The 2019 NFL Season is Finally Here!

drbrumley

Well-known member
Went 9-4 going into tomorrow's game. Detroit let me down. So did Houston. The Niners were a half point from making me happy and the Saints, without their best rusher and on the road were better than I expected. Otherwise, all went well, including the Arizona upset.

If the Jets keep it closer than 9.5 I'm in double digits. We'll see.

Oooops on the Jets
 

drbrumley

Well-known member
Doc's Top 10 NFL as of 10/22
Comments By Dan Hanzus
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1. New England

Same old story. The Patriots have feasted on the Jets for years, and Monday night was no different. ESPN mics caught Jets quarterback Sam Darnold admitting he was "seeing ghosts" in the pocket. We could have guessed that without the wire -- Darnold threw four interceptions and lost a fumble in a game as one-sided as we'll see all year. Tom Brady and the Patriots offense set the tone on the game's first possession: a 16-play, 78-yard touchdown drive that sucked the energy out of MetLife Stadium. While Darnold was under constant assault, Brady had all day in the pocket and was rarely harassed by a weak Jets pass rush. One more note on that dominant Pats defense: New England has 18 interceptions, the second-highest total through seven games for a team in the past 30 years. Bill Belichick is running out a historically great secondary.

2. San Francisco

It will be one of the most indelible images of this 49ers season: Nick Bosa, clinching another win for the 49ers with a sack, then kicking off a celebration with a FedExField Slip 'N Slide. The fast and loose 49ers are 6-0 for the first time since 1990 and have now held opponents scoreless over their last 18 possessions. The driving rain and wind gusts made this an impossible setup for Jimmy Garoppolo and the Niners offense to make a significant impact, so the defense handled most of the business. The biggest play on Sunday was made by linebacker Kwon Alexander, who ended Washington's last real scoring threat by stripping Adrian Peterson of the football for a turnover. Robbie Gould was the hero on offense, kicking three short field goals to account for all the scoring. This was a game where no style points were necessary.

3. Green Bay

In a lot of ways, it was the perfect Sunday at Lambeau Field -- the type of day Packers fans will look back wistfully upon when this is all over. Aaron Rodgers, under a cloudless blue sky, playing quarterback at the height of his powers. His final stats tell the story of position mastery: 25 of 31, 429 yards, five touchdowns, zero interceptions ... and a rushing score, for good measure. It was the most flawless game we've seen from a quarterback all season, and there's something satisfying as a football fan that it came from Rodgers, who struggled enough in the past two seasons to make you wonder if Peak Rodgers was a thing of the past. His play this season has debunked that theory, and as we saw in a jubilant Packers locker room after the game, the whole team is flush with confidence knowing No. 12 is out front.

4. New Orleans

Sean Payton is chasing only one trophy this season, and it will be the one handed out in Miami on the first Sunday in February. But he's already got the NFL Coach of the Year award in the bag for what he's done with the 6-1 Saints. New Orleans has been without Drew Brees for most of the season, and on Sunday, superstar running back Alvin Kamara sat with ankle and knee ailments. Didn't matter in a blowout of the Bears at Soldier Field. At some point, attrition is supposed to take its toll, but somehow, the Saints keep getting stronger. It's a testament to Payton's ability as both a coach and team-builder. And things are only getting better: Brees (out since Week 2 with a thumb injury) is returning to practice this week and could even be back in action on Sunday against the Cardinals. This is your Super Bowl favorite in the NFC.

5. Buffalo

The Bills have worked hard this season to convince the outside world they are legit contenders in the AFC. That could have all been undone in 3.5 hours, had Buffalo not snapped out of it against the Dolphins on Sunday at New Era Field. Miami was set up with first-and-goal at the Buffalo 2-yard line with the chance to extend its lead to 12 in the third quarter. A disaster scenario was unfolding ... and then the light flipped on for Sean McDermott's defense. Jordan Phillips tackled Ryan Fitzpatrick before he could hand the ball off for a loss of 10, then Tre'Davious White jumped a route for a game-changing interception. Josh Allen followed the turnover with a 98-yard touchdown drive to put the home team ahead for good. The Bills remain a difficult team to gauge, but a soft schedule should allow them to stack up some more wins and put themselves in excellent position for the playoffs.

