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The Walking Dead Season 9

So, is anyone still watching? I wasn't going to but when I heard Andrew Lincoln was leaving the show, I had to see how Rick Grimes is killed off. (Spoiler Alert) Dont read further if you intend to catch up.




The show was a bit boring to start the season. They saved Negan and jailed him. There is predictable conflict between the Saviors and the other groups. But the Saviors have no weapons. It's set a year and a half after the final Savior conflict, so in that time Jadis remembered how to speak English!

The writers seem to be listening to criticism too. There are fewer cars, more horses and motorcycles. Eugene is the structural engineer and chemist who has the Saviors making ethanol and building things.

Rick' ends up with a rebar through his guts and has one last coup de gras, and once again saves everyone from the zombie horde. It was a very improbable outcome, considering the severity of the injury. It looks like Rick is gone forever, but is saved by Jadis and the helicopter people. He's seen alive flying away. I don't like the open ending.


Then in highlights for the second part of the season there is a three + year time jump. Judith is a badass. And again the writers must be listening because the zombies are evolving (kind of dumb idea), but they are becoming more dangerous, or so it would seem.. The show was better when the zombies were more of a threat.

Hopefully the Zombies aren't evolving back to semi human people and the group sits them down in classrooms to teach them how to be civil, and conform to society. I don't want to see Carol having an affair with a dead guy.

After being thoroughly frustrated with the show, and thinking I was done with it, my interest is piqued enough to see where it goes from here. I was sick of Rick and Carl. They are both gone, so maybe it gets more interesting. And the show is promising a new direction. Who knows.

Bring On The Seahawks!

As disappointing as the Rams game was today if they can beat the Seahawks next week everything (At least most everything!) will seem ok again! IF, The Rams beat Seattle then that will give them a 4 Game Lead (Really a 5 Game Lead since they will have the Tiebreaker) for the Division Title! Still want to get Home Field advantage throughout the playoffs (Personally, I would rather NOT play the Saints again in New Orleans!) which I think is very possible since I think the Saints have a tougher remaining schedule than the Rams. But, I have to admit that the Chief’s Game definitely has me worried (The Rams secondary better play a lot better against the Chiefs than they did today against Drew Brees and the Saints!)!

Hope I don't get to thrashed

Now take it easy Ramily, But I'm kinda glad we lost. I don't want these guys all cocky....I've heard some players say more than once "We're unstoppable!!". After hearing that each time I would yell at my TV "YA BETTER STOP SAYIN THAT!!!" I was afraid there heads were getting to big. At least we didn't lose to the Whiners or the SeaChickens, that would it really pissed me off!! The Saints are a good team and Drew Brees is a good dude. I feel sorry for the Seahags next week. Walk tall and keep your heads up Ram fans!! GO RAMS!!! #ramsfanfor44years

Celebration Thread: Rams @ Saints

Not even going to look at the vent thread, there are too many things to celebrate.

A) we got out healthy. That's huge. Health down the stretch is one of the biggest indicators of success in the playoffs

B) the defense rallied. After giving up 35 in the first half, we only gave up 3 through 1.5 quarters. And the late TD came on a busted play where there was confusion about the play call. That's going to happen on the road against a playoff caliber team in one of the loudest stadiums in the NFL.

C) we've played 4 of the last 5 games on the road and it turns out that beating Seattle in Seattle was a much bigger deal than we thought as they are playing some really good ball. Beating GB at home was no small thing, either.

D) we can only beat the refs so many times before that caught up to us.

E) Fowler showed up pretty well and as he gets more into the defense, that will be good for us down the stretch. Talib is coming back after the bye.

F) the goal is the Super Bowl, not a perfect season. I have more faith in McVay, Wade and the rest of the coaching staff as well as the leaders on this team to rally than I've EVER had and that includes the GSOT days.

G) I love this team at 2-14 and I loved this team at 11-5 and I love this team at 8-1.

