Mario Cristobal and Dabo Swinney. Week 14 was going to be a redemption story. Instead, the college football gods delivered misery.

    Well, unless you’re a Michigan fan. Then it was all comedy.

    A quick accounting of where things began Saturday.

    It had been 1,442 days since Clemson made a College Football Playoff, but with a win against South Carolina, the Tigers would’ve been poised to squeeze into the first 12-team postseason and erase years of doubts about Swinney’s ability to win in the modern era of college football.

    It had been 1,828 days since Ohio State beat Michigan, but on Saturday, the odds were stacked so heavily in the Buckeyes’ favor, any other result was unfathomable. This was an Ohio State roster as talented as any in program history and a Michigan team put together with duct tape and glue sticks.

    It had been 7,672 days since Miami won a conference championship. But the Hurricanes spent this season as the class of the ACC, finally living up to the immense expectations that have followed the program since its glory years, even if Miami has spent the past 20 years as college football’s version of U2 — still releasing new work, but effectively just a nostalgia act.

    It’s tough to say how many days it had been since Cristobal properly handled a late-game scenario since you can’t divide by zero.

    Week 14 didn’t promise to erase every blemish, forgive every sin or rewrite history for anyone, but it offered a bridge to somewhere better, some new timeline in which Day isn’t defined by a single game each year against his rival, Swinney isn’t lamented as an old man yelling at clouds and someone under the age of 40 can remember a time in which Miami mattered.

    And on Saturday, Ohio State, Clemson and Miami saw those bridges and opted to light a flamethrower.

    It’s hard to say exactly where things went wrong for Day and the Buckeyes in an excruciating 13-10 loss to Michigan. The slow starts have been a signature of 2024, the result of a team that knows it’s good enough to flip a switch or, perhaps, a result of so many noon kickoffs that even Gus Johnson’s voice started to go awry.

    It’s certainly not on Day that Will Howard threw two brutal interceptions, that Jayden Fielding missed two short kicks or that Sherrone Moore opened his desk drawer Saturday morning to find a manila envelope marked, “For Your Eyes Only, Love and Kisses, C. Stalions.” But Day knew the stakes before the season began, and Ohio State spent enough money on this roster to finish third in the American League East, and Michigan was missing two potential first-round NFL draft picks, and it still didn’t matter. The Wolverines managed just 62 yards passing, threw two interceptions, had three different drives inside the Ohio State 5 that didn’t end in touchdowns and still won. There are no logical explanations for this, so it’s fair then to move to the next closest thing: Day is a Michigan sleeper cell installed as head coach in Columbus just to infuriate the Ohio State faithful in some sort of elaborate “Manchurian Candidate” scenario.

    Regardless, the game ended with a loss, with a brawl, with police intervening and pepper-spraying players, but no amount of mace could burn away the images of the Wolverines celebrating on Ohio State’s field in what may well be the most devastating loss in the rivalry’s history.

    At Clemson, there’s similar frustration with a coach who has won enough to have a long leash, but has also climbed far enough out on a limb to endure the slings and arrows of fans and pundits and the occasional radio caller with some valid points but limited self-awareness.

    Clemson has had so many chances in 2024. After being blown out in the opener against Georgia, the tide turned back in the Tigers’ favor amid a six-game winning streak. After a home loss to Louisville, the Tigers clawed their way back up the rankings, thanks in large part to attrition ahead of them, and found themselves as the first team out entering Saturday’s game, with a chance for a signature win — it would’ve been Clemson’s only decent win this year — against red-hot South Carolina. The playoff was within sight, but only if you could see past the imposing figure of LaNorris Sellers.

    Clemson led by four with less than two minutes to play, but the Tigers’ defense never had an answer for Sellers. He threw for 164 yards, ran for 166 and scored twice, including a 20-yard run on a third-and-16 with just 1:08 to play to give the Gamecocks a 17-14 lead.

    The Tigers had their shot to win — or at least send the game to overtime — but Cade Klubnik’s checkdown throw with 16 seconds left nicked off Phil Mafah’s hands and was picked off by Demetrius Knight Jr.

    play

    0:42

    South Carolina comes up with game-sealing INT vs. Clemson

    South Carolina corrals the tipped pass and secures possession to seal its win over Clemson.

    This marks the second time in three years Clemson had a realistic shot at the playoff, only to lose late to rival South Carolina.

    Afterward, Shane Beamer gushed over the play of his quarterback and the resurgence of his team, which was 3-3 in mid-October but is now arguably the hottest team in the country. Beamer insisted South Carolina was a playoff team, and it may well be, but the decision by the committee won’t be easy. South Carolina entered the week ranked behind Alabama and Ole Miss, both of whom won in Week 14 to move to 9-3, and both of whom have head-to-head wins over the Gamecocks.

    Perhaps ironically, it’s Clemson that remains in control of its own playoff destiny after Saturday’s disaster, and the Tigers can thank Cristobal for that.

    All Miami had to do Saturday was knock off Syracuse, and it could punch its ticket — to the ACC title game and to the College Football Playoff. The Hurricanes even jumped out to a 21-0 lead, which should’ve been an insurmountable margin with Cam Ward on their side.

    And yet, this is Miami — a program that flirts with disaster like it has had a half-dozen shots of Fireball and defeat is waiting tables at the Waffle House.

    Syracuse turned its 21-0 deficit into a 35-28 lead entering the fourth quarter before Miami fought back to tie the game. But the Canes’ defense has been a red flag all year, and on Saturday, it had no answers for Kyle McCord, who threw for 380 yards and three touchdowns (and didn’t lose to Michigan).

    McCord engineered a nine-play touchdown drive to put Syracuse up 42-35, but that still afforded Ward and the Canes more than nine minutes to match.

    All of that should’ve just been prelude to another Miami win, because Ward was once again exceptional. And yet, this is Miami, where playoff hopes spend too much time on South Beach and wake up looking like the Pop Tarts Bowl.

    Ward engineered a 13-play drive, setting up Miami with a first-and-goal at the Syracuse 8, but then things went haywire. An unsportsmanlike penalty pushed the Canes back, and a Ward completion and scramble set up a fourth-and-goal at the 15.

    That left Cristobal with a decision: Put the game in the hands of the best quarterback to ever wear a Miami uniform or, with 3:42 remaining, kick a field goal and leave it up to your defense that has served as a maître d’ for Syracuse receivers the entire game.

    Cristobal chose pain.

    The rest was entirely predictable. Syracuse picked up three first downs and ran out the clock to move to 9-3, a playoff team in its own right had it not imploded against a woeful Stanford team back in September. Miami ceded its spot in the ACC championship to Clemson, may have lost its spot in the College Football Playoff and reminded the world that, even when U2 gives you its new album for free, it’s best to just go ahead and delete it and move on with your life.

    And so Week 14 ended without redemption for those most in need of a second act. It ended with Clemson flubbing its best hopes, then being handed another just because the football gods enjoy seeing Swinney’s optimism squashed. It ended with Miami closer to its past than it had been in decades, yet still so far from those glory years that the world rolls its eyes every time the conversation comes up again. And it ended with Ohio State fighting Michigan, handing its conference title shot to Penn State and catching strays from Texas.

    The college football gods can be cruel, and while redemption is always within our reach, days like Saturday also remind us that our reach often exceeds our grasp, and redemption slips through our fingers for a backbreaking interception far more easily than we care to imagine.

    Maybe Ohio State still makes the playoff and goes on a run.

    Maybe Miami does the same.

    Maybe Clemson takes its good fortune to be in the ACC title game and turns that into a playoff berth of its own.

    Maybe.

    So we’ll carry the baggage a little further, in spite of all the grief and hurt and anguish. Even if redemption remains painfully beyond our grasp, the price of admission is still worth it.

    Jump to:
    Irish finish strong | Texas reaches SECCG
    Rivalry watch | Ducks dynasty
    Cyclones in Big 12 title game | Pack go bowling
    Herd win | Trends
    Heisman five | Under the radar

    Irish finish strong

    Jadarian Price came on in relief of an injured Jeremiyah Love and finished with 111 yards and a touchdown on 12 carries, while Xavier Watts (100 yards) and Christian Gray (99) each had long pick-sixes in the fourth quarter to lead Notre Dame to a 49-35 win over USC that should lock up a home game in the opening round of the playoff for the Irish.

    play

    0:50

    Notre Dame’s defense steps up for two massive pick-sixes

    Notre Dame’s defense returns a 99-yard pick-six and a 100-yard pick-six in the fourth quarter.

    USC finishes the regular season at 6-6, and it has now lost 11 of its past 19 games — a track record that would’ve meant past coaches needed an Uber home from the airport tarmac. USC QBs had 12 interceptions this season, one more than the Trojans accounted for in Lincoln Riley’s first two seasons there combined. Notre Dame has also now won six of the past seven games in the rivalry.

    On the victorious side, the Irish have now won 10 straight after a disastrous loss to Northern Illinois in Week 2 that seems more like some sort of Tyrone Willingham-era fever dream in retrospect. Notre Dame has averaged 44 points and nearly 240 rushing yards per game during that stretch.


    Horns ride to SECCG

    After 13 years, the Texas-Texas A&M rivalry is back. Someone should let the Aggies know.

    Quinn Ewers threw for 218 yards and a touchdown, Quintrevion Wisner ran for 186, and the Texas defense dominated in a 17-7 win over the Aggies that punches the Longhorns’ ticket to a rematch with Georgia in the SEC championship game.

    The game had many of the familiar tones of the old rivalry, from the raucous Aggie Yell on Friday night to the traditional Texas fan ride into the game atop a bull while holding a dog. (Don’t get us started on Austin traffic. It’s a circus.)

    Still, it had to be a frustrating outcome for the Aggies, who had a chance to draw to within one score late, but opted to go for it on fourth down at the Texas 1, only to be stuffed.

    Texas is like the rich, successful high school friend who comes into town for a visit and guilts you into inviting him to a party, only for all your friends to love him while you sit in the corner eating Cheetos. After 14 years in the SEC, Texas A&M still hasn’t made a conference championship game, while Texas is now headed to Atlanta in Year 1. Still, Cheetos are delicious.

    The bigger question for the Longhorns now is whether they’ve figured out any way to block Georgia’s pass rush since the Bulldogs eviscerated the Horns’ front in a 30-15 UGA win on Oct. 19. Even with a loss, Texas likely hosts a home game in Round 1 of the playoff, but it would be a blow for championship hopes to lose for a second time to Georgia.


    Rivalry watch

    Florida State has been arguing for weeks to throw out the records, but it’s not until Week 14 that we can officially do it. It was rivalry week, which meant major drama and offseason bragging rights across the country. Here’s how it played out.

    Clean Old-Fashioned Hate

    What was at stake: Georgia had a 30-game home winning streak on the line and appeared poised to make the 12-team playoff with a win. Georgia Tech was looking to remind anyone outside metro Atlanta it still had a football program.

    Controversies: Officials appeared to miss a number of key calls that helped Georgia, including a possible red zone fumble, a possible tipped ball that would’ve negated a critical defensive pass interference flag, a possible targeting on a Haynes King fumble that likely cost Tech the game, an egregious hold before a Georgia overtime score and Kirby Smart’s unconventional use of a Ford F-350 at fullback. Perhaps worst of all, by the time the teams had finished with eight overtimes, The Varsity was closed and the Jackets couldn’t get chili dogs like Brent Key had promised if everybody tried their best.

    End result: The two QBs were electric, with King throwing for 303 yards, rushing for 110 and accounting for five touchdowns. Carson Beck topped 300 yards of offense, and he tossed five touchdowns. Ultimately, it came down to 2-point tries, as Georgia cashed in on a Nate Frazier run in the eighth overtime session to secure a 44-42 win. The game underscores why college football should revisit its OT rules, which require dueling 2-point tries after the second frame. Instead, we recommend 2-point tries in the third OT, a pie eating contest in the fourth, a rock-paper-scissors competition between the coaches at midfield for the fifth, the QBs taking turns attempting to explain the ending of “Inception” in the sixth, Jimbo Fisher’s nephew wrestling each team’s recruiting coordinator in the seventh, and then it moves to a best-of-three “Eeny, meeny, miny, moe” with full “my mother” addendums in use.

    Iron Bowl

    What was at stake: Alabama hoped to keep its playoff hopes alive with a win. Auburn hoped to secure a bowl bid with a win. Finebaum callers hoped to call for everyone to be fired on both sides.

    Controversies: Alabama won, but if this was its statement to the committee, it was hardly an emphatic one. The Tide turned the ball over four times — though Auburn turned those takeaways into just six points — meaning the committee will have to dive back into the secret file marked “How to explain why you’re putting Alabama into the playoff again this time” before releasing the final rankings next weekend.

    End result: Jalen Milroe accounted for 360 yards and three rushing touchdowns, and the Tide D held Jarquez Hunter to just 56 yards in the 28-14 win, their fifth straight in the Iron Bowl. The win helps take some heat off Kalen DeBoer, who has suffered some ignominious losses in his debut season. Auburn, on the other hand, has now finished with a losing record in four straight years (and hasn’t won more than six since 2019), something Hugh Freeze chalked up to an unfortunate combination of his players doing dumb things and him being too good at his job to properly connect with players who can’t appreciate his genius.

    Territorial Cup

    What was at stake: Arizona State could secure a trip to the Big 12 title game with a win (with a little assistance elsewhere), while Arizona could attempt to prevent this game being played and instead just show highlights of last season.

    Controversies: In true “Anchorman” fashion, things escalated quickly: Arizona State scored 49, Sam Leavitt threw three touchdowns, and the Sun Devils murdered the rivalry with a trident.

    End result: Kenny Dillingham has as good a claim for coach of the year as anyone in the country after turning this program around so quickly. The 49-7 win was a resounding finish to a 10-2 season, and while the committee has yet to truly appreciate the Sun Devils’ résumé, it’s more than worth consideration with or without the conference championship. Arizona State’s two losses came by a combined 18 points. One came without its starting QB. It has three wins over ranked (at game time) opponents. It has won five straight. It’s hard to argue there are 12 teams playing better football today than the Sun Devils.