6. Minnesota

The Kirk Cousins Revitalization Project rages on. The quarterback -- identified as The Problem in Minnesota three weeks ago -- has played as well as any passer in the league during the Vikings' three-game winning streak, continuing with Sunday's conquest in Detroit. Cousins absolutely shredded the Lions in play-action, continuing a trend that began (perhaps not coincidentally) at the start of this surge. Over the past three weeks, Cousins has a 157.2 rating on play-action, completing 32 of 42 passes for 592 yards and seven touchdowns without an interception, according to Pro Football Focus. Throw in another huge day from running back Dalvin Cook (25 carries, 142 rushing yards, two rushing TDs), and we're beginning to see the full potential of this Vikings offense. It's an attack with a ceiling as high as that of any team in the NFC.

7. Baltimore

It's time to come up with a proper nickname for Lamar Jackson, who is doing things on a football field that no one else can -- and it's happening on a weekly basis. Lamargic? The LaMarvelous One? Let's workshop it. On Sunday against the Seahawks, Jackson took a snap on fourth-and-2 from the Seattle 8-yard line, danced to his right, then shot through an opening like an evolutionary Michael Vick for the crucial go-ahead touchdown. Moments earlier, Ravens coach John Harbaugh called his field-goal unit back to the sideline and opened the door for his very special young quarterback to do something very special. "Do you want to go for that?" Harbaugh asked his QB. "Hell yeah, coach, let's go for it!" Jackson quickly replied. "Let's go." Jackson has transformed into a star in his second pro season, and the Ravens are one of the most dangerous teams in the AFC because of it.

8. Kansas City

Deep exhale, Chiefs fans. We're told Patrick Mahomes avoided the kind of major knee injury that would have ended his (and the Chiefs') season. Mahomes missing time isn't great news, obviously, but considering how grim things appeared as the MVP writhed on the turf at Mile High last Thursday, this feels like a blessing. As for the game itself, credit the Chiefs for keeping it together in the midst of all that uncertainty. And let's give some love to the beleaguered defense, which held Denver to 205 yards and piled up eight sacks of the Joe Flacco statue the Broncos use as their starting quarterback. Spinning forward in a Matt Moore world, Kansas City has home games against the Packers and Vikings, followed by road games against the Titans and Chargers before a Week 12 bye. The Chiefs aren't constructed to thrive without their star QB the way the Saints have, but they'll have to find a way to survive.

9. Seattle

How strange was it to be watching a Seahawks game at CenturyLink Field in which Russell Wilson wasn't the most exciting quarterback on the field? Such is the power of Lamar Jackson, the young Ravens star who inserted himself into the MVP discussion that Wilson has headlined following a 30-16 Baltimore win. Playing a Ravens defense that has struggled mightily for much of the season, Wilson completed less than half of his pass attempts (20 of 41) and threw his first interception of the season, a pick-six by former Rams cornerback Marcus Peters. Wilson has been a rock of elite consistency all season for the Seahawks, finishing Seattle's first six games with passer ratings of 134.4, 131.0, 102.6, 114.3, 151.8 and 117.6. On Sunday against the Ravens? 65.2. It was an off day for Wilson, which usually means an off day for the team he leads.

