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GAME DAY Giants at Eagles - Divisional Playoff - 8:15pm ET

January 21, 2023​


The third meeting this season between the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles takes on extra meaning with a trip to the NFC Championship Game on the line Saturday night. Philly won both regular-season meetings, blowing out New York 48-22 on the road in Week 14 and 22-16 at home just two weeks ago. The first matchup featured both teams pretty much at full strength, and the Eagles rushed for 253 rushing yards and four touchdowns on their way to an easy victory. The Giants rested most of their starters for the regular season finale but still nearly won thanks to great red zone defense.

New York advanced to the Divisional Round following a 31-24 win over NFC North champion Minnesota last Sunday. The underdog Giants were led by Daniel Jones, who made history in his first-ever postseason start. Jones became the first quarterback to finish a playoff game with at least 300 passing yards, 75 rushing, and two touchdowns. More importantly, Jones didn't turn the ball over against the Vikings. The defense also did its part, limiting Justin Jefferson to just 47 yards on seven catches and holding Minnesota to less than four yards per carry.

Philadelphia is coming off of a bye, meaning the last time the Eagles were on the field was in that 22-16 win over the Giants at home in Week 18. It was Jalen Hurts' first game after missing the previous two because of a shoulder injury. He went 20-of-35 for 229 yards and an interception while adding 13 yards on nine carries. It certainly wasn't Philly's best effort on either side of the ball, as a New York offense led by backup quarterback Davis Webb almost came away with the road upset. It will be interesting to see if the Eagles show any rust or are out of sync to start the game on Sunday.

Overall, Philadephia has won three in a row over its longtime NFC East rivals and nine straight at home. This will be the fifth playoff meeting between these teams, with the Eagles winning the last two matchups. The most recent postseason encounter was in the Divisional Round of the 2008-09 season. Philadephia won 23-11 in the Meadowlands as Donovan McNabb outplayed Eli Manning.

NFC Divisional Playoff: New York (9-7-1) at Philadelphia (14-3)

Kickoff: Saturday, Jan. 21 at 8:15 p.m. ET
TV: FOX
Live Stream: fuboTV (Start your free trial)
Spread: Eagles -7.5
Tickets: As low as $300 on SITickets.com*

Three Things to Watch

1. Quarterbacks in a rush?

Both of these quarterbacks have a lot of mobility, and the team that handles it the best will win on Saturday. Daniel Jones has led the Giants in rushing four times already this season and has enjoyed previous success on the ground against Philadelphia. In the first meeting this season, Jones ran one in for a touchdown. The Eagles allowed the fourth-most rushing yards per game to quarterbacks during the regular season with Jones and his backup Davis Webb, accounting for the only two rushing touchdowns scored by signal-callers. Philly is going to have to use a mush rush to keep Jones from getting outside the pocket while also paying plenty of attention to Saquon Barkley. Jones may have led New York in rushing in the Wild Card Round win over Minnesota, but Barkley put up more than 100 yards from scrimmage (56 receiving, 53 rushing) while averaging 5.9 yards per carry and scoring twice on the ground. He was not that effective in the first matchup against the Eagles (28 rushing yards on nine carries) and sat out the regular-season finale, but he was fourth in the league in rushing this season (1,312 yards) and remains a threat to break off a big play anytime the ball is in his hands.

2. How Hurts is Jalen?

As effective as Jones has been on the ground, Hurts has been even more dangerous for Philadelphia. His 13 rushing touchdowns tied him for second overall in the NFL, and he finished third among quarterbacks (and tied for 35th overall) with 760 rushing yards. He also did this in 15 games because of the two he missed with the shoulder injury. He returned for the regular-season finale against the Giants and seemed rusty, completing 57 percent of his passes with an interception. He also wasn't aggressive at all as a runner, sliding early to avoid any unnecessary contact. He's had even more time to rest the ailing shoulder and everyone on the team is saying the right things about his health. But how much of it is a smoke screen and how much of it is the truth?

Hurts' dual-threat ability was one of the things that made the Eagles' offense so dangerous this season, but if he's limited in that respect, it will make things easier for New York's defense. In the first meeting, when Hurts was healthier and had his full complement of weapons around him, he totaled three touchdowns (two passing, one rushing) and nearly 300 yards (217 passing, 77 rushing) in the 48-22 rout. If he's not going to be able to threaten the Giants with his legs, that puts more pressure on Miles Sanders to be the main ball carrier and to open up the play-action passing game. Fortunately for the Eagles, Sanders had his best outing against New York in the first matchup (144 yds., 2 TDs), but the Giants fared well very against the run last week, limiting Dalvin Cook to 60 yards on 15 carries with a long of 11.

3. The wild cards

Even though this will be the third meeting between these teams, this will be the first time the Eagles' offense will have to deal with a Giants' defense that has Leonard Williams up front and Adoree' Jackson on the back end together. Both defenders missed both regular-season meetings against Philadelphia due to injuries. Jackson is of particular importance because his presence gives New York another solid cover corner to help contain A.J. Brown or DeVonta Smith. Williams provides a big boost for the Giants' defensive front, which will be needed going up against arguably the best offensive line in the NFL. Meanwhile, one Eagle who usually saves his best for the Giants is little-used running back Boston Scott. He has 17 touchdowns in his career (60 games), and 10 of those have come against New York. He has scored at least once in each of his eight games against the Giants. If Scott can continue this trend to complement Sanders and Kenneth Gainwell in the backfield, that will likely lead to a good outcome for the home team.

Final Analysis

A lot depends on the health of Philadelphia's MVP candidate. If Hurts is close to 100 percent and running the ball often, then the Eagles' offense becomes really tough to stop. We may know early how this game will go as Philly has the best first-half offense in the NFL so this team loves to start fast. In the end, this is the third time these teams have faced each other, and in a span of fewer than 45 days no less. have each other. I think the home team wins, but not without some difficult moments.

Prediction: Eagles 24, Giants 20

GAME DAY Jaguars at Chiefs - Divisional Playoff - 4:30pm ET

January 21, 2023​

AFC Divisional Playoff: Jacksonville Jaguars and Kansas City Chiefs Stage a Rematch​

One of these AFC teams was expected to be here. The other was not.

Not a single soul in the NFL pundit world expected Patrick Mahomes NOT to be here in the month of January leading his Kansas City Chiefs to the playoffs and stalking another title run. But Trevor Lawrence? Did we expect him to be here? Nope. If you recall, his Jacksonville Jaguars were an NFL-worst 3-14 overall last season and then limped out to a 3-7 start this season.