    Egg Bowl

    What was at stake: Ole Miss still had flickering playoff hopes if enough chaos happened higher in the rankings. Mississippi State was hoping to avoid a winless season in the SEC. The good news for the Bulldogs, though, is they could still finish with eight quality losses to remain on the committee’s radar.

    Controversies: No coach took the field riding an ATV, and no players celebrated a touchdown by mimicking a dog introducing itself to a fire hydrant. Seriously, if no one’s going to give the opposing kicker a wedgie after an extra point, why even bother playing this rivalry game?

    End result: Mississippi State led 14-10 at the end of the first quarter, but the Bulldogs couldn’t find any offense beyond that. Ulysses Bentley IV ran for 136 yards and a score, and Ole Miss survived 26-14. A month ago, it would’ve been inconceivable Lane Kiffin wasn’t either taking the Florida job or prepping for the playoff on Dec. 1. Instead, he’ll just be doing what so many of us will be doing this week: resodding his lawn after Charlie Weis Jr.’s ill-fated attempt to deep-fry a turkey.

    Governor’s Cup

    What was at stake: Louisville was looking to snap a five-game losing streak against Kentucky while also securing the position of “second ACC team that blew a shot at the playoff by losing to Stanford.”

    Controversies: Ale 8 is a mediocre ginger ale. There, we said it.

    End result: Isaac Brown led the charge with 178 rushing yards and a pair of scores in the Cards’ 41-14 win. One of the nation’s top freshmen, Brown ends the regular season with 1,074 rushing yards, 12 total touchdowns, nearly 1,500 all-purpose yards and a solid fourth-place finish in the Kentucky Oaks.

    Florida-FSU

    What was at stake: Florida could finish with seven wins and a rivalry win for the first time since 2021. Florida State was hoping that maybe this whole season was just a dream and it would wake up to find a healthy Jordan Travis ready to take on the Gators in November 2023.

    Controversies: After demoralizing Florida State on the field, Florida tried to mark its territory, much to Mike Norvell’s displeasure.

    play

    0:49

    Norvell initially snubs Napier’s handshake as FSU-Florida get into it

    FSU coach Mike Norvell initially avoids shaking Florida coach Billy Napier’s hand after the Gators plant their flag in the middle of the Seminoles’ logo at the game’s conclusion.

    End result: Florida State’s season began 100 days ago, 4,000 miles across the Atlantic with a top-10 ranking and big expectations. Florida’s season began a week later with an emphatic loss to Miami and an assumption that head coach Billy Napier would be fired. What a difference a college football season makes. Florida’s defense held FSU to just 239 yards and won 31-11 behind two touchdowns from DJ Lagway. The Gators finished the regular season 7-5 with Napier’s job secured for 2025. Florida State can now turn its attention back to its real passion: lawsuits.

    Fremont Cannon

    What was at stake: UNLV’s faint playoff hopes still flickered, with a win putting the Rebels into the Mountain West championship game. Also the winner got tickets to see Cher at the Bellagio.

    Controversies: Remember when UNLV’s quarterback quit because he wanted money the school hadn’t paid and then UNLV just inserted another quarterback who was much better? The lesson: The house always wins.

    End result: Hajj-Malik Williams threw for 168 and ran for 135, accounting for three touchdowns in the 38-14 win over Nevada. The Rebels are now 10-2 with a rematch against Boise State pending and a playoff berth on the line.

    The Commonwealth Cup

    What was at stake: Both teams would be bowl-bound with a win and also get access to the loser’s beach house in Virginia Beach. It’s three blocks off the beach, but there’s a corn hole set in the back storage shed.

    Controversies: Virginia Tech was playing without its top two quarterbacks, while Virginia was playing without any real hopes of ever getting the upper hand in this rivalry.

    End result: Pop Watson threw for 254 yards and tallied two touchdowns while Bhayshul Tuten ran for 124 yards and two scores in Virginia Tech’s 37-17 win. The Hokies will go bowling and won the Commonwealth Cup for the 23rd time in the past 25 tries, but they also feel sort of like that meme of the guy ignoring his girlfriend to look at another girl who might look a lot like Shane Beamer.

    Old Oaken Bucket

    What was at stake: Indiana needed the win to effectively lock up its place in the College Football Playoff. Purdue was hopeful to make the game worth skipping a “MythBusters” marathon in order to play.

    Controversies: Indiana is poised to make the playoff, despite Purdue somehow being only the fourth-worst team the Hoosiers have played this year, just ahead of Charlotte and just behind the Muncie Boy Scout Troop No. 214.

    End result: Kurtis Rourke threw for 349 yards and six touchdowns, while Purdue threw for 54 yards and two interceptions. This would be embarrassing for Purdue if everyone wasn’t already focused on basketball season.

    Battle on the Bayou

    What was at stake: Louisiana could lock up a 10-win season and a berth in the Sun Belt championship, while Louisiana-Monroe needed a win to get bowl eligible. Also, the loser has to let Louisiana Tech crash on their couch this offseason.

    Controversies: Why does Louisiana get to drop the Lafayette and just go by the state name, but ULM has to keep the Monroe? This game should really decide who gets to be “Louisiana” each year and the other school has to go by ULM or ULL.

    End result: Zylan Perry rushed for 150 yards and two scores, and the Ragin’ Cajuns’ D picked off three passes in a 37-23 win. For ULM, it’s a frustrating finish to a season that started with the Warhawks at 5-1 but ended on a six-game losing streak.


    Ducks dynasty

    The No. 1 team in the country may also be the least interesting at this point.

    Oregon won again Saturday, 49-21 against Washington, to finish the regular season at 12-0. Yawn.

    Since their dramatic 32-31 win over Ohio State on Oct. 12, the Ducks have basically been the work-from-home guy who was told he had to start going into the office again. They show up, swipe their badge, grab a coffee, say hello to Denise in accounts receivable, Dillon Gabriel throws a couple touchdowns, then they’re home in time for “The View.”

    So it was Saturday, with Gabriel accounting for three touchdowns, Jordan James running for 99 yards and the defense holding Washington to 244 yards while racking up 10 sacks and 16 tackles for loss. The 10 sacks in this game were more than rival Oregon State has all season, which should be a fun fact for Ducks fans to bring up with Beavers fans this holiday season.

    Oregon now gets Penn State in the Big Ten title game, a result of Ohio State’s implosion against Michigan.

    The Nittany Lions had no trouble with Maryland, earning a dominant 44-7 win capped by a 15-yard touchdown pass with no time left on the clock that riled Mike Locksley.

    It may have been a bit of showmanship by Penn State, but on the other hand, if James Franklin had blindfolded his QB, handed him a football, spun him around a dozen times and sent him on his way, he still might’ve scored on this Maryland defense.

    The question now is whether Penn State can give Oregon a real game after the Ducks have won five of their past six by at least 20 points. Franklin’s record in big games against top-10 opponents is probably something someone should look up before the game. There might be a story there.


    Cyclones land title game berth

    Iowa State is headed to the Big 12 championship game, possibly due to a 29-21 win over Kansas State on Saturday but likely because people are out to get Deion Sanders.

    Rocco Becht accounted for three touchdowns in the win over the Wildcats, and combined with BYU’s 30-18 victory over Houston, the Cyclones locked up a shot to play Arizona State for what is almost certainly the league’s only playoff bid.

    That leaves Coach Prime and the Colorado on the outside looking in, which is a real slap in the face. First, voters snubbed Travis Hunter for the Thorpe Award and suggest Ashton Jeanty could still win the Heisman. Then they refused to give Hunter a second Michelin star despite his exquisite take on a deconstructed duck confit. And now this. When will the bias end?


    Pack go bowling

    play

    1:18

    Tempers flare as NC State attempts to plant flag following win over UNC

    The end of NC State vs. North Carolina devolves into chaos as NC State players take offense to a Tar Heel player throwing their flag onto the ground.

    Hollywood Smothers ran for two touchdowns, including a 2-yarder with 25 seconds to play to secure a 35-30 win over North Carolina — NC State’s fourth straight in the rivalry — and bowl eligibility for the Wolfpack.

    Jacolby Criswell’s 47-yard touchdown throw to Omarion Hampton with 1:51 to play had given UNC a late lead, but the Wolfpack engineered a six-play, 75-yard drive for the win. Hampton finished with 185 rushing yards, 78 receiving yards and a pair of scores, putting the finishing touches on a season that would’ve had him in Heisman consideration if he played for anyone better than North Carolina.

    This was the possible farewell for Mack Brown, too. In his second tenure with the Heels, the school announced he would not be retained for 2025. This came after he threatened to quit after a miserable loss to JMU this season, then insisted he’d return earlier this week. Now, Brown will retire to a life of quiet solitude, where he’ll work on his memoirs and tend to his garden until a ragtag bunch of UNC boosters arrive at his door in the year 2039, insisting he come out of retirement for one last job, at which time Brown will tip back his cowboy hat, stare off into the middle distance, take a swig from a bottle with a skull on the label and, in a gravelly, world-weary voice, announce, “I’m in.”


    Herd rumbles past JMU

    Marshall was down 17-0 at halftime, but roared back for a 35-33 win over James Madison to claim sole possession of the Sun Belt East.

    Marshall managed just 261 yards in the game, 121 fewer than JMU, and the Dukes had an 11-minute edge in time of possession, but James Madison’s missed two-point try in the second overtime period proved to be the difference.

    Marshall’s lone conference loss came by a point to Georgia Southern, but it also lost to Virginia Tech, which is pretty embarrassing.

    The Thundering Herd will face Louisiana in the Sun Belt title game — though it won’t be until some time Sunday when computer composite rankings are tabulated before anyone knows who’s the home team, since the two teams didn’t play each other. The lack of a tie-breaker determined by a series of “Yo mama” jokes feels like a real missed opportunity for the Sun Belt.


    Regular-season vibe shifts

    We’ve reached the end of the regular season, and while each week has featured some seismic shifts in the college football landscape, some trends have simmered just beneath the surface. We’re looking back on those subtle, but significant, trend lines as we put a bow on 2024.

    Trending down: The Group of 5

    Week 14 began with the Group of 5 in position not only to steal a first-round playoff bye from the Big 12, but perhaps swipe a second playoff bid, too. Tulane checked in ranked ahead of all Big 12 teams except for Arizona State, but a trio of brutal turnovers deep in Memphis territory scuttled those playoff dreams. The Tigers topped the Green Wave 34-24, effectively ceding the Group of 5’s playoff bid to the Mountain West.

    Ultimately, that the Group of 5 missed out on a statement opportunity to swipe a bid from the Big 12 should come as no surprise. The rich continue to get richer in college football, and the line of demarcation has never been wider. Despite San José State’s win over Stanford on Friday, the non-autonomy schools finished with a woeful 9-88 record against the Power 4 in the regular season — easily the Group of 5’s worst performance in decades.

    Indeed, look back at the 2004-2013 era, just before the demise of the Big East, and teams outside the BCS conferences upended the big boys more than 22% of the time. From 2014 through 2021 — post realignment but before the effects of NIL and the portal were fully felt — these teams still won 20% of the time. Over the past three years though, the non-power schools have just a .153 win percentage against the Power 4/5.

    Trending up: Buying your way into a conference

    Turns out, coming in at a serious discount wasn’t such a bad move for schools desperate to find greener pastures in 2024.

    Oregon will enter championship weekend as the No. 1 overall team in the country, despite getting only about 40 cents on the dollar to play in the Big Ten, and SMU now looks like as close to a sure playoff team as the ACC is capable of producing after effectively electing to play in the ACC for free.

    The Mustangs knocked off fellow bargain-bin addition Cal, 38-6, on Saturday. Kevin Jennings threw for 225 yards and two scores, and Brashard Smith accounted for 134 yards from scrimmage and a pair of touchdowns.

    SMU is now poised to win an ACC title in its first year, while Miami — conference championship free since 2003! — watches, and it’s happened in large part because of Miami transfers like Smith, Jahfari Harvey and Elijah Roberts.

    And if Miami fans all weren’t already in their 16th straight hour of listening to house music at a club off A-1A, that might really bother some people.

    Trending up: Big 12 hot seats

    A month into the season, the hottest seat in the Big 12 was at Baylor, where Dave Aranda’s Bears were 2-4. But Baylor has now won six straight after Saturday’s 45-17 thumping of Kansas. QB Sawyer Robertson has blossomed into a star, tossing four TDs in the win. He has made 66% of his throws with 17 touchdown passes, 4 picks and nearly 1,600 yards passing during the win streak.

    Aranda’s job is safe, but other coaches are now feeling the heat.

    After UCF turned the ball over four times in a 28-14 loss to Utah, Gus Malzahn saw the writing on the wall and jumped ship to become the offensive coordinator at Florida State. Mixing Malzahn’s QB history with Florida State’s run of awful QB play by anyone not named Jordan Travis really sets the stage for transfer Thomas Castellanos to lead the country with 106 interceptions next year in Tallahassee.

    Meanwhile, West Virginia’s Neal Brown and Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy didn’t exactly end the 2024 season with fireworks.

    Gundy’s Cowboys were steamrolled by Colorado 52-0 on Friday, finishing the season 0-9 in Big 12 play. Gundy is an institution at Oklahoma State, and he’s the country’s second-longest-serving head coach, but this season’s implosion might be enough to convince both sides it’s time for a fresh start — like going to the barbershop and finally trimming away an out-of-style haircut and trying something completely new.

    Brown was on the hot seat entering 2023, but West Virginia finished a surprising 9-4, seemingly ending any speculation over Brown’s job security. But this season has been a bit of a step back, with an ugly loss to rival Pitt and a 52-15 trouncing in Saturday’s game against Texas Tech. West Virginia will go to a bowl, but the expectations were much higher this season.

    And then there’s Scott Satterfield at Cincinnati. The Bearcats fell to TCU 20-13 on Saturday, their fifth straight loss to finish 5-7 after a 5-2 start to the year. Cincinnati is now 8-16 under Satterfield, including a 4-14 mark in conference play.

    On the other hand, all could return and be in the Big 12 title game in 2025 because the entire conference is basically just like playing roulette at 4 a.m. at a riverboat casino in Shreveport. There is no logic to what’s happening, anyone can win big and everyone is sort of embarrassed to be there.