10. Carolina

The 2019 Panthers feature two major storylines: 1) Their resurgence following an 0-2 start behind MVP favorite Christian McCaffrey, and 2) Cam Newton's continued absence as he recovers from a lingering foot injury. It is on team brass and coach Ron Rivera to figure out how much 1) has to do with 2). And you get the feeling, based on what's coming out of Charlotte, that the Panthers aren't in any rush to change the current formula that includes undefeated quarterback Kyle Allen. Newton is making progress, but Rivera has stressed Carolina won't rush him back into the starting lineup and risk another setback. The big question: Are the Panthers being rightly cautious about their former MVP ... or are they using the injury as a convenient reason to keep Allen behind center? Stay tuned.
 

drbrumley

Well-known member
11. Indianapolis

In a huge showdown against a division rival, Jacoby Brissett played perhaps the best game of his career while showing the rest of the league that the Colts are more than a running team. Brissett threw for 326 yards and four touchdowns without an interception, outdueling Deshaun Watson in a 30-23 win over the Texans. The win moves the 4-2 Colts into sole possession of first place in the AFC South as we near the season's midpoint -- pretty much a best-case scenario for an organization that was rocked by the retirement of Andrew Luck on the eve of Week 1. Brissett wasn't the only Colts player who brought his A-game on Sunday. Zach Pascal scored a touchdown and set a career high with 106 yards receiving, Eric Ebron had an end-zone grab that was as good as any you'll see, and Darius Leonard punctuated his return from a three-game absence with a contest-icing interception. The Colts are good.

12. Dallas

Now that's more like it. The Cowboys came out angry and sharp against the Eagles, jumping on their NFC East rivals early and coasting to a 37-10 win at Jerrah World. The victory was effective on three levels: 1) It snapped Dallas' three-game losing streak; 2) it moved the Cowboys back into sole possession of first place; and 3) it sent the Eagles into a minor panic and potential existential crisis. This was the Cowboys' most lopsided win over Philadelphia since a 34-0 shutout on Nov. 2, 1998. This is all excellent news for head coach Jason Garrett, who was at the center of a particularly heated week of national discussion about his worth and job security. NBC's Cris Collinsworth put it well as Garrett jogged to midfield to meet Doug Pederson for the customary postgame handshake: "The pressure relief valve has been hit."

13. Houston

Consistency continues to elude the Texans. On Sunday, that cost them first place in the AFC South. With the defense struggling to stop Jacoby Brissett (who threw a career-high four touchdown passes) and the running game unable to get it going, Deshaun Watson was again asked to don the Superman cape. Watson is one of the few players in football qualified to accommodate such an ask, but he wasn't as sharp as he needed to be against the Colts. Watson threw two interceptions in the fourth quarter, including the game-icing pick on a slightly high throw to Keke Coutee, who bobbled the ball into the hands of linebacker Darius Leonard to seal the loss. The Texans are probably a better team than the Colts, but when they turn the ball over in crucial situations and play without discipline (10 penalties for the second straight week), they can look pedestrian. And now they're looking up in their division.

14. Los Angeles Rams

The Rams needed that. Playing a Falcons team that looks like it's ready to call it a season before Halloween, Los Angeles won the battle on both sides of the ball in a 37-10 victory. Trade acquisition Jalen Ramsey made a successful debut as the new centerpiece of Wade Phillips' secondary, with the cornerback shadowing Julio Jones for much of the afternoon and keeping the all-world wideout in check. Aaron Donald knocked Matt Ryan out of the game with a sack and forced fumble, while Dante Fowler had his best game of the year, tallying three sacks and a forced fumble. Ryan was sacked five times overall as the Rams held the Falcons' offense (which has been solid this season) to just 224 total yards. The three-game losing streak is history; now is the time for Sean McVay's team to get back on track. Up next: the winless Bengals.

15. Chicago

Sunday's loss started with a blocked punt, and that was just the beginning of the misfortune for the Bears. Mitchell Trubisky and the Chicago offense were getting booed off the field by the home crowd midway through the second quarter, and the Saints -- playing without Drew Brees or Alvin Kamara -- built an insurmountable three-score lead before the fourth quarter began. How bad were the Bears prior to some garbage-time production? The Saints picked up four first downs on their final touchdown drive late in the third quarter -- as many first downs as the Bears offense had gained in the entire game to that point. Chicago's offense has no downfield element to it, and even worse, Trubisky is clearly pressing as the pressure mounts on his shoulders. He's taken a big step back in his third season ... how long can Matt Nagy stand by the former No. 2 overall pick?