But the Jags caught fire down the stretch, and now the cats with the blue tongues enter this playoff game at Arrowhead Stadium having won six straight games, including last week's improbable and incredible 27-point comeback to beat the Chargers 31-30 on the last play of the game.

These two teams know each other well, having already faced off once this season back in Week 10. In that game, the Chiefs beat the Jags 27-17, which dropped the Jags to that 3-7 mark. Obviously, this will be a different J-ville team that the Chiefs will have to deal with on Saturday, which makes it all the more fun of course.

AFC Divisional Playoff: Jacksonville (9-8) at Kansas City (14-3)

Kickoff: Saturday, Jan. 21 at 4:30 p.m ET
TV: NBC
Live Stream: fuboTV (Start your free trial)
Spread: Kansas City -8.5
Tickets: As low as $165 on SITickets.com*

Three Things to Watch

1. Which Trevor Lawerence are we going to see?

Yep, just like when the girl with the neon green hair gets on a crowded elevator, we all saw it. We all saw Jacksonville dig its way out of a huge 27-0 hole to come back and beat the Chargers 31-30 last Saturday night. Great comeback. In fact, it was their sixth come-from-behind win in their last seven wins. But let's remember how bad those first 30 minutes were for Lawrence and the Jaguars. At halftime, the offense had accumulated 106 yards with six first downs and Lawrence was just 10-of-24 for 77 yards. There also were four interceptions, three of those picked off by Asante Samuel Jr. It's weird to think that Lawrence only threw eight picks during the regular season, so last week's first half has to be looked at as an aberration. And credit to Lawrence for staying the course after a dreadful start and rebounding in a big way with four second-half touchdown passes.

So will the Chiefs follow Chargers head coach Brandon Staley’s first-half game plan to mix up coverages from man to zone and try and get after Lawrence? Speaking of…

2. The BIG matchup in this one

While we are on the subject of pressure, let's talk about the Chiefs' defensive line vs. the Jaguars' O-line. The Boys from the Barbecue Capital were second in the NFL with 55 sacks during the regular season. And now KC is facing a Jacksonville line that ranked fifth in terms of fewest sacks allowed (28). In fact, the Jags are coming off of a strong showing last week in which Lawrence dropped back 49 times and was pressured just 18 percent of the time (including just eight percent in the second half). All-Pro defensive tackle Chris Jones leads the Chiefs with 15.5 sacks, but if Lawrence continues to get rid of the ball quickly (2.4 seconds per dropback in the second half vs. Chargers), he may be able to negate KC's pass rush.

3. Don't let Patrick Mahomes get a big lead

Okay Jags, we see you. You made the third-biggest postseason comeback in NFL playoff history. But a word of warning: don’t make that same mistake against the Chiefs. As we have all seen over and over again, Mahomes is a master of prestidigitation. He'll do whatever it takes to make plays; throw with his left hand, throw underhanded, or scramble like mad to make positive yards. He also commands the highest octane offense in the league at 414 yards and 29 points per game (both No. 1 overall). On top of that, Mahomes may have played his best game of the season the last time these two went at it, throwing for 331 yards and four touchdowns (with one INT) in the Week 10 win. Any lead the Chiefs are allowed will be a crusher to the Jags' chances. In that first meeting, it was 20-0 with less than a minute left in the second quarter and KC never looked back.

Final Analysis

Even though the old adage is "defense wins championships" I have a feeling that the offenses will take center stage in this one. Lawrence vs. Mahomes is going to be a great showdown of young QBs who both have viable threats to work with. But give the edge to the home team's cadre of weapons.

Although the Chiefs have explosive wideouts like JuJu Smith-Schuster and Marquez Valdes-Scantling (don't forget about former Giant Kadarius Toney either), keep an eye on other pass catchers. The Jaguars have a notoriously tough time with tight ends and running backs in the passing game. So look for All-Pro Travis Kelce and the versatile Jerick McKinnon (six straight games with a TD catch) to be the difference-makers here.

Oh, one more nugget for you here… In games where Andy Reid has had 10 days or more to prepare for an opponent, his record is 30-6.

Prediction: Chiefs 34, Jaguars 21

2022 Rams Autopsy: How Run It Back Ran Into The Ground

2022 Rams Autopsy: How Run It Back Ran Into The Ground​

It’s been a week since the Los Angeles Rams season ended and the corpse is cooling in the drawer. The season was a disaster at all levels, coaching, offense, defense, special teams, the front office, and even the fans. Only a handful of reputations come out of this season unscathed and sweeping changes are inevitable.

Sure, injuries were one of the main authors of this godawful season but the injuries were the symptom and not the disease. The injuries were, of course, devastating on the field but they also exposed the rot in the foundation of this team. The purpose of this piece is not to have a Festivus for this Rams season nor is the conclusion going to be “FIRE EVERYONE AND BURN IT ALL DOWN” because that’s an obviously lazy and irrational solution.

Conversely, this won’t be a spoon full of hopium meant to course through anyone’s veins. This is an honest assessment of what the team did wrong, right (believe it or not), and what can be done to come out of the worst Super Bowl hangover of all time without going back out there mixing beer, wine, hard liquor, and cocaine. Last season was a glass case of emotions and the decade-plus-long river of sh*t the franchise and fans had to crawl through ended in champagne. Even a disastrous hangover.

The Front Office

Everything starts with the front office and Les Snead understandably was Mike McD riding a hot hand. His years of “F— DEM PICKS” paid off like a slot machine and his ultimate gambit was trading for Matthew Stafford. That was an unqualified success. Denver and Indianapolis attempted to recreate that move to their detriment and Miami, Vegas, and others made big swinging moves that would’ve made Mike Florio throw up in his mouth a year ago.

One of the big things that Les Snead lost was the element of surprise as the league seemingly is no longer allergic to blockbuster trades. The Rams zagged against the conventional wisdom of the league but now it’s no longer rare to see a team trade multiple picks for a superstar. That was one of the inefficiencies Snead exploited and it’s no longer there.

The media narrative was that trading the picks were why the Rams were abysmal this year and it takes no more than a Google to see why that narrative reeked of lazy takes that were sitting in many an inbox for over a year.

“F— DEM PICKS” in and of itself wasn’t the problem. The Rams weren’t actually bereft of picks. Yes, they didn’t have a first and in some instances a second but they had multiple picks in rounds 3-7. The problem was Snead and his scouting department whiffed the last few drafts. The trick was to surround his stars with uncut gems that buttressed the massive talent around them. The big examples of this are the play that sealed the NFC Championship where homegrown Aaron Donald forced Jimmy Garoppolo to throw a pick to seventh-round pick Nick Scott.

Also, the fact that their biggest homegrown star on offense Cooper Kupp was the MVP while Stafford was forced to lean on Brycen Hopkins, Darrell Henderson, and Ben Skowronek to extend the gaming winning drive.