    Trending down: Goalpost theft

    Perhaps the most entertaining trend of the season has been fans celebrating with the theft of goalposts — from Georgia Tech fans bringing the goalposts to a campus pond, to Arizona State tearing down the goalposts, putting them back up when officials added time back onto the clock, then bringing them down again only to learn there’s no bodies of water in the desert in which to deposit them.

    But it was Tennessee and Vanderbilt who did the goalpost celebrations best in 2024.

    On Saturday, the two met with plenty on the line. Tennessee needed a win to all but lock up a playoff berth. Vandy needed a win to ensure a winning season for the first time since 2013.

    The Commodores jumped out to the early lead, but it was the Vols who celebrated when it was over. Nico Iamaleava threw four touchdowns, Dylan Sampson ran for 178 yards and Tennessee overcame an early deficit with a 36-23 win over Vanderbilt on Saturday.

    Tennessee, which was in a do-or-die situation entering Week 14, now may be poised to host a playoff game after losses by Ohio State and Miami.

    Sadly, Vols fans did not tear down the goalposts to celebrate the likely playoff bid, as making a big thing of beating Vanderbilt is like bragging about knowing all the words to “Shake It Off.” It’s nothing to be proud of, and it’s definitely going to hurt your reputation with the other dads. And no, this is not a personal story, so stop asking.

    Holding steady: Big Ten tradition

    This was supposed to be the year the Big Ten finally evolved into a conference with modern offenses. Wisconsin and Purdue had Air Raid coordinators, Penn State brought in Andy Kotelnicki to rejuvenate its attack, four teams arrived from the Pac-12 and Iowa installed a new game plan to replace Brian Ferentz’s playbook that was just 23 pages repeating the sentence, “What if punts?”

    So, how’d it go?

    Well, safe to say somewhere Ferentz is reenacting the Leo DiCaprio meme from “Once Upon a Time… In Hollywood,” pointing at his TV and yelling, “What if punts!”

    On Friday, Iowa won its eighth game of the season — one fewer than it had a year ago with Ferentz calling plays, in spite of scoring 120 more points — by beating Nebraska 13-10 with just five first downs and 164 total yards.

    Iowa completed eight passes, averaged 1.9 yards per rush, and may have paused the third quarter for a group nap time, and yet it still won because this is what the Big Ten is all about. Oh, and also because Nebraska accepted the Big Ten’s terms and conditions without reading them and didn’t realize it’s now permanently barred from winning a close game. The loss was the Huskers’ 23rd by a TD or less in the past four seasons.

    As for the rest of the league?

    Those Air Raid coordinators at Wisconsin and Purdue were both fired. The new Pac-12 teams all averaged fewer points per game in conference play in 2024 than 2023 and, cumulatively, averaged 10 fewer points per game in Big Ten play than they had in the Pac-12 in 2023. Penn State is headed to the Big Ten title game, but still failed to score an offensive TD against Ohio State and finished the regular season with 46 fewer points than it had last year.

    And all of these numbers add up to this: It’s not Ryan Day’s fault. This league just hates teams that try to score.

    Trending down: Postgame routines

    This season, we learned that Syracuse coach Fran Brown punishes himself after losses by refusing to shower because, as he noted, “washing is for winners.”

    We also learned that Oklahoma coach Brent Venables celebrated his win over Alabama by spending $94 at Taco Bell, an amount that we hope also included the colonoscopy.

    Sure, this forces us to ask several big questions.

    For one, had Syracuse lost to Miami on Saturday, would Brown have gone shower-free until the bowl game? Luckily, he didn’t need to answer that, as Syracuse prevailed 42-38 over Miami, moving to 9-3 in Brown’s first season as head coach. Had it not been for a brutal loss to Stanford, the Orange would have an intriguing playoff résumé, including two wins over ranked opponents and a trip to the ACC title game in the offing.

    Another: How much is too much money to spend at Taco Bell? Clearly $94 is too much, as the excessive beefy bean burritos had Venables off his game Saturday in Oklahoma’s 37-17 loss to LSU. After the game, Venables announced he would punish himself for the performance by consuming $1.99 worth of food from Arby’s.

    Trending up: Stadium naming rights

    Before the season kicked off, Pitbull bought the naming rights to Florida International’s home field, changing from its former name, “No, no, This is FIU; You’re Looking for FAU’s Stadium; Yeah, It’s About an Hour North, Just Take the Turnpike to 95 to Exit 48” Field.

    Turns out, it was a wise investment for Mr. 305. FIU toppled Middle Tennessee 35-24 on Saturday, moving to 4-2 on the year at Pitbull Stadium, while finishing 0-6 on the road.

    With this in mind, Kent State will be selling stadium naming rights to its stadium to its most iconic local musicians, Devo. Next season the Golden Flashes helmets will all just be those weird red Mayan-temple-shaped hats from the “Whip It” video.


    Heisman five

    The biggest question is whether more than two players need an invite to New York at this point. It’s a two-man race, and only one of them is going to get one last shot to impress voters before the award is handed out.

    1. Boise State RB Ashton Jeanty

    Four players have rushed for more yards in a season than Jeanty. Three of them won the Heisman. The one who didn’t — UCF’s Kevin Smith in 2007 — was the lone member of that list from outside the Power 5. If that’s the line of demarcation for Jeanty, that’s a shame. He went for 192 yards and three touchdowns against the No. 1 team in the country, so any suggestion that his numbers are the result of a weak schedule seem absurd. His worst game of the season came against his FCS opponent when he got just 11 carries. He has nine games of 150 yards or more. He has scored 29 touchdowns. He has Boise State not just poised for the playoff, but a first-round bye. No, he doesn’t also play cornerback, but he’d probably be pretty good at it if he did.

    2. Colorado WR/CB Travis Hunter

    After Friday’s 52-0 win against Oklahoma State, Deion Sanders said Hunter was the clear favorite to win the Heisman, and anyone who argued differently had an agenda. He has some valid points. Hunter finished Friday with 10 catches for 116 yards and three touchdowns, plus an interception, a tackle and two PBUs. What Hunter has done this season is otherworldly, something that has never been done in college football history. But he has played three defenses ranked among the top 50 in adjusted EPA per game this year (18 catches, 191 yards, no touchdowns) and faced just one opponent who was top 30 in passing EPA (Baylor). If we’re holding schedule against Jeanty, we should do the same for Hunter.

    3. Arizona State RB Cam Skattebo

    Skattebo finished Saturday’s blowout of Arizona with 21 carries for 177 yards and three touchdowns, giving him 1,866 scrimmage yards and 19 touchdowns this season. In the playoff era, the only other power conference player with 1,300 rush yards, 400 receiving yards and 19 total touchdowns in their first 12 games was Dalvin Cook in 2016. And because Skattebo missed a game, he’s actually done than in 11.

    4. Miami QB Cam Ward

    For much of the past month, Ward has been playing the Ralph Nader role in the two-man race for the Heisman between Jeanty and Hunter. Saturday’s loss to Syracuse probably dropped him to full Green Party status though. The long odds are hardly fair. Ward has been exceptional this season, and he was excellent again in Week 14, throwing for 349 yards and two scores, and if Cristobal had given him a shot on fourth-and-goal, he might’ve added another genuine Heisman moment to his résumé. Instead, he’ll probably getting an invite to New York, a dinner at Sbarro and a chance to watch Jeanty or Hunter accept the hardware.

    5. South Carolina QB LaNorris Sellers

    Sellers is 245 pounds of utter physics-defying ridiculousness, and he showed it again and again Saturday against Clemson, running for 166 yards and two touchdowns, including the game winner.

    Afterward, Shane Beamer insisted Sellers was “the best player in the country” and should be on anyone’s Heisman list. So, we’re obliging. But it’s not just bluster either. Take a look at this comparison.

    Past seven games:
    Ward: 5-2, 82.0 Total QBR, 66% completions, 20 touchdowns, three picks, 2,372 total yards
    Sellers: 6-1, 80.5 Total QBR, 68% completions, 19 touchdowns, four picks, 2,174 total yards

    His entrance into the discussion was a bit too late to win the Heisman, but he has made the season a heck of a lot more fun for the past two months.


    Under-the-radar play of the week

    Maalik Murphy screwed up the final play of regulation in Duke’s game against Wake Forest, but he and receiver Jordan Moore improvised a bit, turning a 5-yard route into a game-winning 39-yard touchdown with no time left on the clock, upending Wake Forest 23-17.

    The Blue Devils finished the game with five sacks and 11 tackles for loss, another stellar day for what has blossomed into one of the most aggressive defenses in the country.

    Duke finishes the regular season 9-3 with four wins vs. teams inside the state of North Carolina (Elon, UNC, NC State and Wake) in Manny Diaz’s first season in Durham.

    And if Cooper Flagg mentions any of this in his next news conference, Duke fans will be very excited to learn about it for the first time.


    Under-the-radar game of the week

    Like “Wicked,” Saturday’s Jacksonville State-Western Kentucky game was just three hours of backstory to set the stage for the more significant sequel.

    Unlike “Wicked,” this one actually had an exciting ending (though sadly it didn’t involve Rich Rodriguez belting out “Defying Gravity”).

    Caden Veltkamp, whose name sounds like he should be the heir to a family tuna-canning dynasty but is actually the QB at Western Kentucky, led a 10-play, 44-yard drive in the final two minutes, and Lucas Carneiro drilled a 50-yard field goal with three seconds remaining to secure a 19-17 win.

    play

    1:55

    Jacksonville State Gamecocks vs. Western Kentucky Hilltoppers: Full Highlights

    Jacksonville State Gamecocks vs. Western Kentucky Hilltoppers: Full Highlights

    That field goal secured WKU’s spot in the Conference USA title game against … Jacksonville State.

    Had Jacksonville State prevailed, Sam Houston State would’ve made the title game. Instead, the Hilltoppers have a shot to win the league for the first time since 2016.

  • Maui Invitational scores, takeaways: UConn goes 0-3, finishes last; Michigan State edges UNC in overtime

    LAHAINA, Hawaii — If you thought you might’ve heard a tremor across the Pacific Ocean in the middle of the night, you were right. 

    UConn’s reign of dominance atop college basketball is no more. An earthquake has hit college basketball. The most dominant program has lost its powers. The program that took one nonconference loss the past two seasons managed to TRIPLE that number in three days’ time at the Maui Invitational. It’s the most stunning development in all of American sports this month … and maybe in the past six months. 

    “Right now we’re a shell of who we’ve been,” Dan Hurley said after his No. 2 Huskies were beaten 85-67 by Dayton on Wednesday night in Maui in the seventh place game of the tourney. 

    “The burden of wearing a uniform after back-to-backs, right now, looks like it’s weighing heavy on the group,” Hurley said. 

    The 18-point differential is UConn’s worst loss to a nonconference opponent since 2018, when Connecticut was defeated by Iowa by 19 in Hurley’s first season with the Huskies.

    UConn’s the first team since Louisville in 1986-87 to lose three games in three days as a top-two team. Like UConn, that Louisville group was a reigning champion; it took its loss at the Great Alaska Shootout. The Huskies are the first top-two team in the polls to lose three straight games to unranked teams since No. 2 Arizona in 2017. The Wildcats team infamously ffell out of the AP poll entirely the following week, marking the first time a team had ever gone from top-two to unranked in a week. 

    Connecticut will suffer the same fate. It’s also down to 28th at KenPom after sitting at No. 4 two weeks ago. The program hasn’t been ranked this low since March of 2021. 

    For Dayton, some validation and a sorely needed win to give some nonconference cred to its docket. The Flyers earned their first win against a top-two AP opponent since 1974 (against Notre Dame) and looked unfazed following two gut-punching losses. Earlier this week, Anthony Grant’s team blew a 21-point lead against UNC and a nine-point edge against Iowa State. UConn did not have the defense or the shooting to spook Dayton a third night in a row. The Flyers’ offense was humming. 

    “Offensively, we’ll be fine. Defensively, though, man, it’s been a disaster here for us,” Hurley said. His team gave up 99 in an overtime loss to Memphis, then allowed Colorado to score 1.20 points per possession in Tuesday’s 73-72 loss before Dayton uncorked 1.31 PPP on the Huskies, boosted by 27-of-30 shooting at the foul line. 

    Hurley was not nearly as admonishing of the officials Wednesday as he was the previous two days, but he allude to the overall free throw discrepancy (UConn was 7 for 11). There’s no excuses to be made: UConn didn’t prepare well enough and got thoroughly exposed in a loaded field and now all the shine from the past two seasons has worn off. Losing four NBA players caught up to the Huskies in a hurry, and playing three games in less than 72 hours did not help matters whatsoever. 

    “When you come to a tournament like this and it’s three games in three days and it starts to go bad, there’s no way of fixing it because there’s no time to,” Hurley said.

    It was unthinkable that UConn would leave Maui without at LEAST one win. Instead, it’s desperately searching to get right … and it has to play low-level UMES on Saturday night before hosting Baylor next week. 

    “We need to regroup both from a psyche standpoint and then come up with a different plan defensively,” Hurley said. 

    It needs to be ASAP. UConn has Baylor, at Texas, vs. Gonzaga at MSG and home to Xavier over a four-game stretch in December. If big fixes don’t happen in the next two weeks, these Huskies will suffer the same fate as the last two-time champ: Florida wound up going to the NIT in 2008.

    Auburn’s Johni Broome and Dylan Cardwell have transformed their friendship and Auburn is so much better for it.
    Getty Images

    Tigers’ two bigs at center of team’s reason for success

    Auburn has its first Maui Invitational championship in school history. The fourth-ranked Tigers beat upset-minded Memphis 90-76 in the championship Wednesday, solidifying their status as the team with the best résumé (much more in that column linked there) in college basketball heading into December. Auburn defeated Houston earlier this month, and just beat No. 5 Iowa State, No. 12 North Carolina and increasingly good Memphis over the span of three days in the islands. 

    There are hundreds of factors that go into building a really good team. Auburn’s a really good team. Probably on its way to being a great one. One of the most important factors is genuine trust and encouragement between teammates. Jealousy and friction can be the hidden things that tear away at a group’s potential. 