If you need to complain at tackling Kamara high or refs or Peters... this isn't the place. The Vent thread is ----->.

Horns UP!

Go RAMS!!!

I'm a glass half full type of guy.

Offense and kicking game.
-That missed call on the spot was huge! I felt he was clearly stretched to the marker before his knee hit. They seem to have marked it where the knee hit. Since when was that the rule? Give us that call and that takes away a TD from them and we likely get a minimum of 3 points.
-The missed FG sucked. Points off the board that should have been there. That is never good.
-The last couple drives really sucked. Bad throw by Goff where he missed woods on first down and then the last drive, I felt he had Gurley on the 2nd or 3rd and 2 (can't remember which one) for the easy first down. He forced it to the WR that was further down the field.

Defense.
-Same issues I have seen all year when we play better teams. We seem to sure things up at halftime but getting off the field on third down is always my key with this team. Too many times we gave up 3rd and greater than 6 it seemed. You stop those and that forces them to punt. We did a much better job with that in the second half. The two drives we didn't were their last two. Gave up a FG and then the long TD to Thomas.
-Tackling in the open field. We had some opportunities to get them to 3rd an long but couldn't secure the tackle.


If we are going to lose. I don't mind losing like that. It seems most fans want to get blown out but I'd rather have chances to win.

On to Seattle. 9-1!!

Wade

Just for discussion.

Not hating on Wade.

There is a lot of talent on this D.

Is it possible that this new NFL is not Wades cup of tea.

You know the game passes by O coaches all the time. Does that apply to D coaches as well?

I love me some
Wade. But it's a fair observation

My overall observations about the game

I’m not too upset about the loss, I actually wanted to lose a game or two before the playoffs, I just think being undefeated would be too much pressure on such a young team in the playoffs, I tip my hat to the saints, they played well and capitalized on our mistakes, something we didn’t do to them, with that being said...

The reffing was unbelievably atrocious, the call on the Hekker fake was so horrible it’s not even funny. He was clearly over the line with his arm extended. The saints had 2 penalties for 20 yards, and 1 being the stupid cell phone penalty, so they played such a perfect game that they only had 1 penalty for 5 yards? Which was a defensive holding in the first if I remember correctly?

I saw Goff get hit below the knees, corners holding, o-line holding Donald, and a left guard get a .25 second head start on a play with no false start call, now on to our deficiencies...

McVay did pretty well overall for the most part, I have qualms with the play calling other than the last drive mostly, 3 & 2 in 4 down territory with only 6 in the box and you throw deep to cooks? Hand the ball to Gurley twice, he will get the first down with only 6 in the box...

Goff did well for the most part, his INT was his fault, but also a great play by the LB, he tried to look him off with his eyes, and did, but the LB was able to make a great play. Higbee dropping that Perfect td hurts too.
What isn’t acceptable is 3 & long, 5 mins left and Goff throws a 2 yard into the flats to Kupp, that one had me scratching my head, he’s young and will learn though.

The defense was disappointing in the first half, not a single stop besides that fumble. The second half they definitely stepped it up and made some adjustments. I hope for Peters sake that he is hurt, because if this is him, he’s losing a TON of money every time he gets burned. I’ve been overall pretty disappointed with Joyner this year after how great he was last year, we need Talib back badly. Brees in an expert at getting the ball quicky, I was surprised there wasn’t more press and blitzing in the first half with some zone to force some tight throws to get him out of sync with his receivers.

Overall, our mistakes in the first half came back to bite us in the end, although we still had to chance to come through and couldn’t. Again I tip my hat to the saints and their staff, they did a heck of a job and absolutely deserved the win. I’m looking for us to bounce back in a big way next week and make a statement against Seattle, let that d-line and Fowler take out their frustrations on Wilson next week, then get ready for the chiefs, proud of our boys and pumped for what’s to come! Been waiting a long time for our team to be good, it feels great, as always,

Go rams!