16. Arizona

Have a day, Chase Edmonds. The backup running back played his college ball at Fordham University in The Bronx. On Sunday, he went from small school to big star of the Cardinals' 27-21 win over the Giants at MetLife Stadium. Edmonds, subbing for a banged-up David Johnson, set career highs in carries (27), rushing yards (126) and touchdowns (three) on a day when the Cardinals needed someone to step up alongside Kyler Murray. Edmonds was the star on offense; on defense, there were stars everywhere. Arizona sacked rookie quarterback Daniel Jones eight times, with Chandler Jones accounting for half that total. Patrick Peterson also contributed, finishing with a sack and a forced fumble in his first game back from suspension. The Cardinals have won three straight against opponents with a combined three wins on the season. Things tighten up considerably in the next two weeks, with the Saints and Niners looming.

17. Oakland

The final score tells the story of a blowout, but it wasn't nearly that grim for the Raiders. This wasn't a loss to hang on a gross talent disparity, poor coaching or a quarterback who couldn't make plays. Instead, the failure goes back to an inability to execute in the most important area of the field. On three different occasions, Oakland marched deep into Green Bay territory, only to be turned away without points. Derek Carr lost a fumble and possession on a dreaded pylon reach, Josh Jacobs was turned away at the goal line twice on third and fourth down, and Carr threw an end-zone interception, though the game was close to decided by that point. While Aaron Rodgers and the Packers cashed in on every opportunity, the Raiders stumbled. It was a frustrating loss, but not one that should leave fans of the Silver & Black without hope.

18. Tennessee

Sometimes, the Football Gods smile down upon you. On Sunday, the Titans looked finished, until the Chargers found a way to Charger themselves out of a go-ahead touchdown in the final seconds. Tennessee must take that good fortune and build upon it. At 3-4, it's still been a very disappointing season in Nashville, but the AFC South and AFC wild-card picture both remain wide open. The Titans can find a way back to January football, and Ryan Tannehill gave fans reason to hope against the Bolts. Tannehill sparked the offense, showing more decisiveness and accuracy than the benched Marcus Mariota. The former Dolphins first-round pick completed 23 of his 29 pass attempts for 312 yards and two touchdowns, providing the kind of quarterback production that has been foreign to Tennessee during Mariota's run. Tannehill brought rhythm to the Titans' offense -- let's see if he can keep it.

19. Jacksonville

Turns out the Jaguars don't need Jalen Ramsey to deliver a dominant defensive effort. Jacksonville created four turnovers against the Bengals, including three Andy Dalton interceptions over the course of five pass attempts en route to a 27-17 win in Cincinnati. No team forced more turnovers than the Jags during their run to the AFC Championship Game in the 2017 season, but takeaways have become a scarcity in the seasons since. When linebacker Myles Jack intercepted Dalton and short-circuited a potential game-tying Bengals touchdown drive in the fourth quarter, it marked just the fourth turnover that Jacksonville had forced all season. The defense turned it up after that, and that will have to continue if the Jags hope to stay in the AFC playoff race.

20. Philadelphia

Foot, meet mouth. Coach Doug Pederson told the world last week that his Eagles would beat the Cowboys in Week 7. "We're gonna win that football game, and when we do, we're in first place in the NFC East." Pederson surely wishes he had that moment back after his Eagles pulled a total no-show at Jerrah World, in a 37-10 defeat that was every bit as non-competitive as the final score indicated. The Eagles are 3-4 and looking like one of the NFL's biggest disappointments as we near the season's midpoint. No one played well on Sunday night: Carson Wentz was inaccurate, his skill players were sloppy with the ball, the defense was totally overwhelmed (again) and Nelson Agholor couldn't be bothered to lay out. If this isn't rock bottom for the Eagles, we have a Halloween horror story unfolding in Philadelphia.