    Which brings me to player of the year frontrunner Johni Broome and his teammate, fellow big man Dylan Cardwell. Cardwell is as Auburn as it gets. Last season, Bruce Pearl sat in his office with me and raved about Cardwell. He could have transferred basically at any point if he wanted, considering how he previously took a back seat to Jabari Smith, Walker Kessler and Broome. Instead, he’s going to log five seasons on The Plains and leave as one of the more beloved players in school history. 

    He wasn’t always so keen to be this way, though. 

    “A year ago pretty much this week, Johni and I became friends,” Cardwell told CBS Sports. 

    That’s right: Cardwell wasn’t a fan of Broome for a long time. He saw him not as a teammate, but as the next player to hold back his opportunity. At first, he was resistant to be buddies with Broome. Keep in mind the pressure on college guys to maximize every minute of their careers, pushing toward trying to make it as a professional basketball players. This environment invariably breeds insecurities and intra-team squabbles. Cardwell essentially gave Broome a cold shoulder after Broome transferred from Morehead State in 2022.

    “The first year he was here, I looked at him as an opponent rather than my teammate, and that kind of showed on the court,” Cardwell said. “I wasn’t cheering for him. I wasn’t really happy for him as I should have been.”

    But on Nov. 29, 2023, Cardwell decided to drop the resentment. Auburn was playing against Virginia Tech. Before the game, Cardwell said he prayed for Broome to play well for the first time. Broome went on to score a then-career-high 30 points in an Auburn uniform. At the same time, Cardwell only played 12 minutes in the 74-57 win.  

    “The Lord gave me an option,” Cardwell said. “He’s like, you can either be happy that my prayer was answered or I could be stingy that my teammate went off for 30.”

    He chose happiness. Broome, in kind, was cheering him on, loudly, in the arena.  

    “I realized that he was not my opposition but he was a brother and he was a teammate, and that’s something that coach Pearl has been telling us since we got here,” Cardwell continued. “I’m going to bring in guys that you’re going to love on that are going to be there for you for the rest of your life. The guys in the locker room are not the opponent, and that’s what you see today. We have so many guys that are happy for one another rather than looking at them as competition, and I feel like once I let my pride go and I let that go, Johni and I’s relationship really took off.”

    In my 15-plus seasons of covering college basketball, Cardwell’s response is on the short list of the most honest and transparent things I’ve ever heard a player admit to at a postgame press conference. I think Cardwell and Broome’s connection is the biggest key to Auburn winning the SEC and making a Final Four run.

    “You just wouldn’t believe how eloquently he did that,” Pearl said of Cardwell’s growth. “When Johni decided to come back, we knew we could have a chance to have a really good team, and one of the things that Dylan and I talked about his coming back was not playing behind Johni but playing with him.” 

    Cardwell and Broome wanted to make playing with two bigs — a counter to current basketball tendencies — a viable path to success. Pearl was on board, to an extent. They tinkered and tracked practice logs and monitored. Nothing was guaranteed. Auburn wasn’t playing fast enough at first. But it’s working. 

    The Broome/Cardwell duo has played 27% of team’s minutes together, and they’re the second-best duo on the team (+51 points per 100 possessions), according to EvanMiya.com. 

    “These guys are loving playing together,” Pearl said. “They were never on the floor together very much in the last couple years, so it’s just incredible. They’ve got great chemistry. They trust each other. They listen to each other.”

    As a result, Auburn is building out a case of having one of the strongest, most intimidating 1-2 big-man duos in college hoops. We get to see that tested in six days, when the Tigers face No. 11 Duke to face Cooper Flagg and Khaman Maluach. Tremendous.

    Michigan State held on in yet another outstanding game in Maui. What else is new?
    Getty Images

    Michigan State-UNC yet another riveting Maui affair

    Despite not having freshman Jase Richardson (lingering headache after taking an elbow against Memphis pm Tuesday) and despite giving up a seven-point lead with less than three minutes to go, Michigan State wiggled its way to a 94-91 overtime win against UNC. It took third here in Maui.

    It was the sixth really good/great game of this year’s event out of the 12 that were played. The environment in the LCC was electric. Tom Izzo and Hubert Davis looked like they were coaching in the NCAA Tournament. Once UNC found a way to push it to OT — thanks to a huge 3 from Seth Trimble, who’s coming along really well in his junior season — it felt like they could hear us all the way to Honolulu. This place is special.

    Izzo, who sometimes refers to himself as “Dr. Negative,” decided to be exceedingly optimistic in the huddle down the stretch and in OT, an MSU source told me. It struck the right tone in a tense game. 

    Spartans guard Tre Holloman had a career-high 19 points. Sitting on press row, his competitiveness was clearly contagious. Whatever he did to amp himself for this game worked; no Richardson gave him a window to capitalize on. Wasn’t just him, though. MSU had six in double figures. Maybe this team is getting into its identity. 

    The result also meant a lot. This was a rematch from the second round of last season’s NCAA Tournament. In case you you forgot, UNC won that without issue, breezing to an 85-69 win. A much different game Wednesday night.

    So, MSU is leaving with a 2-1 record here and UNC is 1-2 the last three days. 

    The Spartans are 6-2 and have their first top-80 KenPom win. They had to eke it out, but they got it. To leave here without a notable victory would’ve been a baaaaad look after falling to Kansas and Memphis previously.

    UNC? Had it not rallied from 21 down against Dayton, it might have been 0-3 instead of UConn. (Well, maybe not.) Yet again, the Tar Heels got off to a slow start. It’s a pattern at this point and an infliction on UNC’s potential. As is the issue in the middle. The Tar Heels did not land a highly chased big man in the portal last offseason, instead settling to go with slender 6-10 junior Jalen Washington. Michigan State’s Xavier Booker (12 points, seven rebounds) was able to get some looks he has been hunting for this season, which was as encouraging for the Spartans as it was sobering for North Carolina. Davis may have to go all-in on super-duper up-tempo and small-small ball to try and counter against other teams. 

    This is a raise-your-eyebrows quote from Izzo about RJ Davis, Elliot Cadeau and Trimble: “That is a very good basketball team we played. Right now those three guards might be the best three-guard tandem I’ve ever seen, and I mean that.”

    Carolina did schedule that road game against Hawaii (on Oahu) a few days before heading to Maui, but I don’t think that was a factor. UNC was a moving target headed into the season and I don’t think Maui offered much more clarity on how good, or not, this team is. 

    Iowa State salvages two wins after opening-round loss 

    It took until game No. 9 of the Maui Invitational, but we finally got a blowout. No. 5 Iowa State crushed Colorado 99-71 Wednesday in the opening game on the final day of the tournament.  

    That means the Cyclones finish in fifth place in the bracket. TJ Otzelberger’s team flies back home across the Pacific after going 2-1 on the island and is 5-1 overall. Their wins over Dayton and Colorado are TBD in terms of value, but a 28-point victory vs. the Buffaloes should boost them heading into next week. They’ll need it. 

    ISU’s next game is Dec. 4 at home against No. 10 Marquette. 

    Cyclones sophomore Milan Momcilovic had a game-high 24 points, while Curtis Jones added 15, Keshon Gilbert 14 and three other players had 10. Otzelberger took the Iowa State job in 2021 but Wednesday marked only the second time the Cyclones scored more than 90 points against a high-major opponent. (The other one was also 99, but vs. DePaul, so it barely qualifies, really.)

    The Clones, for the first time under Otzelberger, could have a top-level offense. 

    “We have a team that it’s really difficult to prepare for because we’re going to end up with five, six guys in double figures that any night, one of them could be the guy,” Otzelberger said. “We’re trying to play more in transition. We’re trying to play with more pace.”

    To think: ISU flirted with losing to Dayton and would’ve had to play UConn for seventh place in the last game of the tournament if it didn’t win Tuesday. That’s a wild swing. I had the Cyclones outside of the top 20 heading into the season, which was a contrarian take and, I think it’s fair to say now, almost certainly the wrong one.

    For the Buffs, if I’d have given Colorado coach Tad Boyle the option of taking 1-2 or chancing going 0-3 in Maui, I think he’d have taken 1-2, especially with a win over UConn. 

    “We went from the outhouse to the penthouse back to the outhouse in three days,” Boyle said.

    The Buffs had to replace their top five scorers and are a wait-and-see when it comes to their Big 12 viability. I like what they have in shooting guard Julian Hammond, 6-10 post man (and NAIA transfer) Elijah Malone and 6-8 wing Andrej Jakimovski. 

    Given this was Colorado’s third game in three days, it’s all but a guarantee the next time these teams play it won’t be nearly the blowout. ISU travels to play Colorado in Big 12 play in just over a month, on Dec. 30.

    “I told myself before the season started I have to have patience with this group,” Boyle said. “It’s not in my nature, but it’s where we are right now.”

    And at least we have this video of Boyle water sliding. I never found a water slide during my time out here in Maui, and that’s on me.

    Let’s tour the Lahaina Civic Center

    Over the decades, as I’ve watched this amazing tournament on TV, I’ve always wondered what it felt like and what the confines were around the hallowed Lahaina Civic Center. So I took it upon myself to shoot a couple of videos and bring you in. Until you see it, you don’t quite realize just how cozy this place is. 

    As for the locker rooms, well, there’s nothing like this in sports. You’ve gotta see this most humble of pregame prep spaces. It doesn’t get more bare-bones than this. Ah, Maui. Big games in a small gym. Only college basketball provides something this wholesome. 

    One parting thought: It was a personal highlight of my career to get to fly out here and finally cover this event. To do so after the 2023 wildfires forced the Invitational to Honolulu last season, and to have this one returning, but without Bill Walton, made it all the more poignant. The Aloha Spirit lives on in Hawaiian people. You feel it in the air. This is the best annual sports event not March Madness that we get. Its future is somewhat hazy, but I believe the Invitational is going to power through and maintain its place, even if it comes in different forms later this decade. 

    I’ll have a column on that soon. Thanks for following along this week. Mahalo!

    2024 Maui Invitational bracket

  • Maui Invitational takeaways: UConn reeling, Tyrese Hunter puts Memphis in finals and Auburn’s case for No. 1

    Matt Norlander’s Day 2 notebook from the Maui Invitational, including interviews and anecdotes from the biggest story-makers at the event. Be on the lookout for Day 3’s takeaways on Wednesday, which will begin with Colorado vs. No. 5 Iowa State for fifth place at 2:30 p.m. ET. 


    LAHAINA, Hawaii — Two teams with the same nickname battling in their first Maui Invitational title game. It’ll be Tigers vs. Tigers on Wednesday at 5 p.m. ET for the tournament title. 

    About 4.5 hours after Memphis locked its spot by beating Michigan State, fourth-ranked Auburn won its late tip Tuesday night by outpacing No. 12 North Carolina with an 85-72 victory. It’s the undefeated Tigers’ third ranked win of the season in six games, all three coming against top-12 competition. That’s never happened before in program history. It’s fitting that Auburn is playing Memphis (more on those Tigers further down in the notebook), because those two schools could have the best résumés of anyone in the country. 

    Wednesday’s winner will indisputably carry that claim. 

    The best of Bruce Pearl’s bunch is who we expected. Johni Broome, who is vying with Tyrese Hunter (more on him below) for Maui MVP, put up an outlandish 23 points and 19 rebounds against an overmatched UNC front line. Broome was buttressed by 15 points from Miles Kelly, 14 from Chad Baker-Mazara and 11 from Chaney Johnson. Six Tigers in all landed double figures. North Carolina never threatened in the second half.

    “He’s not fast enough, he’s not quick enough, he’s not good enough,” Pearl said afterward, paraphrasing how Broome was overlooked as a high school recruit. “He doesn’t make the top AAU teams in Florida. He’s a low-major and mid-major kid and all he’s every done his entire career is prove people wrong.”

    As of Wednesday morning, Broome’s statistical lead at KenPom.com’s NPOY algorithm is larger in margin between No. 2 Cooper Flagg than Flagg is from the No. 10 player, RJ Luis of St. John’s.

    “He’s the best player on the floor and it wasn’t even close,” UNC coach Hubert Davis said. “Things looked slow to him. He wasn’t rushed, he was patient. … He’s in full command of his game.”

    Remember, Davis has RJ Davis, who was a First Team All-American last season. On Tuesday, the fifth-year guard had just 12 points on 11 shots, muffled throughout by Denver Jones, who Pearl called “one of the best defensive guards in college basketball. He’s one of the reasons why our team has won the games we have won. Nobody talks about it, nobody writes about it.”

    Everyone is raving about Auburn, though. Tuesday’s win got the Tigeres back to No. 1 at KenPom after reaching that perch on Nov. 13 by way of defeating Houston. 

    If you think Pearl was content with the game, let me tell you … he was not. Pearl was Dan Hurley-level furious with the officials in a 15-point game with 1:22 remaining. After Pearl’s press conference, he pulled aside J.D. Collins, the former director of NCAA officiating who oversees the officials each year in Maui, to share his concerns in a private conversation just outside the media work room.

    That’s something to keep an eye on in Wednesday’s title game. Memphis is a bruising group and a third game in as many days could benefit the more physical team. (Not that Auburn can’t bruise with the best of them. It will be ready.)

    UConn falls to 0-2, Dan Hurley calls out zebras again

    An opportunity in paradise is threatening to turn into a trip to hell for Dan Hurley’s UConn Huskies. The (not for long) No. 2 team in the country is officially reeling after losing two games in two days by a combined three points to unranked opponents in the Maui Invitational.

    “I just think we’re all shocked. We’re all stunned,” Hurley said as he walked to the team bus after UConn lost to Colorado 73-72 in the opening game of Tuesday’s consolation bracket play. “With the run that we’ve been on and how well we’ve played, the games are playing out way differently for us and we’ve got to be incredibly strong mentally right now.”

    Coming into the week, UConn was 47-3 in its last 50 games. Now it’s in danger of falling out of the rankings.

    A day after blowing a 13-point lead against Memphis, Colorado steadily came back from an 11-point deficit to beat the two-time champs. The winning margin was provided by a tough right-handed runner from Andrej Jakimovski with 8.5 remaining. The Macedonian beat UConn freshman Liam McNeeley. Jakimovski didn’t have to worry about a center fronting in that moment because, for the second straight day, UConn had its top two bigs, Samson Johnson and Tarris Reed Jr., foul out.

    Here’s the winning play. If this stuff keeps up, we could have the best Maui Invitational ever. 