For the folks who live in southern California.

I am headed out to LA tomorrow and will be there for two weeks because fortunately my job has me going there so fortunatly as well it will not be JUST for work,it will be for both my job AND pleasure taking additional time off for pleasure and one of them will be seeing the Rams game against seattle.That being said,can you all tell me of a sports place out there where i can get classic LA Ram clothing that says LOS ANGELES RAMS on it,the look with the colors from the 80's? thanks guys.

Dr Z on 1979 Super Bowl

It was an emotional Super Bowl and easily the best of the XIV played so far. It was the way Super Bowls are supposed to be played, but haven't been. The score changed hands six times before it ended Pittsburgh 31, Los Angeles 19, but only the guys who laid the 11 points with the bookies read it as a 12-point Steeler win. The Rams made it that close. They stayed in it because of a sustained intensity that brought them great honor, because of an unexpectedly brilliant performance by young Quarterback Vince Ferragamo, and because of a tackle-to-tackle ferocity that had the Steeler defense on its heels much of the afternoon.


But the Steelers aren't exactly virgins in this type of warfare, and when they needed the great plays they got them—two Terry Bradshaw-to-John Stallworth passes worth 118 yards in the fourth quarter and a deep interception by Jack Lambert on his own 14 that cut off the Rams with 5:24 left to play and Pittsburgh ahead 24-19. The Steelers routinely make the great plays, and when you get all excited about those feats, they'll look at you level and say things like: "I've made better catches in Super Bowls...a couple of one-handers one time" (Stallworth); or "It's part of our basic coverage...it's on the films" (Lambert); or "I really didn't think it would work...I hadn't been completing it in practice" (Bradshaw).


Which is why the Steelers have won four Super Bowl rings in the last six years, and why Joe Greene can say, "This game was an invitation engraved in gold."


"An invitation to what?" someone asked, on cue.


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Table of Contents
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January 28, 1980


Special Report
THE OLYMPIC ULTIMATUM
By Jerry Kirshenbaum

Super Bowl XIV
They Were Just Too Much
The scrappy Rams had 'em on the ropes in Super Bowl XIV, but the Steelers' old pros prevailed once again
By Paul Zimmerman
WORST SEAT IN THE HOUSE
By Ron Fimrite
THE ANATOMY OF A TOUCHDOWN
By Joe Marshall

Italian League
BASKETBALL ITALIAN STYLE
It's not the NBA, but some emigres from the U.S. have found the game in Italy to be their cup of espresso
By Bruce Newman

Also-Rans
THE LAND OF THE ALSO-RANS
The U.S.A. has more skiers, more slopes, more leisure time and more money than just about any other country in the world, but Americans usually finish down the line in Olympic ski competition. Why?
By William Oscar Johnson

College Basketball
A classy guy with ball and books
SW Louisiana's Andrew Toney, an All-America, already has earned his degree
By Anthony Cotton
THE WEEK (Jan. 14-20)
By Herm Weiskopf

Track & Field
Fast track to...where?
Performances at two big indoor meets were overshadowed by Olympic turmoil
By William Nack

Figure Skating
Stumbling to Lake Placid
Linda crashed, Lisa-Marie tumbled, Tai and Randy made mistakes. Still, it all added up to a trip to the Olympics
By Bob Ottum

Horse Racing
Mr. Moneybags cashes in again
Trainer Bud Delp says it's just preseason for Spectacular Bid, who won the San Fernando Stakes to run his earnings to $1,774,917 and now is staring at some huge purses and a slice of history
By William Leggett

Adirondack Park
"NO LANdSCAPE MORE BRiGHTLY GEMMEd"
Though Twain and T.R. knew it, and Lake Placid lies within it, Adirondack Park is our "best-kept secret"
By Robert H. Boyle

For The Record
A roundup of the week Jan. 14-20
Compiled by Brooks Clark

19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
19TH HOLE: THE READERS TAKE OVER
Edited by Gay Flood

Departments
LETTER FROM THE PUBLISHER
By Kelso F. Sutton
CREDITS FACES IN THE CROWD

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Original Layout
"To immortality...along with those tremendous pacesetters, the Green Bay Packers," Greene said. He thought for a moment and then added, "Next year it'll all be forgotten. It'll be, 'What have you done for me lately?' A vicious, vicious cycle."