21. Detroit

We've reached the stage where it's not good enough to merely hang with quality opponents. As Herm Edwards once taught us, "You play to win the game," and the Lions haven't done that this month. The biggest culprit is a sieve-like defense that has allowed 450 yards in each of their last three losses. Their run defense has been suspect all year (Detroit has allowed at least 100 yards on the ground in six straight games), and now the entire unit is beginning to melt. This was not supposed to happen under Matt Patricia, who won a title running Bill Belichick's defense in New England. It wasn't all bad against the Vikings. Matthew Stafford threw four touchdown passes, all four of them going to Marvin Jones. The craziest stat of Week 7? That wasn't even Jones' first four-TD game; he did it with the Bengals in 2013.
 

drbrumley

Well-known member
22. Pittsburgh

The Steelers' pulse grew stronger after an impressive Week 6 road win over the Chargers, but the victory came at a big cost. Defensive end Stephon Tuitt exited the game with a torn pectoral muscle, an injury that ends his season and will require surgery. Tuitt was tied for second on the team in sacks with 3.5 and was a major headache for the opposition on a weekly basis. It's been one of those years for the Steelers, who lost Ben Roethlisberger to a season-ending elbow injury in Week 2. The team's depth is being tested on both sides of the ball, but the silver lining for this star-crossed squad is an AFC North division that remains up for grabs. The Ravens have been hot and cold, the Browns have been one of the NFL's biggest busts and the Bengals are the dregs of the NFL. Could 9-7 win the division? Could Pittsburgh get there?

23. Tampa Bay

This Bucs season seems to be heading into an extended period of football purgatory. Week 6's ugly loss in London felt like the possible end of something for Jameis Winston, who turned the ball over six times in an important division game. Winston is starting to look less and less like Tampa Bay's future, but there remains a majority of the season to go. Bruce Arians recently said that Winston has a "habit of trying to be Superman," a trait that should have been worked out of his game years ago. Winston will be behind center when the Bucs return to action Sunday against the Titans, but it's fair to wonder how much rope the former No. 1 overall pick has at this point. If Winston continues to struggle with ball protection and consistency, you can imagine Arians will want his own guy to stand with in Year 2.

24. Cleveland

The biggest news story out of the Browns' bye week was the idiot lunatic who sucker-punched Myles Garrett. That bizarre incident was a fitting encapsulation of the Browns' 2019 season to date -- a team that came into Week 1 with serious swagger is currently on its butt after getting popped in the jaw. Luckily, Cleveland does not have any superpower to contend with in the AFC North and can still get off the mat ... it just has to happen quickly. They'll get the undefeated Patriots on Sunday before the schedule lightens up considerably. The pressure will be on Baker Mayfield to turn his season around. The second-year passer must find a way to make better decisions and bring consistency to the offense. The Browns know they need to fix their offensive line in the offseason -- it's on the former No. 1 overall pick to make do with what they've got now.

25. Los Angeles Chargers

It can't happen. It. Just. Can't. Happen. The Chargers have to find a way to execute in the final minute and win that game in Nashville. The crushing loss to the Titans will be put at the feet of Melvin Gordon, who had another poor game and lost the fumble that doomed Los Angeles, but disaster in goal-to-go situations has become a theme for the Chargers that's reaching historic proportions. This, from ESPN, tells the story: The Chargers have turned the ball over five times in goal-to-go situations this season, which ties them for the most goal-to-go turnovers by a team in the past 15 seasons. It's WEEK 7, people! This feels like a territory of failure and frustration that is unique to this organization. Hopefully this loss, in conference, against a fellow playoff hopeful, doesn't come back to haunt the Chargers. Just don't be surprised when it does.