    The Huskies tried for a game-saving 3-pointer, just like Solo Ball vs. Memphis, only this time Hassan Diarra’s attempt fell awry. The Buffs came into the day ranked No. 82 at KenPom. The Huskies hadn’t dropped consecutive games since January 2023. Now they’ll try to avoid going 0-3 in Maui by mandate of playing in the seventh-place game, the last tipoff coming Wednesday night against Dayton.

    If you’d like a serving of huh!, check it: Tuesday was only the third time Colorado’s defeated a top-two team in program history (No. 2 Arizona in 2022, No. 2 Oklahoma State in 1992).

    “Coach trusted me to make the last play and I knew I had to go down there and finish,” Jakimovski said. “After a bad game yesterday we showed character and we defensed our ass off. UConn is probably one of the best offensive teams I’ve played in my college career.”

    The Buffs will play the winner of Iowa State on Wednesday. 

    Credit to Colorado, but the story is obviously UConn. For as much as I’m willing to take responsibility for the patented Writer’s Jinx, the Huskies have bigger issues. And it’s not only officiating, but yeah, Hurley took time to gripe about that again on Tuesday after the game. Whereas McNeeley got called for an over-the-back foul vs. Memphis that was Hurley’s breaking point, on Tuesday it was Colorado’s Trevor Baskin who made clear contact with McNeeley’s arm in an over-the-back scenario. No whistle. UConn led by one at the time. 

    “It just speaks to how these last two days have gone for us, that yesterday the biggest play of the game was an over-the-back that was called against us, and then today it was more egregious because the kid Baskin pulled Liam’s arm down,” Hurley said. “I saw the replay of it. Obviously it’s ironic, but that’s not why — our defense has been just so dreadful, just so dreadful out here.”

    Hurley has made himself a target by going after the officials after two close losses. He’s not putting complete accountability on himself and his players as a result. To his point: UConn has lost two games in two days despite making 26 3-pointers on 61 attempts. That’s a 42.6% rate, which will win you a lot of games. 

    They’ve also allowed Memphis and Colorado to hit at least 1.20 points per possession, which will lose you a lot of games.

    “Sometimes you’re not getting a great whistle and I don’t think out here we’ve gotten a great whistle, it just hasn’t bounced our way out here that way,” Hurley said. “It killed us to have so many guys in foul trouble during the game.”

    UConn’s got so used to rolling opponents that it’s struggling to finish out close tilts. With a lot of new faces in prominent roles, this isn’t surprising, despite Hurley’s standard. But consider this: Colorado lost its top five scorers from a season ago. That didn’t hold Boyle’s Buffs back, you know?

    “Dealing with the type of foul trouble that we’ve had out here has certainly not helped a team with so many young guys replacing so many critical parts,” Hurley said. “It’s made it even more challenging and has obviously exposed a lot of our vulnerabilities.”

    We’re far from sky-is-falling territory in Storrs, but after UConn thrived on feasting any type of noncon opponent, it looks lost in its identity. Hurley told CBS Sports he thought two losses in Maui was very much a possibility, acknowledging it with a laugh, even. 

    “In particular I’d say we were most nervous about the guard play coming in, losing what we lost with [Tristen Newton] at that position,” Hurley told me. “I think we’re searching at point right now.”

    Hurley didn’t have point guard Aidan Mahaney in the Huskies’ starting five for the first time this season, starting Hassan Diarra instead. Diarra had 11 points, six assists and two turnovers. Mahaney didn’t score. 

    “We really needed to gut out these last two games here as we tried to find ourselves and it’s definitely knocked us on our ass,” Hurley said. 

    The bigs fouling out was also glaring. Johnson and Reed Jr. have been unavailable in crunch time and it’s handicapped Connecticut the past two days. Hurley’s been humbled, no doubt about that. He said multiple times that his team deserved to be the preseason No. 1 based on what it had done the past two years. Now that’s gone entirely. UConn is just another team right now, and at this stage isn’t close to a top-10 one. With one more game against a good team guaranteed, the Huskies have an opportunity to somewhat salvage this trip late Wednesday night.

    The alternative would be disastrous for the Huskies’ résumé and mark the first time the program’s lost three straight games away from home since 2020. 

    Memphis’ Hunter is best transfer so far

    This tournament always provides big opportunities for teams and players to rewrite expectations on their seasons. Think: 2010-11 UConn and Kemba Walker; 2018-19 Dayton and Obi Toppin; and 2005-06 Gonzaga and Adam Morrison, just to name a few. 

    Through two days, Memphis and Tyrese Hunter fit that bill. 

    The Tigers’ 71-63 win over Michigan State on Tuesday vaulted the program into the Maui title game for the first time in school history. It’s obvious Memphis was overlooked in being unranked heading into the year. After snapping UConn’s 17-game winning streak on Monday and outpacing Michigan State with ease today, Penny Hardaway’s team has five top-100 KenPom wins. No other team can match that.

    The biggest reason: Hunter’s detonation from deep. The senior lead guard is more than the breakout player in college basketball through the first three weeks of the season. He’s an All-American candidate, lifted by his amazing two-game run in Lahaina. 

    “I’m him! I’ve always been him!” Hunter yelled to his teammates after a beautiful parabola from more than 23 feet fell through in the second half of Memphis’ win against UConn. On Tuesday, he provided a riveting encore. 

    “Make everybody know. Put them on notice,” Hunter told me Tuesday. “Let them know I’m still here. It ain’t went nowhere.”

    Hunter’s averaging 24.5 points, just 1.5 turnovers and shooting 60% from deep (12 for 20) here in Maui. On the season, he’s at a comfortable career-best 17.3 points. He’s doing it alongside PJ Haggerty, giving the Tigers one of the best backcourts in the country and easily the best duo that was picked up in the portal this past offseason (Hunter came from Texas, Haggerty via Tulsa). 

    What’s gotten into Hunter? He was a volcano vs. UConn, and on Tuesday, Tom Izzo described his 5-of-10 3-point barrage “hellacious.”

    “He made some shots that … I don’t know if Penny made those shots when he played, and I mean that,” Izzo said. “He was falling right, falling left, end of the shot clock, and he drained them. Give them credit. There’s a reason they beat UConn.”

    He’s the easy favorite for Maui MVP heading into Wednesday. So, what’s changed from his promising but inconsistent growth periods at Iowa State and Texas?

    “You start with taking the right shots,” Hunter said of when to shoot 3-pointers. “Coming in as a freshman, I think I shot 27%, I was shooting shots that I’d take in high school that you can’t take at the next level. … I was kind of immature on the shots that I was taking.”

    Hunter developed a reputation as one of the best freshman defensive guards in the sport at ISU. He said at Texas, there were some nice spots, but also some “shaky stuff.” 

    “I think I sacrificed a lot as a player,” he told me. 

    He’s found his groove, something he calls a niche, but he’s more impactful than that. Memphis’ staff told me Hunter’s maturity and leadership is the No. 1 reason this team is as good as it is.He’s mentoring Haggerty along the way. Something genuine is building between the two and it’s turned the Tigers into a potential top-10 team. 

    By being admittedly being “a little more selfish,” Memphis has its best offense and 3-point attack under Hardaway. The Tigers’ 45.4% 3-point clip is No. 3 nationally, boosted by Hunter’s hot-as-the-sun 52.6% accuracy from deep. There was a lot of offseason drama with this program, including bizarre staff dismissals and a still-looming potential NCAA case. 

    “Everything that I ever did sacrifice was for winning and I’m proud of it,” Hunter told me. 

    Now his bag is deep. He can move deftly off the dribble, has a great snatch-back release, can hit with accuracy on contests from the corner, is pure on screen-peels. I don’t know if there’s a more enjoyable player to watch in this young season than him. 

    “I’m free out there, not looking over my shoulders,” Hunter said. “I know if I mess up, Coach has my back, whatever I got to do. I’m free-minded.”

    Dayton, so close … 

    No team had more to gain in Maui than the Dayton Flyers. The only of the group not in a power conference. Anthony Grant’s team blew a 21-point lead against North Carolina on Monday and lost 92-90 in a thriller. It soiled away a nine-point edge against Iowa State on Tuesday and came up short 89-84. Next up is UConn. With how the Huskies have played, a Dayton win is on the table. Even still, the Flyers are staring at an 0-3 trip with at least two terrific chances at Quad 1 victories. 

    The A-10 has struggled to build up its nonconference heft in recent seasons, and with Dayton vying alongside VCU to be maybe the best in the league, this was a grand opportunity for the Atlantic 10. But that’s the chance you take in signing up for this. The fields are almost always loaded, meaning you’ve got an opportunity to change your season — like Memphis — or fly home 0-3. 

    Having seen the Flyers push the Tar Heels and Cyclones to the edge, I’m a believer in their chances to make a second straight NCAA tourney under Anthony Grant. 

    The Iowa State win also means we avoid Connecticut-ISU for seventh place. Those teams could have easily been playing for the title on Wednesday. Instead, the Cyclones will play Colorado on Wednesday for fifth place. Two Big 12 schools, but not a Big 12 game. This also guarantees ISU and Colorado will face each other three times this regular season, as they’ve got two conference dates (Dec. 30, Feb. 18). Also: Keshon Gilbert has taken another step in his growth as a senior. He had 24 vs. Dayton and wouldn’t falter, including when he took a hard Flagrant 1 foul from Zed Key in the closing minutes. 

    2024 Maui Invitational bracket

  • Maui Invitational scoruri, takeaways: UConn scăpat după pierderea în Colorado; Tyrese Hunter îl pune pe Memphis în finală

    Matt Norlander oferă un caiet pentru Ziua 2 de la Maui Invitational, inclusiv interviuri și anecdote de la cei mai mari creatori de povești de la eveniment. Această poveste se va actualiza continuu până marți seara.


    LAHAINA, Hawaii — O oportunitate în paradis s-a transformat într-o călătorie în iad pentru UConn Huskies ai lui Dan Hurley. Echipa nr. 2 din țară (nu pentru mult timp) se zguduie oficial după ce a pierdut două jocuri în două zile cu trei puncte combinate în fața adversarilor neclasați în Maui Invitational.

    “Cred că suntem cu toții șocați. Suntem cu toții uimiți”, a spus Hurley în timp ce mergea spre autobuzul echipei după ce UConn a pierdut cu Colorado cu 73-72 în jocul de deschidere al jocului de consolare de marți de la Maui Invitational. „Cu alergarea în care am fost și cât de bine am jucat, jocurile se desfășoară diferit pentru noi și trebuie să fim incredibil de puternici mental chiar acum.”

    În cursul săptămânii, UConn a avut 47-3 în ultimele 50 de jocuri. Acum riscă să iasă din clasament.

    La o zi după ce a suflat un avantaj de 13 puncte împotriva lui Memphis, Colorado a revenit constant de la un deficit de 11 puncte pentru a învinge de două ori campioni. Marja de câștig a fost oferită de un alergător dur dreptaci de la Andrej Jakimovski, cu 8,5 rămase. Macedoneanul l-a învins pe bobocul UConn Liam McNeeley. Jakimovski nu a trebuit să-și facă griji cu privire la un centru de față în acel moment, deoarece, pentru a doua zi consecutivă, UConn a avut cei mai buni doi mari ai săi, Samson Johnson și Tarris Reed Jr., eliminati.

    Iată piesa câștigătoare. Dacă aceste lucruri țin pasul, am putea avea cel mai bun Maui Invitational vreodată.

    Huskies au încercat un 3-pointer care a salvat jocul, la fel ca Solo Ball vs. Memphis, doar că de data aceasta încercarea lui Hassan Diarra a căzut greșit. Buffs au intrat în ziua clasată pe locul 82 pe KenPom.com. Huskies nu au mai renunțat la meciuri consecutive din ianuarie 2023. Acum vor încerca să evite să meargă cu 0-3 în Maui prin mandatul de a juca în jocul de pe locul șapte, ultimul meci urmând miercuri seara împotriva învinsului din Iowa State de marți. Jocul Dayton.

    Dacă doriți o porție de huh!, verificați: marți a fost doar pentru a treia oară când Colorado a învins o echipă de top din istoria programului (nr. 2 Arizona în 2022, nr. 2 în statul Oklahoma în 1992).

    “Antrenorul a avut încredere în mine să fac ultima piesă și am știut că trebuie să merg acolo și să termin”, a spus Jakimovski. “După un meci prost ieri, ne-am arătat caracter și ne-am apărat fundul. UConn este probabil una dintre cele mai bune echipe ofensive pe care le-am jucat în cariera mea la facultate.”

    Buffs vor juca miercuri cu câștigătorul din Iowa State-Dayton.

    Multumim Colorado, dar povestea este evident UConn. Pentru cât sunt dispus să îmi asum responsabilitatea brevetatul Writer's JinxHuskiii au probleme mai mari. Și nu este numai a oficiat, dar da, Hurley și-a făcut timp să se plângă din nou de asta marți după meci. În timp ce McNeeley a fost chemat pentru un fault în spate împotriva lui Memphis, care a fost punctul de rupere al lui Hurley, marți, Trevor Baskin din Colorado a fost cel care a intrat în contact clar cu brațul lui McNeeley într-un scenariu de peste spate. Fără fluier. UConn condus de unul la momentul respectiv.

    „Vorbește doar despre cum au trecut ultimele două zile pentru noi, că ieri cel mai mare joc al jocului a fost un over-the-back care a fost chemat împotriva noastră, iar apoi azi a fost mai flagrant pentru că puștiul Baskin l-a tras de brațul lui Liam. jos”, a spus Hurley. “Am văzut reluarea. Evident că este ironic, dar nu de aceea – apărarea noastră a fost atât de îngrozitoare, atât de îngrozitoare aici.”

    Hurley și-a făcut o țintă mergând după oficiali după două înfrângeri strânse. În consecință, el nu își asumă responsabilitatea completă asupra lui și a jucătorilor săi. La punctul său de vedere: UConn a pierdut două jocuri în două zile, în ciuda faptului că a făcut 26 de triple în 61 de încercări. Aceasta este o rată de 42,6%, care vă va câștiga o mulțime de jocuri.