As the Steelers discovered on Sunday, it's getting tougher and tougher to stay on top. Two weeks before, Houston was supposed to roll over—but hadn't; the Oilers had hung tough until the fourth quarter of the AFC Championship Game. This time it was the Rams who were supposed to lie down. The betting was even money that Ferragamo, making only his eighth start, would not be in at the end. The only Ferragamo interview of note that had appeared in the papers during the week was a piece about his malapropisms: "How they arrived at their conclusions behooves me," etc.


But Ferragamo was clear-headed in Pasadena, and he led a very spirited team. As the clubs changed ends to start the fourth quarter with the Rams leading 19-17, a significant thing happened. The Rams had intercepted Bradshaw—for the third time—at the L.A. four-yard line, and Wendell Tyler had broken one for 13 yards, out to the 17, behind a big block by his fullback, Cullen Bryant. Then the whistle blew, and next thing you knew, the Rams were sprinting for the other end of the field.


"We talked about doing it," said Left Tackle Doug France. "It was a very good psych; it let them know we were ready to go. We had 83 yards to cover, and we had to show them we had the strength to do it. We were saying to them, 'Hey, we're not that tired.' "


The Steelers took their time switching ends. No sense getting all excited about a change of quarters.


"No, I didn't see it," Greene said of the L.A. sprint, showing a tiny bit of annoyance for the only time during the post-game interviews. "I had other things on my mind."


"I think the Rams were just excited," said Cornerback Mel Blount, like Greene a veteran of Steeler Coach Chuck Noll's eight playoff teams. "You know, it's the Super Bowl and all that."


If Hollywood, not Pasadena, had been hosting XIV, the Rams would have driven those 83 yards and put the game away, and the losingest team—9-7 on the regular season—ever to come into a Super Bowl would have tasted the golden bubbly. But what happened was that the Rams ran three plays, gained six yards and had to punt. And it was a terrific punt by Ken Clark, 59 yards, one yard short of his career best. The Steelers got the ball on their own 25, and, hey, the Rams were still on top of this game.


First-and-10: Jack Reynolds stuffs Franco Harris after a couple of yards. Second-and-eight: Sidney Thornton drops a screen pass, but the play is messed up anyway because Gerry Mullins, the Steeler right guard, is 10 yards down-field. Hang on, Rams, the champs are coming apart. Third-and-eight at the Pittsburgh 27 and what to do? Normally, the Steelers would have gone into a three-wide-receiver set and tried to work something underneath the zone defense for the first down, but they didn't have three wide receivers left.


Lynn Swann had given the Steelers a brief 17-13 lead in the third quarter with a leaping catch of a 47-yard touchdown a pass, but he had been knocked out of the game one series later as the result of a very bad decision by Bradshaw. Bradshaw had rolled to his left, looking for help, and had dumped the ball to Swann, curling to the left side. Throw late over the middle and you run the risk of getting either an interception or one of your receivers killed. Bradshaw got the ball high to Swann, who got a very rough ride from Cornerback Pat Thomas. When Swann came to, his vision was blurred and one whole area was totally blank. "Lower right quadrant," he said. "I couldn't see anything at all in that area. The doc told me I'd had it for the day."