26. Denver

Sometimes, a prime-time showcase is the worst thing for a team. All the Broncos' shortcomings were laid bare against the Chiefs on Thursday Night Football, a game that had FOX analyst Troy Aikman declaring late in the contest that Denver has "about as bad an offense as I've seen." Yikes. Joe Flacco has clearly reached the Respected Veteran Backup stage of his career, but Vic Fangio has no choice but to keep him on the field, with no other feasible option behind the 34-year-old. Flacco was sacked eight times, lost a fumble that became a touchdown and generally displayed the ball security and spatial awareness you'd expect from a QB 15 years his junior. Flacco was done no favors by a turnstile offensive line in need of a major overhaul. With the trade deadline looming, the Broncos could look like a very different team in the near future.

27. New York Giants

The Giants and their rookie quarterback are going in the wrong direction. Daniel Jones was sacked eight times, threw an ugly interception and lost two fumbles in a 27-21 loss to the Cardinals at the Meadowlands. Big Blue suddenly feels a long way off from the positive vibes that emanated from the franchise following back-to-back wins over the Bucs and Redskins in Jones' first two starts. Jones' inability to play clean football has been one of the factors behind New York's three-game losing streak, but growing pains were always going to be part of the gig once Eli Manning was sent to the bench. Speaking of Manning, Giants coach Pat Shurmur shot down any speculation that the two-time Super Bowl MVP could return to action in place of the struggling Jones, which is obviously the right decision. This is a developmental year for the Giants. It would make no sense to sit the developing quarterback.

28. New York Jets

The Jets were embarrassed on national television by the Patriots -- where have we heard that before? The story of this shutout loss was second-year quarterback Sam Darnold, who suffered through the worst game of his life. The five-turnover meltdown came just days after Darnold was named the AFC Offensive Player of the Week for his excellent performance in a win over the Cowboys. Darnold, wired for sound (another Jets gaffe), muttered to himself in the second quarter that he was "seeing ghosts" in the pocket, a sound bite that became another punchline at the team's expense on social media. Darnold played terribly, but he -- and the two other quarterbacks who have started games for the Jets this season -- continue to be undermined by an offensive line that is both talent deficient and seemingly unprepared each time out. The Jets have been exposed on a near-weekly basis -- a terrible look for Adam Gase and his entire staff.

29. Atlanta

The losing streak has extended to five, and the Falcons seem to be getting worse by the week. On Sunday, the Rams -- riding their own losing streak -- waltzed into Mercedes-Benz Stadium and bullied the Falcons for four quarters of a 37-10 win. Devonta Freeman got ejected for throwing a punch at Aaron Donald, Julio Jones was held in check by Jalen Ramsey and Matt Ryan exited with an ankle injury. At 1-6, it's beginning to feel like a formality that Dan Quinn will be let go, either during the season or immediately after it ends. None of this was expected in Atlanta, where the Falcons saw themselves as playoff contenders in the NFC. Big change is coming for the organization, that is certain. In fact, Atlanta flipped veteran wideout Mohamed Sanu to New England for a second-round pick on Tuesday. The next nine games will feel like an audition for the majority of the roster ... and perhaps the front office, as well.

30. Washington

The Redskins got shut out at home on Sunday, but they didn't look totally hopeless. Four times, Washington worked its way into 49ers territory, but once there, the team had no earthly idea how to turn those opportunities into points. Not helping matters were some truly dreadful weather conditions in the D.C. area that reduced FedExField's turf to a slippery mud pit. After the game, interim coach Bill Callahan said he still had faith in quarterback Case Keenum and that the veteran quarterback will continue to start despite Washington's 1-6 record. None of this feels like a good sign for first-round pick Dwayne Haskins, who is getting the storage-in-mothballs treatment in an era when that simply doesn't happen anymore. Haskins struggled in limited playing time last month -- is it possible the Redskins are already having drafter's remorse?