    De asemenea, le-au permis lui Memphis și Colorado să bată cel puțin 1,20 puncte per posesie, ceea ce vă va pierde o mulțime de jocuri.

    „Uneori nu primești un fluier grozav și nu cred că aici am primit un fluier grozav, pur și simplu nu ne-a sărit drumul aici”, a spus Hurley. „Ne-a omorât să avem atât de mulți tipi în necazuri în timpul jocului.”

    UConn s-a obișnuit atât de mult să arunce adversarii, încât se chinuie să finalizeze înclinările apropiate. Cu o mulțime de fețe noi în roluri proeminente, acest lucru nu este surprinzător, în ciuda standardului lui Hurley. Dar luați în considerare acest lucru: Colorado și-a pierdut primii cinci marcatori de acum un sezon. Asta nu i-a reținut pe Buffs lui Boyle, știi?

    „Confruntarea cu tipul de probleme grele pe care le-am avut aici cu siguranță nu a ajutat o echipă cu atât de mulți tineri care înlocuiesc atât de multe părți critice”, a spus Hurley. „A făcut și mai dificilă și, evident, a expus multe dintre vulnerabilitățile noastre.”

    Suntem departe de un teritoriu în care scădea cerul în Storrs, dar după ce UConn s-a bucurat să-și ospăteze orice tip de adversar neconformist, pare pierdut în identitatea sa. Hurley a declarat pentru CBS Sports că crede că două înfrângeri în Maui sunt foarte posibile, recunoscând chiar râzând.

    „În special, aș spune că am fost cel mai nervoși în legătură cu jocul gărzii, pierderea cu ceea ce am pierdut. [Tristen Newton] în acea poziție”, mi-a spus Hurley. “Cred că căutăm un punct chiar acum.”

    Hurley nu l-a avut pe apărătorul Aidan Mahaney în cincizeci de start ai Huskies pentru prima dată în acest sezon, în schimb pe Hassan Diarra. Diarra a avut 11 puncte, șase pase decisive și două transformări. Mahaney nu a marcat.

    „Trebuia să eliminăm aceste ultime două jocuri aici, în timp ce am încercat să ne regăsim și cu siguranță ne-a dat peste cap”, a spus Hurley.

    Echipele mari a fost, de asemenea, strălucitoare. Johnson și Reed Jr. au fost indisponibili în timpul crizei și a afectat Connecticutul în ultimele două zile. Hurley a fost umilit, fără îndoială. El a spus de mai multe ori că echipa sa merită să fie locul 1 în presezon, pe baza a ceea ce a făcut în ultimii doi ani. Acum asta a dispărut complet. UConn este doar o altă echipă în acest moment și, în acest stadiu, nu este aproape de una din top-10. Cu încă un meci împotriva unei echipe bune garantat, Huskies au ocazia să salveze oarecum această călătorie miercuri seara târziu.

    Alternativa ar fi dezastruoasă pentru CV-ul Huskies și ar marca prima dată când programul a pierdut trei meciuri consecutive departe de casă din 2020.

    Memphis' Hunter este cel mai bun transfer pe parcursul a trei săptămâni

    Acest turneu oferă întotdeauna oportunități mari pentru echipe și jucători de a rescrie așteptările cu privire la sezoanele lor. Gândiți-vă: 2010-11 UConn și Kemba Walker; 2018-19 Dayton și Obi Toppin; și 2005-06 Gonzaga și Adam Morrison, pentru a numi doar câțiva.

    Timp de două zile, Memphis și Tyrese Hunter s-au potrivit pentru acest proiect.

    Victoria cu 71-63 a Tigrilor în fața statului Michigan, marți, a transformat programul în jocul pentru titlul din Maui pentru prima dată în istoria școlii. Este evident că Memphis a fost trecut cu vederea pentru că nu a fost clasat în cursul anului. După ce luni a întrerupt seria de 17 victorii consecutive a lui UConn și a depășit cu ușurință Michigan State astăzi, echipa lui Penny Hardaway are cinci victorii în top-100 KenPom. Nicio altă echipă nu poate egala asta.

    Cel mai mare motiv: detonarea lui Hunter din adâncime. Garda principală este mai mult decât cel jucător de evaziune în baschetul universitar în primele trei săptămâni ale sezonului. Este un candidat All-American, ridicat de uimitoarea lui rundă de două meciuri în Lahaina.

    “Eu sunt el! Am fost mereu el!” Hunter a strigat colegilor săi după ce o parabolă frumoasă de la peste 23 de picioare a căzut în a doua jumătate a victoriei lui Memphis împotriva UConn. Marți, a oferit un bis captivant.

    “Să știe pe toată lumea. Anunțați-i”, mi-a spus Hunter marți. “Să știe că sunt încă aici. Nu a mers nicăieri.”

    Hunter are o medie de 24,5 puncte, doar 1,5 turnover-uri și trage 60% din adâncime (12 pentru 20) aici, în Maui. În sezon, el are 17,3 puncte, cel mai confortabil din carieră. O face alături de PJ Haggerty, dându-le Tigrilor una dintre cele mai bune terenuri din țară și cu ușurință cel mai bun duo care a fost preluat de portal în extrasezonul trecut (Hunter a venit din Texas, Haggerty prin Tulsa).

    Ce sa intrat în Hunter? El a fost un vulcan împotriva UConn, iar marți, Tom Izzo a descris barajul său de 5 din 10, în 3 puncte, „audacios”.

    “A făcut niște lovituri care… nu știu dacă Penny a făcut acele lovituri când a jucat și vreau să spun asta”, a spus Izzo. „El cădea în dreapta, cădea în stânga, la capătul cronometrului, și i-a drenat. Dă-le credit. Există un motiv pentru care au învins UConn”.

    El este favoritul ușor pentru MVP Maui care se îndreaptă miercuri. Deci, ce s-a schimbat față de perioadele sale de creștere promițătoare, dar inconsecvente din Iowa State și Texas?

    „Începi cu loviturile corecte”, a spus Hunter despre când să tragi 3 puncte. „Venind ca boboc, cred că am tras 27%, am făcut fotografii pe care le-aș face în liceu, pe care nu le poți face la nivelul următor… Eram cam imatur la fotografiile pe care le făceam .”

    Hunter și-a dezvoltat o reputație ca fiind unul dintre cei mai buni paznici defensivi pentru boboci din sport la ISU. El a spus că la Texas au fost niște locuri frumoase, dar și niște „lucruri tremurătoare”.

    „Cred că m-am sacrificat foarte mult ca jucător”, mi-a spus el.

    Și-a găsit groove, ceva ce el numește nișă, dar are mai mult impact decât atât. Personalul lui Memphis mi-a spus că maturitatea și conducerea lui Hunter sunt primul motiv pentru care această echipă este la fel de bună ca și ea. El îl îndrumă pe Haggerty pe parcurs. Ceva autentic se construiește între cei doi și ia transformat pe Tigri într-o potențială echipă de top 10.

    Fiind, desigur, „puțin mai egoist”, Memphis are cea mai bună ofensă și un atac de 3 puncte sub Hardaway. Clipul cu 45,4% 3 puncte al Tigrilor este pe locul 3 la nivel național, sporit de precizia de 52,6% de la adâncime a lui Hunter. A existat o mulțime de drame în extrasezon cu acest program, inclusiv concedieri bizare ale personalului și un caz potențial NCAA care încă se profilează.

    „Tot ce am sacrificat vreodată a fost pentru a câștiga și sunt mândru de asta”, mi-a spus Hunter.

    Acum geanta lui este adâncă. Se poate deplasa cu îndemânare din dribling, are o eliberare grozavă de snatch-back, poate lovi cu precizie în concursuri de la colț, este pur pe ecran. Nu știu dacă există un jucător mai plăcut de urmărit în acest sezon tânăr decât el.

    „Sunt liber acolo, nu mă uit peste umeri”, a spus Hunter. „Știu că dacă dau greșelii, antrenorul mă sprijină, orice ar trebui să fac. Sunt liber la minte.”

    2024 Maui Invitational bracket

  • Maui Invitational Takeaways: Auburn și Memphis câștigă târziu pentru a ne aminti de puterea foarte reală a Maui Magic

    LAHAINA, Hawaii – Aloha de la Maui Invitational! The cel mai mare eveniment de baschet universitar din sezon a livrat încă o dată, așa cum face întotdeauna. Ce grozav este să ai acest suport înapoi la Centrul Civic Lahaina. Amintiți-vă, COVID și incendiile tragice din 2023 au împiedicat acest gimnaziu sfințit și umil să găzduiască evenimentul său principal în 2020, 2021 și 2023.

    După acțiunea de luni și cu câteva omagii aduse pilonului principal din Maui, regretatul Bill Walton, sunt cu atât mai recunoscător că nativii Lahaina găzduiesc din nou un astfel de eveniment magic. Această regiune merită asta. Toate acestea. Și este un privilegiu să îl poți acoperi în persoană pentru prima dată. Totul este în regulă, LCC fiind centrul lumii cercurilor de colegiu în săptămâna de Ziua Recunoștinței.

    În fiecare zi voi publica un caiet cu ceea ce am văzut și voi piper în unele observații și citate din partea mea unu-la-unu cu antrenorii aici în paradis. Această poveste va fi actualizată de mai multe ori înainte de terminarea zilei de luni. Azi a fost atât de bine, așa că să trecem direct la asta.

    Auburn face istorie școlii cu mitingul târziu asupra statului Iowa

    Maui Magic este atât de real. Acest lucru a fost dovedit din nou cu UConn-Memphis și Auburn-Iowa State. Am mai multe despre UConn mai jos. Să vorbim despre Tigri și Cicloni.

    După ce a coborât pe locul 5 din Iowa State cu până la 18, cu 4:18 rămase în prima repriză, numărul 4 Auburn a revenit, a luat conducerea cu 75-73 cu 4:01 rămase și în cele din urmă a câștigat pe un post de Johni Broome. -a revenit cu mai puțin de două secunde pentru a obține o victorie 83-81. Un meci de top cinci care s-a redus la jocul final în cea mai mare săptămână a sezonului fără conferințe. Nu putem cere mai bine.

    Scena a fost incredibilă, așa cum sunt adesea în această sală confortabilă de pe coasta de vest a uneia dintre cele mai pitorești insule din lume.

    Dumnezeu. Binecuvânta. Maui.

    Broome a jucat 36 de minute – un record personal într-o uniformă Auburn. A trebuit să coșchioapă în și să iasă din conferința de presă de după meci din cauza crampelor corporale în toată regula. Broome a terminat cu 21 de puncte și 10 recuperări.

    „A muncit foarte mult în acest extrasezon pentru a fi în cea mai bună formă a vieții sale și a dat roade acolo”, a spus Pearl despre informarea oportună a lui Broome despre ratarea lui Denver Jones. Acest joc a fost ca în Iowa State pentru cea mai mare parte a nopții. Ciclonii au marcat 49 (!) în prima repriză. Să-i vezi pierzând după ce au făcut asta este greu de înțeles. Echipele lui TJ Otzelberger nu sufla astfel de jocuri.

    Deci, când a crezut Pearl că o victorie este cu adevărat pe masă? Aproximativ cinci minute în repriza secundă, când echipa sa a ieșit cu foc și a avut un scor de 18-2.

    „Am schimbat imediat aspectul jocului defensiv”, mi-a spus Pearl. “Iowa State a jucat grozav în prima repriză, dar am ajutat puțin. Am intrat puțin în panică, iar presiunea mingii lor vă va face asta, așa cum pur și simplu ne-au extins și ne-au perturbat. Dar am primit piese. Am primit câteva caracter.”

    Pearl a recunoscut că echipa sa nu a fost la fel de pregătită pentru ca jocul să înceapă ca ISU, ceea ce a reușit. Ciclonii au tras 58% în prima jumătate față de doar 32% în a doua jumătate.

    Amintește-ți când Auburn a avut accidentul de avion care a dus la suspendarea a doi jucatori de rol? Tot ce s-a întâmplat de atunci este o victorie împotriva top-5 Houston și top-5 Iowa State. Auburn este a patra echipă din istoria sondajului AP (din 1948-49) care a început un sezon 5-0 cu mai multe victorii în comparație cu primele cinci echipe în acea perioadă. Ultima echipă care a făcut-o a fost Kansas în 1989-90.

    Pearl a spus că nu a avut niciodată o echipă Auburn să arate atât de multă inimă în noiembrie în deceniul său de conducere a programului. Auburn ar putea avea o clădire specială în vestiar. Vom vedea cum se recuperează Tigrii pentru meciul de marți de la 23:00 EST/18:00 HST împotriva câștigătorului Dayton-Carolina de Nord.

    Nelegiuitul lui Dan Hurley devine bun pentru colegii

    Dacă doriți să citiți despre victoria uimitoare a Memphis în prelungiri 99-97 în fața UConn Huskies numărul 2, poți să-mi vezi jucătorul chiar aici.

    Aș dori să dedic aproximativ 250 de cuvinte chiar acum nestăpânirilor lui Hurley de luni. UConn a avut șapte greșeli de echipă în primele șase minute împotriva Tigers; Hurley era ca lava față de oficiali chiar mai devreme. El a vânat un fault tehnic, câștigând în cele din urmă un T prost timp, cu 40 de secunde rămase într-un joc de prelungiri 92-92. După aceea, Hurley mi-a spus că nu crede că T-ul a costat echipa lui. El a creditat efortul și execuția lui Memphis, dar a spus, de asemenea, că echipa sa nu a primit o scuturare corectă de la zebre.

    „Nu cunosc prea multe echipe consecutive din campionatul național care primesc acest tip de fluier”, a spus Hurley în afara autobuzului echipei.

    La conferința de presă, el a spus asta despre echipa de oficiere: “Nu l-am văzut niciodată pe un arbitru până acum. Nici nu știam că este arbitru la facultate. Sunt familiarizat cu celelalte două, așa că nu sunt surprins.”

    Acest lucru, evident, a făcut ca fanii adversari să se scufunde peste tot pe Hurley pe rețelele de socializare, numindu-l un plângător, învins, plângător, îndreptățit și mai rău.

    Reacția mea? Aceasta este o dezvoltare bună pentru baschetul universitar. Hurley a avut întotdeauna critici din cauza izbucnirilor sale laterale, dar acum s-ar putea să se confrunte cu o nouă facțiune de haters.