Theo Bell, a backup receiver for the Steelers, had been removed from the game after taking a vicious shot by Linebacker George Andrews on a punt, and now, with third-and-eight on their own 27, with a little over 12 minutes to go and trailing by two points, the Steelers had only two wide receivers left on the roster. Bennie Cunningham, the tight end, split wide left. Jim Smith, Swann's backup, was wide right, and Stallworth was in the slot inside him. Chuck Noll sent in the play: "60 Prevent Slot Hook and Go." A pass to Stallworth, who would make a little hitch inside and then take off.


"I didn't like the call," Bradshaw said, "but, you know, the coach sent it in. I hadn't been hitting that pass all week. It's a matter of building confidence. You don't build confidence in things that don't work. Maybe it was our ace in the hole, I don't know."


It hadn't been a good week for Bradshaw. He was beat, having slept only four or five hours a night. The night before the game he went to bed at midnight but woke up at 3 a.m. "I couldn't get back to sleep," he said. He had dragged through the practices, the interview sessions, the pre-Super Bowl madness that turned the Steelers' Newport Beach hotel into a zoo. Meanwhile, the Rams were practicing on their home turf over in Anaheim and going home to the wife and kiddies at night. On Thursday, Bradshaw gave one of his zillion radio interviews of the week. His answers were mechanical.


"You certainly seem laid-back going into this game," the guy with the mike said.


"Yeah, well, you know, we've been here before," Bradshaw said, giving stock answer No. 435.


"Laid-back, hell, I'm tired. Tired," he said later. "I'm not sleeping. I just can't sleep.... I don't know what it is. Pressure, I guess. Tension. I've never felt it this bad. I haven't thrown the ball well in two weeks. I'm just tired of football. Drained."


Ray Mansfield, the old Steeler center, dropped by the hotel to visit with his former teammates. "I could always look at Terry before a game and tell you what kind of a day he was going to have," Mansfield said. "If he was a little glassy-eyed—you'd be talking to him and he'd look through you like you weren't there—I'd know it was going to be a long afternoon."


"How does he look today?" Mansfield was asked.


"Don't ask," he said.


And now the coach is telling Bradshaw that his arm is going to win it. Bradshaw's first interception, which had set up a Rams' go-ahead field goal—13-10—in the second quarter, had brought back visions of the interception Houston's Vernon Perry ran back for a TD in the AFC title game. His first interception against the Rams had been a late throw over the middle to Swann; Bradshaw had tried to force the ball through double coverage, and Dave Elmendorf had picked it off. Bradshaw's second interception had been a ball that got away from him, a bloop throw to Smith on a deep pattern. His third one had been a force to Stallworth over the middle, deep in Ram territory, with the Steelers behind 19-17.


There had almost been a fourth one. In the third quarter, with the Rams still on top 19-17, Bradshaw had tried to find Swann inside, and Nolan Cromwell, the L.A. free safety, had roared up like the Duesenberg that had transported Steeler patriarch Art Rooney out for the coin toss. "The only thing that could have stopped him," said Steeler Center Mike Webster, "was a .357 magnum." But Cromwell dropped the ball.


Third-and-eight on the 27. Your game to win, Terry baby. The Steelers' running game? Forget it. Thirty-seven carries for only 84 yards on the day. "The Rams did their homework," Webster said. "When we'd audible, Jack Reynolds would call the correct defense for the play we audibled to. They knew us."


"I could see them doing research on the sidelines," Ram Defensive End Fred Dryer said. "I think Terry was having trouble reading us."


There are not many ways a human being can throw a football better than Bradshaw did to Stallworth on that third-and-eight play. Stallworth got inside Rod Perry, the cornerback, and behind Elmendorf, the strong safety, and took it 73 yards for a 24-19 Pittsburgh lead. Two series later Stallworth did it again—45 yards on the same play—only this time he didn't bother to throw the little inside fake. It set up Franco Harris' one-yard touchdown for the 31-19 margin that rewarded the Steeler bettors.


"God-given ability," Webster said. "You just can't beat it. Terry had enough ability to overcome the mistakes, the three interceptions, the bad week he'd had. He had the courage to go with that long stuff."