For all the crap the Rams get for being top-heavy, they actually were top five in homegrown roster talent. Unfortunately, Snead and Co started whiffing on those homegrown guys. The last two drafts were unmitigated disasters and this extends far beyond fans’ favorite rallying cry “CREED HUMPHREY”. Obviously, every draft is a dart throw and there will always be misses but 2020 is where the wheels come off.

2020 started strong with Cam Akers (more on him later) and Van Jefferson which count as wins. They’ve been valuable pieces to the offense when healthy but after that, Terrell Lewis was a guy with a ton of potential but needed to be encased in that mechanism the Mona Lisa was stored in in “Glass Onion”. Terrell Burgess had flashes but was cut midseason, Brycen Hopkins struggled to exist, Jordan Fuller is the closest thing to a winner but his availability is becoming a concern, and Tremayne Anchrum is an incomplete. Clay Johnston and Sam Sloman were whiffs. 2021 would somehow be worse.

Yes, their first pick was Tutu Atwell over Creed Humphrey or Quinn Meinerz. And while Tutu (more on him later too) did come on towards the end of this season, this was still a big misstep. Atwell could’ve been had later. Ernest Jones was a winner but he had a bit of a second-year slump.

Beyond them it got worse, Bobby Brown, Earnest Brown, and Jacob Harris have failed to materialize into anything beyond practice squad mentions. Robert Rochell had flashes as a rookie but really struggled to get on the field and when he did it didn’t end well. Jake Funk is no longer on the team and so is Chris Garrett. Ben Skowronek is the only other player that has a place on the offense but unfortunately, he has too big a place at the moment.

It’s not fair to judge 2022 quite yet but there do appear to be some winners. Cobie Durant, Russ Yeast, and Quentin Lake are DBs that could be valuable pieces in the future. Kyren Williams has a ton of upside if he can ever get consistent playing time, and Logan Bruss missed his rookie year because he tore his ACL so he also gets an incomplete.

That said, Derion Kendrick got way too much play and struggled mightily at times. Daniel Hardy never cracked the barren linebacker rotation and AJ Arcuri had to start a few games and did OK all things considered. The point being is that when a team whiffs two straight drafts it caused the Rams house to wobble. It wasn’t just the draft where Snead lost his fastball but it was also in dealing with his incumbent roster and free agency.

The root of the Rams’ off-season was the negotiations with Von Miller. The Rams lost a lot of time trying to work out an extension with Von and they wouldn’t give him the years that Buffalo eventually did. On one hand, this does make some sense. Von is on the wrong side of 30 and his deal would run until he’s 38. That’s a long time to invest in a pass rusher whose speed is a big part of his game and he’s had health issues the last few years (He ended up tearing his ACL this season).

On the other, their pass rush sans Miller didn’t exist and they could always eat the dead cap down the road. So once Von joined the Bills Mafia they made a HARD pivot. They traded starting receiver and cultural touchstone Robert Woods to the Titans for a sixth-round pick (because he had a big contract) and while in a vacuum it makes sense why, as he was coming off an ACL tear, carried a big (well-deserved) salary, and didn’t find a rhythm with Stafford the way Kupp had. Of course, trading him probably hurt the dynamic in that locker room, especially with Andrew Whitworth riding off into the sunset.

They replaced Bobby Trees with Allen Robinson (more on him later) which on it’s face was a good idea. Stafford loves to throw 50/50 balls and Robinson is one of the best at catching them. That wouldn’t pan out and looks worse with the three-year $46 million price tag.

They never got a deal done with Odell Beckham and assumed (albeit correctly) that they would still have an opportunity to do so because he’s coming off an ACL and his medicals would factor into whether he makes a playoff run this season (he wouldn’t) and while they’re still in the Beckham sweepstakes that meant they were down a weapon.

Signing Bobby Wagner was an unqualified success but didn’t address their lack of a pass-rusher.

Trading a 5th for Troy Hill seemed like a good idea but he missed seven games and that became a massive problem for the secondary and Jalen Ramsey in particular.

Their in-house free agency spending was also mixed. They rightly granted Stafford, Kupp, and Aaron Donald raises/extensions as well as Sean McVay. However, rather than go outside for their Whitworth replacement they decided to promote Joe Noteboom. The 2019 3rd-round pick was oft-injured but when he had to fill in for Whitworth he was pretty good. The problem is Snead gambled on the injuries being in the past and they weren’t.

Center Brian Allen was also given a three-year $24 million extension and he was another case of a player who could never stay healthy and yet paid to ultimately dire ends. He also repeated his 2018 of letting Rodger Saffold leave by letting Austin Corbett go which really came back to bite him.

The Rams didn’t go out and pick up a veteran pass rusher or offensive lineman and spoiler alert that wound up biting them. The trade deadline wound up being a crossroads moment as luckily for them the Panthers refused multiple firsts for Brian Burns and Christian McCaffrey.

Neither would’ve moved the needle this season and would’ve MURDERED them for years to come. Their big move was bringing in Baker Mayfield on a flyer and ultimately it was a great ride as he had a come-from-behind win against Vegas and a blowout of Denver. Mayfield will at the very least net the Rams a comp pick in the draft.

The front office flew too close to the sun but it would be Sean McVay who showed signs of burnout.

Coaching

Before getting into the issues that stemmed from the coaching staff there is one thing that needs to be taken care of first. Sean McVay IS A GOOD COACH. He’s flawed like all coaches are to varying degrees but he is not a nepotism baby that fell a$$ backward off the Metrolink into a Super Bowl.

Yes, like 98% of the league he got his foot in the door via nepotism/connections but he’s not a stumblebum who huffed glue while his superstars did the work. He came into the Rams as the youngest coach in the league and managed to put together a quality staff and build a culture. Anyone who says he was gifted a playoff team is some combination of petty and high.

Jeff Fisher was around when some big pieces were in place but outside of Donald and Todd Gurley, none of them were properly utilized if utilized at all. Dare anyone to look at that roster and at that moment say that’s the kind of roster anyone could win the NFC West with (even a bad NFC West). You can’t. Cooper Kupp was a rookie and unproved, Andrew Whitworth was a 35-year-old tackle, and Robert Woods was a wide receiver who was only complimented for his blocking. Gurley was coming off a second-year slump and Jared Goff.

Yes, the Rams were aggressive in acquiring stars but that didn’t come at the detriment of doing actual player development. Furthermore, they brought in volatile figures like Ndamukong Suh, Marcus Peters, Jalen Ramsey, and Odell Beckham, yet the “WE NOT ME” culture didn’t suffer.