31. Cincinnati

Andy Dalton needs a fresh start. For years, Dalton was a steady option at quarterback, a man who straddled the line between true franchise passer and hold-the-fort journeyman. But as the Bengals' talent level has dissipated around him, Dalton has crumbled. Sunday was a low point: Dalton threw three interceptions in a 27-17 loss to the Jaguars, with all three picks coming over a span of five passes in the fourth quarter. The Bengals actually entered the final quarter with a one-point lead, but Dalton's struggles in and around the red zone (an ongoing theme this season) crushed any chance of securing victory No. 1 for Zac Taylor. Given the right surroundings, you could see Dalton (still just 31 years old) having productive seasons in the NFL. But he is no longer the answer in Cincinnati, where he was drafted in the second round in 2011, and where a complete rebuild is necessary. It is time for an amicable divorce.

32. Miami

The Dolphins are going to win a game eventually. Brian Flores' team has gotten incrementally better as the season has progressed, and Miami was just a couple of plays away from a shocking road win against the Bills on Sunday. The turning point in Buffalo was Ryan Fitzpatrick's interception deep in Bills territory with five minutes to play in the third quarter. It's the type of throw that has burned Fitzpatrick too often in his career -- staring down a receiver, then trying to force the ball into a window that exceeds the capacity of his limited right arm. Still, there's no debate that the Dolphins are a more capable team with Fitzmagic behind center. His 11-yard touchdown run to keep the Dolphins alive in the fourth quarter was all guts and guile -- it's why his teammates love him wherever he goes. The Fish have graduated to being competitive.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Oooops on the Jets
You never know. I like to take a couple of chances any week. But I should have remembered, Bill eats rookie quarterbacks for breakfast. :chuckle:

Still curious about how the Pats will look against a worthy opponent. Cleveland should at least be interesting, but it's at home...the Ravens are up after that in Baltimore.

Later they'll get the visiting Cowboys then go to KC for a hopefully Mahomes led game.
 

Idolater

"Foundation of the World" Dispensationalist χρ
...the Patriots are looking scary good.

...I don't think Roethlisberger will ever play again. He's 37, and has been talking about retiring a lot....
...same amount of Super Bowl wins as Tom Brady does by himself.
Scuttlebutt today is that this season might be Brady's curtain call, even regardless of the season's outcome. On a Boston sports talk radio interview he for the first time when asked "how much longer", did not mention age 45. For context, he's regularly asked the question about when he thinks he might hang up his cleats, and this was the first time he didn't say age 45.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Scuttlebutt today is that this season might be Brady's curtain call, even regardless of the season's outcome. On a Boston sports talk radio interview he for the first time when asked "how much longer", did not mention age 45. For context, he's regularly asked the question about when he thinks he might hang up his cleats, and this was the first time he didn't say age 45.
He's been slipping. What's remarkable is how good he was late in his career. In 2016, at 39 years of age, he had one of his best years. His qb rating that year was 112. Even with today's qbr inflation, that's excellent. In 2017 it dipped ten points, to a still excellent 102. In 2018 it fell by half of the preceding decline and he was at 97, a very good rating. This year, so far, and mostly against not so great teams, he's at 94. Being at 94 early in the season would be reason to worry and might be, depending on how good this defense of his actually is, which we won't know for a few more games.

If you're wondering, that rating puts him near a middle of the pack status, at 13th among qbs with over 100 pass attempts.

I think Brady has been in decline for a while, but when you're that good you're still good enough to lead a team to a championship for five or six years once that last leg starts to manifest. Lebron is in that period in his sport. He's not quite the man now, but he's close enough to win any given contest. . . though his window is much smaller given the differential in games. James will be in the great support role, at the latest, after next year. If he's injured again this year, it could be now.

So Tom would be wise, if he can, to try for an Elway this year. Now if he doesn't slip more and the defense is actually this good, he could try to outdo Elway and go out with a three-peat.
 

Idolater

"Foundation of the World" Dispensationalist χρ
The 8-0 Pats look vulnerable.

This Baltimore game is going to be a dog fight, and far and away I think the biggest test for them so far.
 

The Berean

Well-known member
I still don't know what to make of the 7-0 49ers. Only the 1990 49ers had a better start at 10-0. That team was a powerhouse, a 2-time defending Super Bowl champions.
 