In the Rams' locker room Perry answered the same question over and over: "Inside-outside coverage. I had the outside. I did the best I could. Hey, haven't you ever seen a perfect play?"


Emotions were running high in that dressing room. On his way in, Tyler had turned to the writers and said, "I didn't fumble in the game. Put that in your paper!" Tyler never fumbled. No one did. The Steelers banged Tyler around plenty, too. Knocked him out of the game five times. Count 'em. But he kept coming back.


"We wanted to gang-tackle him because he has a reputation for fumbling," Lambert said. "We wanted to make him know he'd been in a football game."


It went both ways. On his third carry Tyler broke a 39-yarder, which set up the Rams' first score and gave them a 7-3 lead. Faked two guys off their feet on the slippery sideline turf.


"It set the tone," Greene said. "Put us in the tank, so to speak."


In a corner Ferragamo was trying to describe what it had been like to face 103,985 fans and 11 Steelers in his first Super Bowl. "I tried audibling one time at the noisy end of the field," he said. "No one heard me. I was a little leery about audibling after that. There was a 30-second clock, but it was kind of concealed. It was tough to see until it started getting dark. It was there for you, though, if you could make it out. Hell, you'd better make it out."


Ferragamo was asked a technical question. "I tried zooming—and motion—they took me out of it," he said. No one knew what he was talking about. Ferragamo stopped for a moment and looked up. "It just hurts to know you're that good and you can't win it," he said. "It's a hurting feeling inside."


"Ferragamo was the better quarterback today," Webster said in the other dressing room. "Overall, I'd have to say he did the better job."


It was a strange role-reversal for the clubs. The Rams were the muscle team, not the Steelers. L.A. established a running game very early and worked it. The Steelers went big play, big gamble. Three big plays, three interceptions.


Anyone who calls us dogs," Jack Youngblood, the Rams' defensive end, said, "well, let him call me that to my face."


"We gave it everything we had, we went out there with everything in our hearts," Dennis Harrah, the L.A. right guard, was saying. "We picked up all their stunts, all their defensive-line games. I think we surprised them with our guts and determination."


He was looking at the floor. When he looked up, you could see he was crying.


"I'm sorry, but I just can't talk about it anymore," Harrah said.


Jim Jodat, a reserve running back, put his arm around Harrah. "C'mon, man, the bus is leaving," he said.


"I'll be all right," Harrah said.


"I said a few nice things to Joe Greene after the game," Harrah said. "I hugged my buddy [Steeler defensive tackle] Gary Dunn. I just...I'm sorry, I can't say any more."


There were times when the Pittsburgh defense looked shaky, when it looked as if the Steelers were barely hanging on. They reached Ferragamo for four sacks, but they had to use multiple blitzes to do it. Linebackers, safeties, cornerbacks—the Steelers threw it all at the kid. Ferragamo said, "On one of them—when we were down on their 13 and they put 11 men up on the line and sacked me—well, maybe I should have called time out before I ran the play. Maybe it's inexperience. We'll be back here again."


The Rams fooled the Steeler secondary on their last touchdown, a 24-yard halfback option pass, Lawrence McCutcheon to Ron Smith, that gave them the 19-17 lead. L.A. did a number on Ron Johnson, the left corner, on that play. Johnson had been having words with Billy Waddy, the Rams' wide receiver. Then Waddy, on an underthrown ball, had caught a 50-yarder on Johnson, the kind of catch that drives cornerbacks crazy. The book says you don't let crazy cornerbacks off the hook, so the Rams swept McCutcheon to Johnson's side, and when Johnson was drawn into the net, it was time for McCutcheon to stand and deliver to Smith. Six points.


"You could see we were getting to them," said Gordon Gravelle, the reserve L.A. tackle who used to be a Steeler. "At times they looked a little confused out there. I haven't seen that on a Pittsburgh team in a long while."