Even when things would go south there wasn’t one word about the locker room turning on McVay or that he wasn’t up to the task. Instead, he turned it around. He won a Super Bowl in his first five years despite roster tumult, other teams poaching his staff year in and year out (if he sucked they wouldn’t poach), and the pressure of having to revive football in LA, oh and his in-laws are in a war-torn Ukraine. Which isn’t easy.

From the outside, it looks easy but it wasn’t. So while all the leave of absence talk seemed like a frontrunner bailing when things got tough, he’s not that. He’s coming back to coach and made a point of calling this year a professional failure and admits he’s had to confront his shortcomings (more on those in a minute) and while time will tell whether or not he truly figured it out, he’s not turning tail and running away because he was forced to actually coach.

Furthermore, he also didn’t just coast on the roster Jeff Fisher built and if Jeff Fisher had a playoff roster he would’ve made the playoffs. So, anyone who thinks he’s a bad coach propped up by superstars can go to hell.

All that said, this was the first year all the above tumult finally caught up with him. Kevin O’Connell finally graduated to head coach and because the hiring cycle occurred during the playoffs the pickings for offensive coordinators were SLIM. He landed on Kentucky OC Liam Coen and while McVay is the primary play caller he does like having an O’Connell or a Matt LaFleur to have input, so the OC isn’t just tasked with guarding a bee in a jar.

Coen’s influence on the offense didn’t yield anything positive and one could chalk that up to the injuries along the offensive line but McVay succumbed to one of his worst impulses by getting overly conservative and failing to divert from his system.

Even in the face of a running game that was in shambles and Allen Robinson not gelling with Stafford, and not having Van Jefferson until week eight, he didn’t adjust. Furthermore, the offense had a difficult time integrating Robinson until the point where he got hurt. His big early adjustment was Ben Skowronek as a fullback or in the Robert Woods jet sweep role and while that worked for a bit, it ultimately wasn’t enough. He leaned on Cooper Kupp to the point of Kupp getting injured on a play he absolutely didn’t need to be in on.

Eventually, when Kupp went down he had to experiment by making Brandon Powell a K-Mart Deebo Samuel, actually using Brycen Hopkins, and just bombing it to Tutu Atwell and Van Jefferson. His Baker Mayfield offenses did what they could with their limitations but once Cam Akers reemerged as a capable runner and they found some semblance of an offensive line there was proof that the system hadn’t totally collapsed. Too little too late, unfortunately.

Thomas Brown‘s lack of involvement or at the very least reduced involvement in the game was very apparent. He was promoted to assistant head coach/passing game coordinator and even did time with the tight ends. They hired R’aShaad Samples and for whatever reason, he didn’t work well with Akers or Darrell Henderson. McVay’s handling of Cam Akers was truly baffling. There was clearly a major rift between the Rams and Henderson. Akers kept getting treated as the feature back but his explosiveness was still working its way back after tearing his Achilles.

It was miraculous he came back for the playoffs but he wasn’t himself. Even with a full training camp, Akers was still working his way back to full health because that injury takes at least a year to fully heal if it ever does. No matter the reason, McVay obviously didn’t want him around and the Rams tried to shop him but there was no reason anyone was going to trade a pick for Akers as his stock price was akin to Tesla’s post-Elon’s Twitter purchase.

Akers missed a month of the season and Darrell Henderson was tasked with being the lead back but his own durability concerns and the aforementioned offensive line breakdown hindered his effectiveness. With Henderson being a free agent the Rams granted his release as they worked to make amends with Akers since he’s cost controlled for one more season. Thomas Brown went back to being the running back coach and Akers flourished late in the season and even improved as a pass blocker. It isn’t known exactly what went down or how it was resolved but McVay bears responsibility for the situation being as ugly and public as it was.

In speaking to the defensive side of the ball, the “FIRE RAHEEM” movement reached a fever pitch, which seemed impossible given how toxic and annoying it was last season. That said, Raheem Morris had a mixed year. On one hand, the run defense did improve and the defense even without Aaron Donald for the last six games didn’t allow a 100-yard rusher until Week 17.

On the other, the pass defense suffered. The “bend don’t break” philosophy proved flawed when the personnel wasn’t fit to run the scheme. Jalen Ramsey was tasked with running the entire secondary because Troy Hill spent seven weeks injured and Jordan Fuller missed all but three games. The secondary was relying on rookies, as well as future comp picks Taylor Rapp and David Long. Ramsey had to also be a primary run defender which isn’t that common for a corner to be and he was great at it finishing in the top four in the entire league.

While Bobby Wagner and Ernest Jones did what they could in the middle but they desperately needed a pass rusher. Von Miller‘s loss on this defense was catastrophic. Aaron Donald was the only source of a pass rush as Leonard Floyd‘s injuries prevented him from being effective for six weeks. Greg Gaines had a slow start to the season and no one developed outside of them.

Morris and his defensive staff deserve blame for not experimenting with their rotation more as Justin Hollins (later released) wasn’t an adequate pass rusher and he never adjusted his scheme at all. The nadir for Morris was the cataclysmic collapse in the Tampa Bay game where the Rams had the Bucs dead to rights but the young secondary headlined by Derion Kendrick got roasted by a running-on-fumes Bucs offense.

The accusations of “SOFT” coverage aren’t entirely without merit but they aren’t entirely derived from Morris or the defensive scheme for being WEAK. The entire point of the defense isn’t to get beat for explosive plays, but that opens them up to being killed by a thousand cuts. This is, of course, best highlighted by all the meetings with the Niners, which is further exacerbated by the Rams penchant for poor tackling which on some level is on the coaching staff.

As great as Bobby Wagner was this season he’s not the linebacker anyone wants in pass coverage but he had to shoulder that responsibility too often and while Ernest Jones is a developing cornerstone he experienced a second-year slump.

The defense also failed to get turnovers until the back half of the season and that came when they allowed Michael Hoecht to try out as a pass-rusher. They finally went with Cobie Durant at corner and it turns out that adjustment paid off.

Again, Morris should’ve altered his scheme a bit to meet the skill set of his players and should’ve worked harder at finding better rotations when what he had clearly wasn’t working. But that is by no means a reason to have him fired.

Aesthetically, the defense can be hard to watch especially when injuries and poor personnel allow for the offense to routinely convert third and fourth downs. Even when they get goal line stops and or force field goals the time it took to get that far compounded with the offense’s inability to score made “bend don’t break” all the more frustrating.

All the rookies and younger players have also made the special teams difficult to watch as the Rams routinely excel in coverage or in the return game. Brandon Powell struggled to make much of a spark as he did a year ago primarily because the blocking wasn’t there. With Joe DeCamillis gone, it will be up to the next coordinator to right the ship.