    Înfrângerea a fost prima înfrângere a lui UConn în 288 de zile, prima înfrângere în noiembrie din 2021 și prima înfrângere pe teren neutru de la Turneul Big East din 2023. Programul lui Hurley a dominat sportul. Era atât de bun, încât Los Angeles Lakers voiau ca el să-și conducă franciza. El a spus nu, s-a întors la baschetul la facultate și acum este pe o cale de război pentru a menține Connecticutul în vârful muntelui.

    Paroxismele lui Hurley sunt exagerate, dar indiscutabil distractive. Este un personaj clasic de colegiu. Cel mai bun dintre toate, el câștigă mult mai mult decât pierde. Dacă oamenii vor să-l reproșeze pentru că este un ratat dureros sau să-l mustre pentru felul în care se comportă pe margine, este total inbounds. Apropo, Hurley nu ar fugi de această critică.

    Indiferent de cum te simți, el face sportul mai comercializabil și mai demn de urmărit. Echipele sale sunt pregătite cu meticulozitate și caută sânge în fiecare meci. Poate trece peste linie și probabil că o să-l facă din nou probleme la un moment dat. Nu-l poți acuza că este neautentic și nu-i poți minimiza măreția de antrenor.

    Acum așteptăm să vedem ce se întâmplă cu Huskies și cum răspunde Hurley. Colorado ar putea avea o dimineață lungă de marți. Apropo de…

    Statul Michigan trece pe lângă Colorado

    Acesta a fost cel mai puțin convingător dintre cele patru meciuri de luni, ușor. Spartanii au câștigat cu 72-56 pentru a se îmbunătăți la 5-1, cu Magic Johnson stând în spatele băncii lui Sparty.

    Este pentru a cincea oară când antrenează Tom Izzo la Maui Invitational. Este cel mai experimentat antrenor din istoria evenimentului. Acesta a fost singurul joc dintre cei patru de luni fără surprize. MSU este prea încărcată de veterani pentru a nu apărea și a juca bine și a câștiga cel puțin un joc în acest teren stivuit. Cu UConn în jos, Sparty are o șansă realistă de a fi câștigătorul surpriză al grupului Maui, dar nu va fi ușor.

    Memphis vă așteaptă și iată statistica de știut: MSU ocupă locul 362 în țară în ceea ce privește precizia de 3 puncte (20,0%) în cinci jocuri. Între timp, Memphis este pe locul 2 cu un succes scandalos de 47,9% dincolo de arc. L-am întrebat pe Izzo dacă acea discrepanță de 3 puncte ar fi aspectul definitoriu pentru semifinala de marți.

    „Când vorbești despre asta și nu mă deranjează să vorbesc despre asta aici, pentru că mă simt confortabil că în ultima săptămână și jumătate am filmat mai bine, dar când vorbești despre asta cu echipa ta, atunci devine un albatros pe tine, a spus Izzo, dar cu o avertizare. Nu va exista nicio acoperire de zahăr cu echipa lui.

    „O să mă întorc să fiu cine sunt și să spun, ai vrea să faci lovitura, te rog”, a spus Izzo.

    Asta înseamnă că Jaden Akins și Frankie Fidler trebuie să se pregătească să-l bombardeze din adâncuri împotriva unei echipe din Memphis care va căuta să-l tragă din adâncuri. Contraste mari așteaptă între spartani și tigri marți după-amiază.

    „Bineînțeles că este o îngrijorare”, a spus Izzo despre lipsa de pricepere a echipei sale la 3 puncte. „Așa că apărarea noastră ar fi mai bine să dezvolte și să se îmbunătățească și ar fi mai bine să găsim o modalitate de a începe să facem niște lovituri.”

    În ceea ce privește Colorado, antrenorul lui Buffs, Tad Boyle, și-a numit apărarea „soft”. Băieții din Colorado au mai puțin de 24 de ore să se pregătească pentru o echipă din UConn.

    “Cine va fi mai supărat, UConn sau Colorado? Asta vom afla mâine dimineață la 10:30”, a spus Boyle.

    Mă înfioră să mă gândesc la ce le vor face Huskiii Buff-ilor dacă sunt motivați corespunzător atât de curând după micul dejun. Connecticut-Colorado este primul pont de marți la 3:30 ET/10:30 aici, în Hawaii.

    2024 Maui Invitational bracket

  • Colorado-Kansas live – Top jocuri, cele mai bune momente, takeaways

    Colorado Buffaloes sunt pregătiți să ajungă în campionatul Big 12 și să se apropie cu un pas de playoff-ul de fotbal al colegiului, dacă reușesc să treacă de Kansas Jayhawks.

    Colorado poate câștiga un loc în meciul de campionat cu o victorie și înfrângeri de Arizona State (vs. BYU) și Iowa State (la Utah). Jayhawks, totuși, vin din supărări ale BYU și Iowa State neînvinse anterior. Fondul KU, Jalon Daniels, a revenit și el în formă.

    Buffaloes, cu Travis Hunter în cursa spre un trofeu Heisman, au câștigat patru la rând. Quarterbackul Shedeur Sanders este pe locul 6 în general în țară.

    Iată cele mai bune jocuri, momente și concluzii din joc:

  • NFL Week 11: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game

    Week 11 of the NFL season kicked off Thursday with quarterback Jalen Hurts leading the Philadelphia Eagles past the Washington Commanders.

    Around the NFL on Sunday, the Pittsburgh Steelers earned a statement win over the Baltimore Ravens, the Detroit Lions overpowered the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Miami Dolphins and New Orleans Saints look like they are headed in the right direction after posting their second consecutive wins.

    Our NFL Nation reporters reacted to all the action, answering lingering questions coming out of each game and detailing everything else you need to know for every team. Let’s get to it.

    Jump to:
    WSH-PHI | JAX-DET | LV-MIA
    IND-NYJ | BAL-PIT | CLE-NO
    GB-CHI | MIN-TEN | LAR-NE

    Rams

    Can the Rams’ offense sustain this success as they attempt a playoff run? After the Rams didn’t score a touchdown against Miami, coach Sean McVay called the offense “inconsistent.” While the Rams scored 28 points against the Patriots, they did it all in the second and third quarters. The Rams did not turn the ball over for the first time since Week 3. They’ll face a tougher test in Week 12 against a Philadelphia defense ranked seventh in DVOA. The Rams have won three out of four games after a 1-4 start and now have a playoff probability of 14%, according to NFL Next Gen Stats.

    Eye-popping stat: Matthew Stafford’s second-quarter touchdown pass to wide receiver Puka Nacua had a completion probability of 13.5%, per NFL Next Gen Stats. That’s Stafford’s lowest completion probability on any passing touchdown since 2017, when NGS began tracking that stat. The play gave the Rams a lead they never relinquished.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Another slow start offensively. For the seventh time in 10 games, the Rams failed to score in the first quarter. They have been outscored by 50 points in first quarters this season, which is the worst in the NFL, according to ESPN Research. When asked last week whether they could pinpoint the reason for the early scoring struggles, both Stafford and McVay said it’s the result of poor execution. — Sarah Barshop

    Next game: vs. Eagles (Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET)


    Patriots

    Does first-year coach Jerod Mayo need to be more aggressive with his playcalling? Mayo has referred to himself as a “defensive head coach,” and some of his decision-making reflected that. He didn’t attempt a 54-yard field goal (tough wind in that direction); he settled for a field goal on fourth-and-3 from the Rams’ 13 late in the second quarter; and he called for a PAT instead of a two-point conversion while trailing 28-19 early in the fourth quarter (it was blocked). Such decisions are always easy to second guess, but none worked out for the Patriots. Mayo has said he’s taking notes throughout his first season and plans to learn from his experience. This game presented multiple decisions from which he can learn.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Aligning correctly along the offensive line. The Patriots led 7-0 and appeared to convert on third-and-8 on a 17-yard connection from quarterback Drake Maye to tight end Hunter Henry. But an illegal formation penalty called on left tackle Vederian Lowe — which might have been a result of how deep left guard Michael Jordan aligned next to him — negated the play. It was a turning point in the game.

    Most surprising performance: Pass coverage. It certainly didn’t help that the Patriots couldn’t generate a consistent rush, but the secondary — which is a strength of the defense — didn’t have many answers for the potent combination of Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp. Nacua had six receptions for 117 yards and a touchdown in the first half. Kupp had two touchdowns, and the latter was a backbreaking 69-yarder early in the third quarter. — Mike Reiss

    Next game: at Dolphins (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Vikings

    Was this a bounce-back game for quarterback Sam Darnold? Absolutely. The game began inauspiciously when, on the third play of the Vikings’ first possession, Darnold’s pitch to running back Aaron Jones hit the ground and was recovered by the Titans. But after committing six turnovers in the previous two games, Darnold held on to the ball for the rest of the game while throwing two touchdown passes and running for a third. That was no small feat given the heavy pressure (38% of offensive snaps) he endured from the Titans’ defensive front, which was active even after the Vikings gave right guard Dalton Risner — a strong pass blocker — his first start of the season.

    Describe the game in two words: Penalty buffet. The Vikings had two touchdown drives extended by penalties against the Titans, including one on a fourth down incompletion. Penalties sometimes cancel out over the course of a game, but the Vikings held a big advantage throughout and ended up with three for 35 yards compared to the Titans’ 13 for 91 yards.

    Most surprising performance: Backup linebacker Pat Jones II pressured Titans quarterback Will Levis throughout the game, finishing with two sacks. They were his first sacks since Week 4, but he already has a career-high seven on the season. — Kevin Seifert

    Next game: at Bears (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:25

    Vikings pick off Will Levis late to secure win

    Titans quarterback Will Levis throws an interception in final minutes against the Vikings.


    Titans

    Can quarterback Will Levis’ big plays boost him for the rest of the season? Levis showed glimpses of the deep passer he was last season. It started with a beautifully thrown pass from his own end zone to Nick Westbrook-Ikhine for a 98-yard touchdown. Levis’ deep strike to Calvin Ridley for 51 yards on a post the next series was another well-placed pass, but an illegal formation penalty called it back. Those two passes seemed to do something for Levis. With seven games left in the season, he can build upon his season-high 295 passing yards in his quest to prove he’s Tennessee’s future at QB.

    Describe the game in two words: Uphill battle. The Titans knew they were going to be attacked by Brian Flores’ defense. Minnesota did just that against the Titans’ offensive line, resulting in five sacks. The Titans also didn’t get the benefit of the whistle. The biggest penalty they committed was against safety Mike Brown, who was called for a personal foul after he broke up a pass on fourth down.

    Early prediction for next week: The Titans have allowed quarterbacks to rush for a touchdown in each of their past two games, and Darnold managed to escape multiple would-be sacks and deliver the ball downfield for big plays. Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud could rush for his first touchdown of the year next week. — Turron Davenport

    Next game: at Texans (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Packers

    Is this what quarterback Jordan Love needed to get rolling? On a day when the Packers signal-caller threw his 11th interception to match his season total from last year, he and the offense left Soldier Field knowing that if they need a game-winning drive, they can get one. Trailing 19-14, Love, who was effective all game when throwing deep, hit receiver Christian Watson for a 60-yard catch-and-run. That set up the go-ahead score with 2:59 left in the game.

    Describe the game in two words: Lucky win. The Packers got away with a flat performance for the first 3½ quarters and only their last drive — and Karl Brooks blocking a 46-yard field goal attempt on the final play of the game — saved them from embarrassment. The Packers were fortunate not to lose any more ground in the NFC North.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Red zone decisions. The Packers threw the ball on second-and-1 from the Bears’ 5-yard line and got flagged for an ineligible man downfield. Two plays later, on third-and-11 from the 15, Love threw his 11th interception of the season. Later, coach Matt LaFleur went for it on fourth-and-goal instead of settling for a field goal that would have cut the Bears’ lead to 19-17. — Rob Demovsky

    Next game: vs. 49ers (Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET)


    Bears

    How did the offensive coordinator change affect the Bears’ offense? New OC Thomas Brown’ game plan led to more decisiveness from rookie quarterback Caleb Williams, who held the ball less (2.3 seconds, the lowest of his career) and made short, quick throws to combat the Packers’ pass rush. The Bears leaned heavily on the run, including a career-high 70 rushing yards from Williams, got their top playmakers involved (17 total catches for wide receivers DJ Moore, Rome Odunze and Keenan Allen) and had more third-down conversions (eight) than they did the previous three weeks combined (six).

    Describe the game in two words: Gut punch. Chicago was playing its best complementary football since before its recent four-game losing streak. After cornerback Terell Smith picked off Jordan Love in the red zone, the Bears ended their streak of 25 straight drives without a touchdown. But Cairo Santos had a 46-yard field goal blocked as time expired, which would have given Chicago its first win over Green Bay in 11 meetings.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: The Bears need to play better along the defensive line. They pressured Love on only three of his 17 dropbacks (3-of-3, 72 passing yards) and running back Josh Jacobs went untouched into the end zone on Green Bay’s lone third-quarter drive. With nose tackle Andrew Billings (pectoral) out for the season, Chicago’s D-line needs to find solutions for their porous run defense. Quickly. — Courtney Cronin

    Next game: vs. Vikings (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    Saints

    Is the bye coming at the right time for the Saints? New Orleans is finally picking up some positive momentum with its first win streak since Week 2, potentially putting the bye at an inopportune time. But it’s been a long season for the Saints, who fired coach Dennis Allen after a seven-game losing streak and promoted Darren Rizzi to interim coach. The Saints have dealt with a laundry list of injuries, and this could be a good opportunity for players such as Erik McCoy and Pete Werner to heal injuries they have been playing through. They face the Rams and Giants after the bye.

    Describe the game in two words: Taysom Time. The Saints got the full Taysom Hill experience against the Browns — he was a blocker, receiver, quarterback and running back. He scored three times but was also picked off throwing deep and fumbled near the end zone. Per ESPN Research, Taysom Hill is the first player with three rushing touchdowns, 50 receiving yards and one pass completion in a game since the Chiefs’ Ed Podolak in 1971.