"Jack Lambert hollered so hard in the huddle in the first half that I got scared," said Steeler Strong Safety Donnie Shell. "I can't repeat what he said, but he got real red in the face. He said we were sleepwalking out there."


The final chapter is that the Steelers' big-play people—Bradshaw, Lambert, Swann, Stallworth, the guys who had done it so many times before—rose up one more time.


"The real fact," Greene said, "was that we just had too many good football players. It had to show today because the Rams were so high emotionally and they were executing so well."


He looked at his audience. "You can't beat talent," he said.




SNF: Packers at Patriots

https://athlonsports.com/nfl/sunday...vs-new-england-patriots-prediction-picks-2018

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Sunday Night Football: Green Bay Packers vs. New England Patriots


The Green Bay Packers and New England Patriots have spent decades defined by their quarterback play. Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady, two surefire Hall of Famers, have collected Super Bowl rings on the backs of MVP, All-Pro performances that have carried the team along with them.

But if this season is any indication, both men are entering the point in their career where they can’t earn those rings alone. Rodgers, injury-prone in the past few seasons, has done a Herculean job in 2018 despite an inconsistent running game and porous defense. But his Packers are just 3-3-1, struggling to define themselves in their own division. Keep in mind two of those wins were late Rodgers comebacks against the lowly 49ers and upstart Bears. It’s no surprise, then, that trades of Ha Ha Clinton-Dix and Ty Montgomery have some wondering if the Packers are on the verge of looking ahead to 2019.

And Brady? Continuing to defy the odds at age 41, he’s finding ways to win while putting the Patriots in position to contend for the AFC’s top seed at 6-2. (The team holds the tiebreaker over the Chiefs, currently in the No. 1 spot at 7-1). But cracks in the Patriots' offense, however slight, were evident in a 25-6 win over the lowly Buffalo Bills on Monday night. It took a pick-six from the defense to seal the victory as the Patriots' running game, missing young star Sony Michel, earned half of its 76 yards by a converted wide receiver.

It’s clear these two teams have the leader they need under center. It’s the players around them that are the issue.

Will Sunday night be the moment one or both teams finally find the right help?

Green Bay at New England

Kickoff: Sunday, Nov. 4 at 8:20 p.m. ET
TV: NBC
Spread: Patriots -5.5

Three Things to Watch

1. Which banged-up players will suit up Sunday night?


The injury report for both teams would easily be enough to fill up a local hospital. A whopping 15 players made the Patriots report, affecting nearly every position on the roster. Even punter Ryan Allen made the list with an ankle injury that limited participation.

The most notable players are tight end Rob Gronkowski, running back Sony Michel, linebacker Dont’a Hightower and wide receiver Julian Edelman. Gronkowski appears to be the most noticeable after battling back and ankle injuries that have limited production. He missed the game two weeks ago in Chicago and hasn’t topped 100 receiving yards since the season opener. What’s worse is he walked out of a Wednesday press conference when questions centered around his on-the-field confidence.

Michel and Edelman are also major question marks. Michel’s impact on the Patriots' offense is clear; without him, counterpart James White averaged a paltry 1.9 yards per carry. Bill Belichick and offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels did an impressive job working wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson in for a nice change of pace. But the Packers are a far better team than the Bills and that trick is unlikely to play out twice.

Edelman’s presence, as we’ve seen, opens up the field for Brady and new deep threat Josh Gordon. Losing him would put more of a load on Chris Hogan, a capable role player but someone who seems incapable of assuming a starring role.

The Packers, meanwhile, appear to be in better shape. Rodgers remains on the injury report with his left knee but has been more mobile in recent weeks. Wide receivers Geronimo Allison and Randall Cobb both returned last week against the Rams but they looked rusty, combining for just five catches, 54 yards and no touchdowns. Cobb should be fine for Sunday night, but Allison injured his groin in practice on Thursday so his status is worth keeping an eye on. Tight end Jimmy Graham is expected to play despite a knee injury.