That said, both Matt Gay and Riley Dixon were absolutely not problems. Matt Gay in particular needs to be kept on as there were games where he was the only major source of offense the Rams had.

Circling back to McVay, as stated earlier his conservative play-calling hindered the team but also his failure to make fundamental changes sooner. Yes, the offensive line was decimated by injuries but McVay refused to make changes to that rotation until it was too late.

Bobby Evans is the poster child of this. Evans had a strong rookie year in 2019 but got worse each and every year. Evans was easier to pass than the admissions board to Arizona State. Despite being a chief cause of Matthew Stafford‘s sacks, Evans would start game after game with his nadir being the Tampa Bay game where he’d give up multiple sacks that would stall drives.

McVay finally had to pull the plug but like with Morris’s defensive adjustments it was too little too late. He also failed to utilize his tight ends more as he’s done in the past when the chips were down and even when bombs to Atwell worked he seemed afraid to keep trying it.

Once the season was over, he rightly took stock of what he had, and sure enough, Atwell, Hopkins, and others had moments throughout the dead part of the season, which further frustrates him because there’s a sliding doors moment where he adjusts earlier and they squeak out two or three more wins. Instead, he doubled down on what felt safe even when it didn’t work.

The backup QB situation also reared its ugly head. Once Stafford went down, it became apparent that the staff was derelict in their duties in planning for injuries. John Wolford dined off of one decent game and once his sample size grew he was exposed for being woefully unprepared to be a Stafford understudy and Bryce Perkins was only marginally better. Perkins struggled to read defenses and never seemed comfortable.

Once Baker came on board they were able to also find a bit of stability on the offensive line (not much) and the running game fell into place. Experimentation became possible and everyone was able to audition for their spots next season but again, it shouldn’t have taken future comp pick Baker Mayfield to enable that.

The Players

The coaches and front office bear the brunt of the blame for how everything went down but it also comes down to play on the field. The Rams have already begun pruning their roster of guys that haven’t worked out so there’s no point in belaboring Bobby Evans or Justin Hollins any longer. They’ve had a fairly lucky health situation the last few years but the injury bug infested the Rams like they were a Travelodge.

Their offensive line alone had at least fifteen different combinations which obviously means there was no cohesion. Rob Havenstein was the only lineman to make it through the season unscathed and for that, he deserves a medal. On the positive, there were linemen that acquitted themselves as capable when they were in the rotation.

Alaric Jackson and Coleman Shelton stepped into a brutal situation and when healthy were guys who deserve to be key reserves with the Rams assuredly injecting more resources into that position they are two that deserve to stick around when the roster purge happens.

Matthew Stafford came into the offseason not entirely healthy and it was difficult to parse what was happening with him because of how bad his blocking was. His elbow didn’t seem as big of an issue as reported in the summer but at the same time, a lot of his picks or bad throws could be chalked up to not having time. He was under duress at every turn but at the same time, Cooper Kupp was the lone source of offense right up until he got injured.

Beyond that Van Jefferson missed seven weeks and even once he was back didn’t truly get into a groove until the Stafford went down. Tutu Atwell will never be CREED HUMPHREY but he actually proved himself as the burner the Rams could utilize in the near future. He also was able to be used in jet sweep situations so if McVay and his future new offensive coordinator want to get back to that they can depend on him.

Ditto Brandon Powell who as stated earlier was able to be used in that fashion and has enough speed/agility to make guys miss. McVay likes using the empty set with Stafford but Powell, Atwell, and Skowronek demonstrated why he might want to expand his horizons a bit. Allen Robinson struggled mightily too.

Tyler Higbee had a rough year following his injury that resulted in his drops increasing. McVay wanted to lean on him and while he’d have a game or two where he was moving the chains and getting into the end zone but then he’d have games where he’d be ineffective which became a problem as his role in the offense had to grow given the injuries elsewhere. Brycen Hopkins was the only other viable tight end and he missed six games due to a suspension.

The run game’s struggles were documented earlier but it needs to be said that Akers not only lacked explosion but he was also careless with the ball. He had multiple games where he fumbled in key situations and until later in the season he was a liability as a blocker and didn’t do well in pass-catching situations.

Kyren Williams when he played was a decent pass-catcher and blocker. He was also able to break tackles when he had to but the sample size was too small. He and Akers have the makings of an interesting duo next season if that comes to pass.

Jalen Ramsey and Bobby Wagner put the defense on their backs this season. Not only because they started every game but they overcompensated for the deficiencies elsewhere on the field. Both were exemplary run defenders and while Ramsey was described as “washed” he was anything but.

Yes, there were times when he was scored on but that was largely due to the coverage errors made by Taylor Rapp, Derion Kendrick, and the other DBs on the field. He could still shut down a team’s number one receiver but without help from a pass rush or from his safeties the odds he gets beat increase.

Bobby Brown missed four games due to a suspension and that hindered any development on his part. Greg Gaines didn’t come on until late in the season and until he got hurt A’Shawn Robinson was once again an unsung hero in the run game. Robert Rochelle regressed in year two and while a lot of that was due to injuries but even in special teams situations made a lot of second-year mistakes. He struggled to crack the rotation even late in the year as well.

Troy Hill came on strong in week one but again, injuries dulled his impact, and even when he came back he was beaten more often than not. Injuries also made Jordan Fuller‘s season a miss and Leonard Floyd was a dud for half the year for the same reason. Injuries clouded everything, especially with the younger players. Their 2022 draft was listed as the second least active but again that’s due to most of them not being available.

What Now?

Given everything that went wrong this season, a massive overhaul is coming at all levels. They’ve had almost half a season to evaluate all of their in-house free agents and likely know who they want to keep and who they can move on from. It starts with restructuring several contracts including Floyd, Stafford, Kupp, and possibly Ramsey. They have the lowest pick they’ve had in over five years with the 36th pick and have several comp picks coming their way.

They aren’t flush with cap space but again, by restructuring they should free enough space to bring in a few key vets. Their biggest areas of need are obviously the offensive line and pass rusher. They also have some big decisions to make in terms of their post-June 1st releases as it will give them cap space to make moves later in the year because as Les Snead has demonstrated, the team isn’t built in March.

With McVay back and Donald on borrowed time it’s clear they aren’t headed for a 3-5 year rebuild, but reloading. Snead needs to restructure his scouting department and get new voices in terms of player development. It might be a feature and not a bug at this point but his penchant for giving out ill-advised extensions needs to stop and he needs to better evaluate his in-house talent.