    Most surprising performance: WR Marquez Valdes-Scantling. Valdes-Scantling joined the team only a month ago but has already proved he can be the team’s explosive element with Rashid Shaheed out for the season. Valdes-Scantling has now scored three touchdowns in two games, tying the team lead in receiving touchdowns. He had a 71-yard touchdown in the first half Sunday. — Katherine Terrell

    Next game: vs. Rams (Dec. 1, 4:05 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:25

    Taysom Hill goes 75 yards for his 3rd TD of the game

    Taysom Hill races past the Browns defense for a 75-yard touchdown to ice the game for the Saints.


    Browns

    Do the Browns have a wide receiver corps they can build around? Jerry Jeudy had his best game of the season with a 142-yard performance (his first 100-plus-yard game since 2022). Elijah Moore delivered an acrobatic touchdown catch. And wide receiver Cedric Tillman chipped in with 47 yards. All three players are 25 or younger and have stepped up since the trade of Amari Cooper, giving the Browns something to be bullish on as they inch closer to their third losing season since Kevin Stefanski became head coach in 2020.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Not placing more attention on Taysom Hill. The Browns talked about how mindful they would have to be of Hill and his multifaceted role. But time and time again, they lost track of or couldn’t bring down Hill, who recorded a career-high eight catches, completed a pass and ran into the end zone three times.

    Most surprising performance: Kicker Dustin Hopkins missed a pair of field goals, including a 27-yard attempt as time expired in the first half. Another missed kick was negated by a holding penalty. It was just the second time in Hopkins’ 134-game career that he missed two field goal attempts in a game. — Daniel Oyefusi

    Next game: vs. Steelers (Thursday, 8:15 p.m. ET)

    Steelers

    Was this a bad game or a bad sign for Russell Wilson? Despite a stout defensive effort to force three turnovers and two rare misses from Ravens kicker Justin Tucker, the Steelers’ offense managed only nine points on the ensuing drives — and it nearly cost them in Sunday’s 18-16 win. Wilson completed 1 of 8 attempts for minus-1 yards with an interception and four sacks when pressured. And in the the red zone, he completed just 2 of 9 attempts for 7 yards and an interception. He papered over an inefficient performance a week ago against the Commanders with a rebound fourth quarter and a game-winning moon ball to Mike Williams. But Wilson couldn’t do the same against a statistically weaker Ravens defense.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: Not getting more from the Steelers’ wide receivers. Against the league’s worst pass defense, receivers not named George Pickens struggled to get open. Pickens led all receivers with eight catches on 12 targets for 89 yards, but the rest of the receivers combined for two catches on four targets for 3 yards. At halftime, the Steelers had just 52 net passing yards.

    Most surprising performance: Chris Boswell. With the offense struggling to convert in the red zone, Boswell came through with six field goals, including three of 50 or more yards. Sunday marked Boswell’s fourth game with four or more field goals this season, matching his own franchise record set in 2017. — Brooke Pryor

    Next game: at Browns (Thursday, 8:15 p.m. ET)


    Ravens

    How much does this loss put a dent in the Ravens’ chances to win the AFC North? This is a major setback for the Ravens in their pursuit to become back-to-back AFC North champions. Baltimore’s chances to win the division dropped to 37%, according to ESPN Analytics. It’s difficult to believe the Ravens can overtake the Steelers when quarterback Lamar Jackson continues to struggle against them. The reigning NFL Most Valuable Player is now 1-4 against Pittsburgh after completing a season-worst 48.4% of his passes (16-of-33), which doesn’t include his desperation toss on a failed two-point conversion.

    Describe the game in two words: Uncharacteristic mistakes. The Ravens turned the ball over three times after not committing a turnover in their previous three games. The most glaring one was an interception im which Steelers linebacker Payton Wilson wrestled the ball away from running back Justice Hill. That ended a streak of 161 passes without a pick for Jackson. Two fumbles were converted into two field goals, which was the difference in the game.

    Most surprising performance: Justin Tucker. The NFL’s most accurate kicker was full of surprises. Tucker missed field goals from 47 and 50 yards in the first quarter, which marked the first time since 2022 that he had failed to convert on back-to-back attempts. — Jamison Hensley

    Next game: at Chargers (Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET)

    Colts

    Did quarterback Anthony Richardson show progress in his return to the lineup? It was not perfect, but Richardson took a step in the right direction after two weeks on the bench. He was more rhythmic in his passing, more accurate with his throws and more in command of the offense. His final numbers — 20-of-30 for 272 yards, 1 touchdown and 0 interceptions — were a mixed bag. But he didn’t turn the ball over, which had plagued him earlier in the season. The other variable of note was coach Shane Steichen’s adjusted playcalling. The offensive play selection seemed to mesh better with Richardson’s skills, including a significant increase in designed quarterback runs.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: The Colts repeatedly tried and failed to generate rushing success. The Colts could not come up with more creative run schemes to beat the Jets’ defensive front. Running back Jonathan Taylor rushed for 31 yards on seven carries in the first quarter, but he was limited to 26 yards on 17 attempts the rest of the way.

    Describe the game in two words: Good enough. The Colts had lost three straight and go home to face the red-hot Lions next week. With their playoff hopes dimming and a long week of debate over their quarterback situation looming, the Colts managed to take advantage of a bad Jets team. Indianapolis still has an eye on the postseason. — Stephen Holder

    Next game: vs. Lions (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:20

    Anthony Richardson puts Colts ahead for good with late TD run

    Anthony Richardson runs in a touchdown with less than a minute left to lead the Colts past the Jets.


    Jets

    What happened to the Jets’ once-formidable defense? The Jets top the 25-point mark for the first time this season and what happens? Their defense, once their pride and joy, chokes it away in the final two minutes. Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson marched 70 yards on six plays for the winning touchdown. The Jets looked lost on the final drive. Ditto, their final offensive possession, as quarterback Aaron Rodgers made poor decisions as time ran out. It was a brutal ending.

    Most surprising performance: For the first time in his career, running back Breece Hall scored a rushing touchdown and a receiving TD in the same game. That’s a surprise, considering he has been such a productive receiver. The offense is a lot better when Hall is heavily involved. He produced 121 yards from scrimmage, including two explosive plays — 29 yards (receiving TD) and 18 yards (running TD).

    Describe the game in two words: Fourth kicker. Anders Carlson was the Jets’ fourth kicker in four games — a franchise first. And he did OK, making both field goal attempts, including a career-long 58-yarder. He wasn’t supposed to be their kicker this week, but Spencer Shrader was unexpectedly poached from the practice squad by the Chiefs on Thursday. — Rich Cimini

    Next game: vs. Seahawks (Dec. 1, 1 p.m. ET)

    Dolphins

    Are the Dolphins officially back? With Sunday’s win over the Raiders, Miami has recorded four straight improved performances since QB Tua Tagovailoa’s return from injured reserve. Their 34 points are their most since Dec. 3 of last season. The Dolphins rank eighth in offensive expected points added over the past four weeks after ranking 31st without Tagovailoa from Weeks 3-7. If they can string two more wins together over the next two weeks, they’ll be back at .500 and firmly in the AFC playoff picture.

    Describe the game in two words: Spark lit. To paraphrase what the Dolphins have said for the past two weeks, all it takes is a spark to light a fire. With their second straight win and a favorable matchup against the Patriots coming next week, they’re on the cusp of a season-saving win streak entering the final stretch of the season.

    Early prediction for next week: Another massive workload for running back De’Von Achane. After failing to record a carry in Week 10, Raheem Mostert ran the ball three times for minus-2 yards Sunday. Meanwhile, Achane recorded 17 carries for 73 yards, as well as 32 receiving yards. Mostert’s ball security issues paved the way for Achane to take an even greater share of the backfield workload, which doesn’t appear to be changing soon. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

    Next game: vs. Patriots (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)


    Raiders

    Can the Raiders’ offense be more efficient to better protect its overworked defense? It had better. Sure, the Raiders looked better under new interim offensive coordinator Scott Turner as he called plays from the press box. But a certain lack of efficiency in stretches taxed the defense, which could not enforce physicality and get off the field against the speedy Dolphins. Familiarity should breed success for Las Vegas’ offense and there were enough glimpses of more imaginative playcalling to give the Raiders hope for the immediate future.

    Describe the game in two words: Deja-vu. The Raiders’ seemingly season-long script — a slow start followed by a rapid descent — reared its head for the umpteenth time this season. The Raiders had actually outgained Miami in total yardage in the first half before a late Dolphins flurry. And then after getting nothing to start the second half, the Dolphins scored to start their second-half surge.

    Most surprising performance: Tight end Brock Bowers going off with Michael Mayer’s return. With Mayer playing for the first time since Week 3, targets to tight ends would seemingly be at a premium, right? No. Bowers continued his Pro Bowl-level season with a career-high 13 catches for 124 yards. That was his first triple-digit receiving yards game, which included a 23-yard touchdown. — Paul Gutierrez

    Next game: vs. Broncos (Sunday, 4:05 p.m. ET)

    Lions

    Can the Lions keep overcoming injuries to key players? So far, yes. It’s next man up in Detroit. Lions captain Alex Anzalone was ruled out with a forearm injury at the start of the second half, but Detroit still dominated in his absence, scoring 50-plus points in multiple games in a season for the first time in franchise history. The Lions also lost Defensive Player of the Year candidate Aidan Hutchinson to a leg injury earlier this season, but traded for Za’Darius Smith last week, who recorded a sack in his Lions debut against Jacksonville. This Lions team has plenty of depth and has proved to be a resilient group.

    Describe the game in two words: Home dominance. Surprisingly, the Lions scored their first opening drive touchdown at home this season with a goal-line rush by David Montgomery. They never looked back. Detroit used a balanced attack to score a touchdown on seven consecutive offensive drives. The Lions are also currently outscoring opponents plus-99 (188-89) at home this season, which is the most by any team in the NFL.

    Most surprising performance: Lions quarterback Jared Goff. Typically, Goff isn’t viewed as a mobile quarterback. He’s known for efficiency and pinpoint accuracy, but his mobility was on display against Jacksonville as he rushed for 21 yards off four carries. Goff hadn’t rushed for 20 or more yards in a game since Sept. 20, 2021, at Green Bay, when he had 46. He also became the first quarterback in NFL history to have multiple games with a perfect passer rating (158.3) and 400 passing yards. He also accomplished that feat in 2018 with the Rams. — Eric Woodyard

    Next game: at Colts (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

    play

    0:25

    Jameson Williams leaps into end zone on 64-yard TD

    Jared Goff hits Jameson Williams across the middle of the field, then he turns it up and scores a touchdown for the Lions.


    Jaguars

    Was this coach Doug Pederson’s last game with the Jaguars? If owner Shad Khan decides to fire Pederson and doesn’t want to wait until after the season ends, this week would be the logical time to do it. The Jaguars are 2-9 after Sunday’s embarrassing loss to the Lions — and have lost 14 of their past 17 games — entering their bye week. Quarterbacks coach Mike McCoy was a coach with the San Diego Chargers from 2013-16, so he would be the logical choice as an interim for the remainder of the season.

    Describe the game in two words: Different directions. The Jags and Lions appeared to be on similar trajectories following the 2022 season when both teams went 9-8. Jacksonville has gone in the opposite direction after an 8-3 start in 2023, and there are major holes to fill along the offensive line, at cornerback, linebacker and receiver, as well as adding another pass rusher. The talent gap between the two franchises was evident.

    Eye-popping stat: The Jaguars gave up 644 yards to the Lions, the second-most in a single game in their 30-year franchise history. Trailing only the 653 yards they allowed to Houston in 2012. Quarterback Jared Goff’s 412 passing yards is tied for the fifth-most allowed in a game in franchise history. — Mike DiRocco

    Next game: vs. Texans (Dec. 1, 1 p.m. ET)

    Eagles

    What is the Eagles’ ceiling at this point? It’s time to start viewing them as title contenders. Their past five wins were over teams with sub-.500 records, but they took down a quality Washington team on Thursday to extend their lead in the NFC East to 1½ games. The Eagles have positioned themselves to challenge the Lions for the top seed in the conference. There are tests remaining on the schedule, including tilts with the Ravens and Steelers, but the bulk of their travel is over: next week’s trip to play in Los Angeles against the Rams will be the Eagles’ last plane ride of the regular season. Philadelphia heads into the final stretch red-hot and largely healthy.

    Eye-popping stat: Rookie cornerback Quinyon Mitchell allowed zero receptions on one target in 32 coverage snaps as the nearest defender in coverage, per NFL Next Gen Stats. Mitchell, who was often pitted against Terry McLaurin, Washington’s top receiver, is allowing 0.9 yards per coverage snap this season, the sixth best of 44 cornerbacks with at least 200 coverage snaps in 2024.

    Most surprising performance: The normally reliable Jake Elliott had a subpar night, missing field goal attempts from 44 and 51 yards in the first half. He followed up with a missed extra point early in the fourth quarter after the Eagles went ahead. Elliott entered the game tied for the second-highest field goal percentage (90.9%) since 2021 among NFL kickers with 80-plus attempts but has now missed five field goals this season. — Tim McManus

    Next game: at Rams (Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET)


    Commanders

    What has gone wrong with the offense? Coach Dan Quinn and quarterback Jayden Daniels insist the rookie signal-caller is fine physically after hurting his ribs in Week 7, but the passing game has been inconsistent the past three games. Washington has played two of the league’s best defenses in the past two games in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, and the Commanders might not have enough playmakers to challenge top units. The Steelers and Eagles generated more pressure on Daniels, perhaps speeding him up and forcing him to be less accurate than he was earlier in the season. They’ve also done a good job taking away his running ability, as Daniels has rushed for 18 combined yards in the past two games.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: The inability to get the wide receivers involved, notably Terry McLaurin. McLaurin was not targeted until the third quarter — only the second time in his six-year career that he did not have a first-half target — and finished with only one catch for 10 yards. The receivers combined for four catches and 28 yards overall. Without their involvement, the offense isn’t explosive.

    Describe the game in two words: Not yet. The Commanders played tough for three quarters for the second consecutive game but surrendered a four-point lead to the Eagles in the fourth quarter on Thursday after squandering a 10-point lead to the Steelers in the final period on Sunday. Washington’s next evolutionary step is learning to close out games versus good teams. — John Keim

    Next game: vs. Cowboys (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)