2. Where is the Packers' psyche?

This question is clearly worth asking after a weird week up in Wisconsin. The team traded away Montgomery, opening up the backfield for Aaron Jones but also raising questions on whether the team felt they could be competitive this season. Adding Pro Bowl safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix to the departure list only heightened those fears.

New Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst, who replaced the now-retired Ted Thompson in January, insisted those moves weren’t designed to give up on 2018.

“I don’t think there’s a message it sends to the locker room,” he said this week. “I think the decisions we make are always in the best interest of our team, not only in the short term, but the long term, as well. I think our locker room knows where we’re headed and I think we’re humming at the right time.”

At the same time, there doesn’t seem to be a clear sense of direction on how this season will play out. The run game, at least, has some definition now as Jones ran for a season-high 86 yards on 12 carries against the Rams. But the Packers' defense has been problematic. Dix had three of the team’s five interceptions and was playing at a top-tier level. How do you replace that?

Add to that a long line of stories this week suggesting Rodgers would have smashed NFL records playing for the Patriots. It’s a backhanded criticism of the way the Packers have been coached and put together over the years compared to the five-time Super Bowl champions. While the quarterbacks have immense respect for each other it leaves the impression the Packers are second rate. And no one’s really spoken up to truly defend that, including head coach Mike McCarthy.

For the first time in a while, the direction of one of the NFL’s most storied franchises is worth questioning. Who’s steering the ship here?

3. Can the Patriots' defense pressure Rodgers into mistakes?

Monday night’s win for Patriots fans will be defined by Devin McCourty waltzing to the end zone, an 84-yard interception return off Derek Anderson dashing any hope the Bills had left. McCourty has been exceptional for this defensive unit, whose 11 interceptions are tied for second in the NFL.

That’s the philosophy this group has been built on; make the game-changing play that tilts momentum your way regardless of how many yards you give up. The unit ranks in the bottom quarter of the league in yards allowed per game and will give Rodgers his yards; they’re 27th in the league at 277.3 passing yards allowed per game. Chiefs superstar Patrick Mahomes just a few weeks ago torched New England for 352 yards and four touchdown passes.

But the Patriots also had two crucial interceptions in that game, early turnovers that built them a cushion which ultimately proved to be the winning margin. The Packers may be more than happy to give them the ball. Their seven fumbles lost is tied for fourth in the NFL; it was a botched kick return against the Rams which cost them an opportunity at toppling the lone remaining undefeated team. Up to that point, they had gone punch for punch and Rodgers appeared to have enough time to put the Rams on the ropes. (They lost 29-27).

Rodgers himself has lost three fumbles, tied for third in the league while getting sacked 22 times in eight games. All it’s going to take is one of those mistakes to throw this game the Patriots’ way.

Final Analysis

The Packers enter this game knowing a win is crucial to their playoff hopes. A record of 3-4-1 would put them potentially a game-and-a-half back in their division with a second half schedule ahead that includes games against the Seahawks, Vikings and Bears on the road. Expect their best effort in what’s been a yo-yo type of season.

But the Patriots are playing in Gillette Stadium, where they’re 4-0 to start the year while downing fellow AFC contenders Houston and Kansas City. Brady knows how to get the job done here along with one piece of additional help that has never gone unreliable: Stephen Gostkowski. It was Gostkowski who kicked four field goals to give the Pats breathing room last week; he’s 17-for-19 this year and perfect on extra points to lead the AFC.

The Packers’ Mason Crosby, by comparison, has struggled, going 1-for-5 (and missing his only PAT) in a game against the Lions last month and missing a kick that would have avoided the tie with the Vikings. That type of volatility could make the difference in a back-and-forth offensive contest which will likely be decided by defense and special teams.

Prediction: Patriots 34, Packers 31

Rams at Saints

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