Depending on if Raheem Morris gets a head coaching job the defense could look dramatically different next year and that might be a good thing. Morris deserves another chance to be a head coach and the Rams could always use another comp pick. Perhaps, with a new voice on the defense they might shed some of their worst tendencies. If he stays then McVay still has his head coach on defense and they can fine-tune that staff.

They need to maximize their Donald, Wagner, and Ramsey core for the next few years and whether that’s with Morris, Vic Fangio, or some other coordinator to be named later.

Sean McVay is in his most critical off-season yet. He’s said the right things in terms of confronting his weaknesses and insecurities but now he has to prove it. The first step is hiring an offensive coordinator who whether they have play-calling duties or not can be a check on McVay and a key voice in the room by adding new wrinkles and dimensions to this offense.

McVay needs to demonstrate a willingness to let go even just a little. The burnout reports seemed silly because he’s only 36 but it makes sense given the way he coaches and runs the team. He likes having a head coach on defense because that takes the pressure off and he needs to do something similar with his offensive staff. He needs to delegate more and not feel compelled to call every single shot.

He also needs to develop more flexibility and not double down on the people or plays that feel the most comfortable, and get back to being the creative play-caller he was in 2017 and 2018. No more running back screens on third down! As long as he’s in LA and has this core he will always feel pressure to win but in order to grow as a coach, the willingness to open himself up to change is going to be vital.

The Rams aren’t about to enter another era of bad luck and misfortune that will haunt fans’ pathetic souls for all eternity as they did pre-McVay. Les Snead is a better GM than he was in 2012 and the ownership is in a better place than it was post Greatest Show on Turf.

It’s understandable that there is anger and anxiety amongst fans because these past six years felt AMAZING despite being an emotional roller coaster. Beating the Niners and winning Super Bowl 56 was one of the most cathartic and euphoric feelings a fan can experience and that forever should’ve buried the notion of SOSAR.

Despite jokes that the Rams don’t have fans, the long-term over these last six years has disproven that. Go outside and see how many kids are rocking Rams gear (it’s true) and if this core makes one or two more runs at a title that’s probably galvanized for life.

The old heads, the St. Louis transplants, and the bandwagoners have done an awesome job laying the foundation for “WHOSE HOUSE” and that work will pay off down the road. SoFi won’t be a sea of visiting jerseys and empty seats for long.

In the meantime, everyone should take a breath, catch up on some TV, go outside if possible, and not fret over every single social media post or stray comment. Let the news play out before spiraling into a Dewey Cox-level “DARK F—— Period”.

Nobody wanted “RUN IT BACK” to run into the negative zone but it’s probably forced a lot of necessary decisions and conversations to be had. Sometimes in life, a rock bottom needs to be hit in order to have a moment of clarity. As Buster Moon would say “the best thing about rock bottom is there’s nowhere to go but up”, and that’s when the real change happens.

Stupid Stuff You Did When You Were a Kid

I was at a family friends house and I used to play with their daughter because she was my age. We were out of sight from our parents and I found a three prong gardening type thing and I told her, "Don't move." I started plunging the implement around her foot

She moved.

I plunged the three prongs into her foot and she screamed. I felt bad but I also didn't want to get into trouble. I said "Shhh! They'll find out!"

Tattle tale!

Peyton Manning exposes the ‘biggest myth’ in football

Peyton Manning exposes the ‘biggest myth’ in football​

Many people feel that one of the marks of a great head coach is the ability to make in-game adjustments. According to Peyton Manning, anyone who tries to tell you those adjustments ever come at halftime of an NFL game is lying.

During the “ManningCast” broadcast of Monday night’s wild-card game between the Dallas Cowboys and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Peyton Manning made a sarcastic remark about the Bucs going three-and-out to start the second half. The Hall of Fame quarterback quipped that “all those halftime adjustments” didn’t really pay off. He then called the idea of halftime adjustments “the biggest myth in football.”

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“I don’t know about you, I don’t think I ever made a halftime adjustment in my entire 18-year career,” Manning said. “I think that’s the biggest myth in football — the halftime adjustments, right? You go in, you use the restroom, you eat a couple of oranges and then the head coach says, ‘Alright, let’s go.'”

Eli Manning agreed with his brother and said it feels like players are in the locker room for a total of three minutes, so there is no time to make real adjustments related to the game plan.

The Manning brothers were probably exaggerating a bit. There have definitely been times where a coach sees something during the first half that leads to a slightly different approach in the second half, but the point Peyton was making is that talk of halftime adjustments is overblown.

If there were some magical cure for your game plan at the half, the Bucs would not have come out looking just as bad in the third quarter of their 31-14 loss to Dallas as they did in the first two.

Ranking Every Potential 2023 Super Bowl LVII Matchup from Worst to First

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Ranking Every Potential 2023 Super Bowl LVII Matchup from Worst to First​

We're down to the elite eight in the NFL playoffs, leaving us with 16 potential matchups for Super Bowl LVII in Glendale, Arizona.

Four potential rematches remain possibilities, including third Super Bowl meetings between the Cincinnati Bengals and San Francisco 49ers as well as the Buffalo Bills and Dallas Cowboys. And of course, we could see the Jacksonville Jaguars become the 29th team ever to play in the game.

With that in mind, and with a focus on player/coach matchups as well as rivalry dynamics and team strength and popularity, let's rank all of the potential matchups from worst to first.

16. Jaguars vs. 49ers

Look, there are some very popular, very intriguing and very talented teams still alive. We don't mean too much offense to the Jaguars, but they're pretty clearly the lowest team alive on the national totem pole right now.

Would it be fun to see Trevor Lawrence on another national stage? Sure, but a matchup between the nine-win Jaguars and a San Francisco team quarterbacked by Brock Purdy wouldn't move the needle in comparison to any other possible tilt right now.

15. Jaguars vs. Giants

On paper, this is arguably worse than Jags-49ers. Neither team reached 10 wins in 2022. But that might result in a closer game than Jacksonville-San Francisco. You also wind up with a non-Goliath champion, which is always a little fun, and the New York Giants have a large following.

Still, it's a low-profile matchup between two so-so teams.

14. Jaguars vs. Cowboys

Like 'em or hate 'em, "America's Team" draws so much attention that a Super Bowl meeting between the unpopular Jaguars and the Cowboys still ranks ahead of every other Jacksonville matchup except the one that pits the former team's head coach against it.

Still, the blowout potential is high here, so it remains in the bottom quarter.

13. Jaguars vs. Eagles

Jaguars fans won't be happy with the first four listings here. Both of them will likely have words with me on Twitter. Again, no disrespect intended but this goes with the territory when you have a small fan base and aren't an elite team on paper.