Idolater

"Foundation of the World" Dispensationalist χρ
I still don't know what to make of the 7-0 49ers. Only the 1990 49ers had a better start at 10-0. That team was a powerhouse, a 2-time defending Super Bowl champions.
From afar, the NFC teams that look like contenders so far are SF, NO, GB, and maybe Seattle and Philly. Maybe Dallas, maybe. I doubt Minnesota.

In the AFC, Mahomes' injury has put a wrinkle into things. It looks like NE, Baltimore, KC assuming Mahomes comes back at about 100%. And I doubt Houston.

There's still time for medium teams to turn a corner, but that's how things look from where I'm setting right now. :idunno:
 

tetelestai

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
I still don't know what to make of the 7-0 49ers.

If a year ago, I would have told you that in one year, the 49'ers would be 7-0, Durant & Thompson wouldn't be on the Warriors this season, and that the Warriors will probably end up in last place, you would have said I was nuts.

If that didn't make you think I was nuts, what if I would have also told you that in one year the road team would win all seven games of the world series?
 
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tetelestai

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
The 8-0 Pats look vulnerable.

This Baltimore game is going to be a dog fight, and far and away I think the biggest test for them so far.

It's extremely rare I cheer for the Patriots. However, this Sunday, I'll be a huge Patriots fan....lol
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
I still don't know what to make of the 7-0 49ers. Only the 1990 49ers had a better start at 10-0. That team was a powerhouse, a 2-time defending Super Bowl champions.
Make that an 8-0 49ers...though it was Arizona...and by 3...so...:idunno:
 

The Berean

Well-known member
Make that an 8-0 49ers...though it was Arizona...and by 3...so...:idunno:

Some counterpoints.

1) It was a road game.

3) The 49ers broke an eight game losing streak to the Cardinals.

3) Jimmy G threw for 317 and 4 TD's on 28 for 37 passing with 0 INT's.

Though, the 8-0 record is great the 49ers will be tested later this season with two games vs the Seahawks, and games vs the Saints, Ravens, Rams and Packers. These five teams are a combined 30-9 on the season far. I'd be happy with a 3-3 record in these six games, ecstatic with a 4-2 record.
 

The Berean

Well-known member
If a year ago, I would have told you that in one year, the 49'ers would be 7-0, Durant & Thompson wouldn't be on the Warriors this season, and that the Warriors will probably end up in last place, you would have said I was nuts.

If that didn't make you think I was nuts, what if I would have also told you that in one year the road team would win all seven games of the world series?

That is nuts. The 49ers are now 8-0! The Warriors season has already complete unraveled after just four games. Steph Curry suffered a broken hand and is out for a long time. The Warriors have nine players 23 years old or younger. They have some talent but they are very raw an inexperienced. Might as well just tank the season and get a lottery pick and come back strong in 2020. Klay will be back. Also the reining MVP, Giannis Antetokounmpo, is a free agent after this season! He would look great in a Warriors uniform.
 

Idolater

"Foundation of the World" Dispensationalist χρ
It's extremely rare I cheer for the Patriots. However, this Sunday, I'll be a huge Patriots fan....lol
Pats defenses' are easy to anticipate in a way. They always target the most dangerous weapons and try to neutralize them. The result is that other less dangerous weapons are less defended. It typically looks like, for a passing team, that the running game is more effective, but that's the tradeoff the Pats make with this strategy.

With Baltimore it could be that they try to neutralize Jackson's running, and defend pass plays less, basically forcing him to beat them with his arm instead of his legs.

It should be a very competitive game.
 

tetelestai

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
Make that an 8-0 49ers.

Yep, however Garoppolo called Erin Andrews "baby".....so, the remarkable season is now going to be scrutinized by the Liberal media.

For the record: Garoppolo is 16-2 as an NFL starting QB...that's pretty good.

Ben Roethlisberger was once 22-3 as an NFL starting QB, won a Super Bowl, but then he raped a couple women.

Good luck Jimmy!!!
 
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