This one, however, gains points because it would involve current Jags head coach Doug Pederson going up against the Philadelphia Eagles team that fired him just two years ago.

12. Bengals vs. Eagles

Decent quarterback matchup between two young stars and this should be a competitive game, but there's really no rivalry here. The Bengals also don't attract close to as much attention as the Bills or Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC, while the Eagles aren't quite as much of a draw as at least Dallas in the NFC.

It's a "meh" matchup.

11. Bengals vs. Giants

I think this would have a better chance at being a close contest than Cincinnati-Philadelphia, and you'd have that David vs. David factor with no Goliaths in the picture.

Still, the Bengals aren't a hot attraction and the Giants had a negative scoring margin during the regular season.

10. Chiefs vs. Giants

We interrupt the AFC feline-named team bashing for a shot at a Chiefs-Giants matchup that would have considerable blowout potential with a high point spread.

Still, the very existence of Patrick Mahomes, Daniel Jones and that New York fan base keeps this one outside of the bottom half-dozen.

9. Bengals vs. Cowboys

Again, the Cowboys are the Cowboys and they make games fun because they're so polarizing.

This could also be a very low spread one way or another, as Dallas and Cincinnati had nearly identical DVOA (defense-adjusted value over average) totals at Football Outsiders.

8. Bengals vs. 49ers

They've met in two Super Bowls, both coaches are branches on the Mike Shanahan coaching tree, and both teams would be looking to get monkeys off their backs following recent Super Bowl defeats.

It's quite a solid matchup, but a low-profile Bengals fan base and the absence of a high-profile quarterback in San Francisco limits this game's potential.

7. Bills vs. Giants

For obvious reasons, the Bills, Chiefs, Eagles, 49ers and Cowboys dominate the top half of this list. The Giants sneak in here with Buffalo because this could be a fun throwback to one of the best Super Bowls ever played.

There's also the "Brian Daboll versus his former team" narrative, but the blowout potential is high because the Bills are a much better team on paper.

6. Bills vs. Eagles

Less of a narrative for this potential Bills Super Bowl matchup, but you get two rabid fan bases backing two teams that lost just three games each this season.

Plus, we're talking about Josh Allen versus Jalen Hurts, and it's hard to imagine this wouldn't come down to the wire.

5. Bills vs. 49ers

These were the top two teams in the NFL in terms of both DVOA and scoring margin, and Josh Allen versus Mr. Irrelevant would be quite the narrative as the Bills seek their first-ever Vince Lombardi Trophy.

Still, there's not much of a rivalry or a narrative within the matchup so it's only at the bottom of the top five.

4. Chiefs vs. Cowboys

Big stars, hot-shot head coaches, strong fan bases, dynamic quarterbacks. Can't ask for much more than Chiefs-Cowboys, which really only lacks a bit in the narrative department compared to the top three potential Super Bowl matchups on this list.

Still, that this ranks fourth shows how many sick possibilities remain on the table here in mid-January.

3. Chiefs vs. 49ers

There's a lot to love here. Kyle Shanahan's attempt at redemption against the very team that burned his 49ers in Super Bowl LIV, plus the David (Brock Purdy) vs. Goliath (Patrick Mahomes) factor as Mahomes looks to further solidify his legacy and establish a Chiefs dynasty with Andy Reid.

It's also likely to be close, but Purdy is a wild card.

2. Chiefs vs. Eagles

Take Patrick Mahomes, Andy Reid, Jalen Hurts and two high-profile teams, and then throw in the element of Reid facing his former employer in the freakin' Super Bowl and you have a sweet battle between the only 14-game winners from the 2022 regular season.

Still, this falls just short of the top spot because of the history between two other teams in contention...

1. Bills vs. Cowboys

Buffalo-Dallas Super Bowl Take No. 3 would be the ultimate juiciness level for fans and the media. The Bills hope fifth time's a charm on the Super Bowl platform and third time's a charm specifically against the nation's most popular, but polarizing, franchise.

You've got Josh Allen, Dak Prescott, a deep historic rivalry and two of the league's four highest-scoring offenses. It really would be the NFL's dream come true for SBLVII.

QB Carousel Could Be Crazy This Year

With all the QBs who are free agents, injured, potential retirees, and candidates to be replaced, how many teams will be completely immune from a potential “QB carousel” this offseason? Here’s my breakdown:

First, the locks. These QBs are signed and unlikely to be replaced.

Buffalo (Josh Allen), Cincinnati (Joe Burrow), Pittsburgh (Kenny Pickett), Cleveland (Deshaun Watson), Jacksonville (Trevor Lawrence), Kansas City (Patrick Mahomes), L.A. Chargers (Justin Herbert), Denver (Russell Wilson), Dallas (Dak Prescott), Philadelphia (Jalen Hurts), Minnesota (Kirk Cousins), Detroit (Jared Goff), L.A. Rams (Matthew Stafford)

That’s only 13 names!

The next group are the probable starters. These are guys who need to get healthy, need a new contact, or, in the case of the Bears, need to be deemed preferable to a Blue Chip rookie:

Miami (Tua Tagovailoa), Baltimore (Lamar Jackson), N.Y. Giants (Daniel Jones), Arizona (Kyler Murray).

That’s another four.

The 49ers’ 2023 starter is almost certainly on their roster, but we don’t know who he is.

The rest… 14 teams with question marks!

On top of that, some pretty big names could be on the market. Even if Jackson, Jones and Smith re-sign with their current teams, you have Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers, Jimmy Garoppolo, Baker Mayfield, Sam Darnold, Teddy Bridgewater, Andy Dalton, Taylor Heinicke and Gardner Minshew all set to be free agents.

Its going to be interesting. Glad we’re among the “haves.”

Calijah Kancey (DL / Pittsburgh)

I don't often post on the Draft Discussion Board but I enjoy reading you guys' comments.

With a disappointing season, I have reverted-back to my pre-McVay-days, and been looking at draft prospects.

I noticed this guy's name as one of those who have declared for the Draft. Then I read a CBS Sports article calling him "one of the most dynamic interior-DL in the country". I looked him-up and he's just 6' and 280 lbs. Then I looked at some highlight tape.

Now, I always try to take highlights with a grain-of-salt because they are ... well ... highlights.

Never-the-less ... Holy Shit! I mean, I got boner! Don't you guys judge me!

Have any of you guys done some research, or have an early opinion on Calijah Kancey?

Interesting Family Expressions/Traditions

Tell us expressions that your family has passed down, or maybe rituals that your family did that noticed no one else did.....

"I see," said the blind man.
My Dad used to say this when one of us understood something that we at first, did not. A Google search te;;s me that a variation of this phrase has been around since at least, 1533.

An example of a family tradition that has died out, even in our family was, "Pinch, punch, first of the month. No returns." Like it sounds, a quick family member would sneak up on you and pinch/punch your shoulder while saying the phrase on the first day of the month. It was game that you knew was coming and you tried to do it first.

My Great Grandparents and their daughter (Grandma) came off the boat from England in 1925 and so I guess that these sayings/traditions came from them in the old country.. What are some of yours?

What Assistant Coaches Do You Want? Who do you think they will hire? Who have they hired?

Now that the Rams have a commitment from McVay (Which, I think will be most important/best news the Rams could get this offseason no matter who they get in the Draft, Free Agency, Trade, etc!!!) which Assistant Coaches would you like to see the Rams sign and which Available Assistant Coaches do you think they will sign (Realistically)?

I really think this was an extremely WEIRD Season for the Rams where pretty much everything had to go wrong for them to end up having such a terrible/disappointing season!!! But Optimistically(!!), I do think we will see the “REAL” Rams next season!!!

GAME DAY Cowboys at Buccaneers - Wild Card - 8:15pm ET

Monday January 16, 2023​

NFC Wild Card: Tampa Bay Looks to Continue Recent Success Against Dallas​

The Dallas Cowboys won four more games than the Tampa Bay Buccaneers this season. Their problem? They play in the same NFC East that produced this year’s top seed, the Philadelphia Eagles, whose 14-3 record was the best during the NFL's regular season.

That leaves the Cowboys in the unenviable position of traveling to Tampa Bay and facing 45-year-old Tom Brady on the road for their NFC Wild Card playoff game. The Bucs, only 8-9 this year, struggled on both sides of the ball and needed a fourth-quarter comeback against the Carolina Panthers in Week 17 just to win their division. Their 4-2 record within the NFC South ultimately made the difference against a trio of teams who could do no better than 7-10.

But no matter how ragged the Bucs look coming in, no one wants to face the GOAT in what could potentially be his final NFL game. Brady still had a successful year, albeit a little below average by his standards. His 4,694 passing yards marked the third straight season in which he’s gone above 4,500 with Tampa Bay; his nine interceptions were the fewest since joining the team in 2020.

Brady also has a healthy Mike Evans at wide receiver, a connection that’s finally borne fruit once again during the past few weeks. Evans’ 207-yard, three-touchdown performance in Week 17 swung both the Panthers and NFL fantasy football playoff matchups everywhere as he reminded everyone why he’s one of the best wideouts in the NFL.

These teams also faced each to open this season, a 19-3 Bucs win in Dallas on "Sunday Night Football." That was the game that Dak Prescott injured his thumb as the Cowboys struggled to do much of anything on offense (244 total yards, 3.8 yards per play). Brady didn't light up the Dallas D (18-for-27, 212 yds., TD, INT) but Tampa got 127 rushing yards from Leonard Fournette and took advantage of the Prescott injury to get the road victory. However, much has changed for both teams since that game.

Which of these teams will prevail in the final game of Super Wild Card Weekend? Can Dallas wash off some ugly recent playoff history or will the Bucs somehow find a way despite being the only playoff team this season with a record under .500?

NFC Wild Card: Dallas (12-5) at Tampa Bay (8-9)

Kickoff: Monday, Jan. 16 at 8:15 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN/ABC
Live Stream: fuboTV (Start your free trial)
Spread: Cowboys -2.5
Tickets: As low as $239 on SITickets.com*

Three Things to Watch

1. Can Dak Prescott outplay Tom Brady?

The Cowboys' offense caught fire once Prescott returned from that Week 1 thumb injury. They ended the regular season 11th overall in total yards, fourth in points per game (27.5), and led the league with a 71.43 percent conversion rate in the red zone. It’s clear Prescott's arm alone gives Dallas a better chance to win.

But Prescott, especially within the last two months, has found himself prone to mistakes. In the last seven games alone, he’s thrown 11 interceptions, hurting his team in crunch time during games against inferior opponents like Jacksonville and Washington.

Compare that to Brady, whose history of playoff success is unparalleled within the NFL. And he takes advantage of quarterbacks who give him the opportunity to score points. Consider last season's wild-card game against the Eagles, where Brady and company jumped out to a 31-0 lead. They took advantage of Jalen Hurts' two interceptions while Brady was near-perfect, throwing for 271 yards and two touchdowns to post a 115.2 passer rating. The Buccaneers capitalized on the good field position the Eagles created through turnovers and took charge of the game at home.

The Cowboys can’t afford to make those types of mistakes. Prescott needs to have the type of flawless game he hasn’t had in nearly two months; is it in him?

2. Can the Dallas defense make a play?

The Cowboy's D stood out this season through an ability to cause turnovers. Their 33 takeaways led the league, leading to a plus-10 turnover margin that was second only to the San Francisco 49ers. In the past six games alone, Dallas has forced 17 turnovers, including nine interceptions, while holding teams to less than six points on average during the fourth quarter.

That type of solid defense should break through against the Bucs, who have struggled this season to a minus-two turnover margin. Each of Tampa's last six games has had at least one turnover, often putting the team behind to depend on a Brady comeback during the second half.

3. Which team wins on the ground?

The Tony Pollard-Ezekiel Elliott combo has been exceptional for Dallas, finishing the regular season ninth in the NFL in rushing offense. Pollard went over the 1,000-yard mark, bypassing the aging Elliott with three 100-yard performances during the season (Elliott had none). They combined for 1,883 yards on the ground despite being virtually invisible or inactive during the past two games. Tampa Bay’s 15th-ranked run defense will have its hands full.

By comparison, Leonard Fournette is the Buccaneers' leading rusher with 668 total yards. But it’s important for this team to have some sort of rushing attack in order to buy the statuesque Brady time in the pocket. In the season opener, Fournette ran for 127 yards, which is the second most given up by the Cowboys defense this season (Aaron Jones had 138 in Week 10). His longest run went for 17 yards and he finished with six yards per carry. Fournette may not be the first playmaker you think of when it comes to Tampa's offensive attack but he could be a wild card in his own right that could make the difference on Monday night.

Final Analysis

There's a reason the NFL put this game on Monday night: it should easily be the most competitive of the six during "Super Wild Card Weekend." Dallas may come in with the better record, winning six of its last eight games, but the Cowboys don’t have a history of recent playoff success. You can’t discount Tampa Bay winning the Super Bowl just two years ago, a team that has also beaten Dallas in each of the last two regular-season meetings.

In the end, the Cowboys should pull this one out, but expect it to be back and forth all the way through the fourth quarter. A Brady-led team never goes down without a fight.

Prediction: Cowboys 24, Buccaneers 21

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