MMQB: 9/10/18

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These are excerpts. To read the whole article click the link below.
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https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/09/10/aaron-rodgers-packers-bears-comeback-khalil-mack-mmqb-week-1-nfl

Aaron Rodgers’ Magic Caps a Wild First Sunday
By Albert Breer

mmqb-week-1-aaron-rodgers-lede-2.jpg


It feels like it was just yesterday that we were all moaning about the officiating and sloppy play in a sideways Thursday opener at Lincoln Financial Field.

And then Aaron Rodgers happened.

Somehow, on Sunday night at Lambeau, Rodgers went from riding a cart towards an uncertain future, after an inauspicious start to this particular game, to slicing and dicing a loaded Bears D and announcing his return to the NFL in the most emphatic way possible. He wasn’t just getting by out there, either. After his knee crumpled in a pocket collapsed by Khalil Mack and Roy Roberson-Harris, he got better.

“It would have had to take something really catastrophic injurywise to keep me off the field in the second half,” Rodgers told NBC’s Michelle Tafoya at the gun. “I went in the locker room, did all the tests, and then I was in the indoor facility, trying to loosen up. But I knew once I got back on field, the adrenaline would start flowing, I’d be able to hang in there.”

He did more than that. Like, a lot more than that …

At the time of his injury: three for seven, 13 yards, 50.3 rating; Packers down 10-0.

After post-halftime return: 17 for 23, 273 yards, three TDs, 152.7 rating; Packers outscore Bears 24-6.

The capper was a play where, as he said, he hung in, moving in the pocket long enough for his receivers to go into a scramble drill. Randall Cobb, sitting down right in Rodgers’ sightline, broke off his route. And with most of the defense following the quarterback shuffling to his left, Cobb raced up the right sideline for 75 yards and the game-winning touchdown.

Week 1 got off to a bumpy start on Thursday, but now we’re off and running.

In this week’s MMQB, we’ll look at Ryan Fitzpatrick, on his seventh team in Year 14, outgunning Drew Brees in a shootout at the Superdome; we’ll give you Tom Brady’s motivation as he ripped apart the Texans to kickoff Year 19; we’ll explain how Ron Rivera’s sturdy operation in Charlotte has its foundation; and we’re going to Miami to show how the longest game in NFL history revealed the difference in the Dolphins.

But could you start anywhere else but with the Packers on the first full Sunday of the NFL season?

The great thing about this game was that, over the first half or so, the story seemed pretty unlikely to be the one we’d be discussing on Monday morning. At that point, Packers-Bears was playing out like as if we were all watching a real-time referendum on the Raiders’ decision to trade Khalil Mack.

First there was the pressure on the play on which Rodgers got hurt, with 9:22 left in the second quarter. A few minutes later Mack came free, sacked backup DeShone Kizer, and ripped the ball from the QB’s hands. And finally, with 27 seconds left in the half, he picked off a bungled Kizer screen pass and ran it in for a score.

At that point, some Packers figured they’d seen the last of Rodgers for the night. The cart coming out to get you is typically a good sign of that a player is done for the day. Kizer even addressed his teammates at halftime, telling them he needed their trust. Then they went out to warm up for the second half, and you-know-who snuck on to the field behind them.

“He was in the back as we came out and we heard the crowd,” veteran tight end Lance Kendricks told The MMQB’s Kalyn Kahler. “And we were like, ‘Oh, there he is.’ It was cool.”

And then, everything changed.

The Packers made a slight adjustment—snapping Rodgers the ball out of the pistol, to limit how much he’d have to move—but the rest was business as usual.

Shut out in the first half, the Packers scored on all four of their meaningful second-half posessions. The three touchdown drives were of 81, 75 and 75 yards. It was one of those nights.

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Getty Images

“Aaron Rodgers was remarkable,” coach Mike McCarthy said. “I just can’t tell you how proud I am of him.”

The NFL should be too. Because of him, we’re all waking up on Monday morning with a pretty different feeling about pro football than we did on Friday. And given all that’s happened the last few months, the folks at 345 Park could use that.
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WATCH: THE MONDAY NIGHT KEY
Albert Breer breaks down a critical factor in the Raiders-Rams Monday night game.

Click link below and scroll down to watch video.

https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/09/10/aaron-rodgers-packers-bears-comeback-khalil-mack-mmqb-week-1-nfl

Two new coaches and a new quarterback get unveiled tonight, but I think it’s the other team in the mix that’s most interesting. The Rams have spent this offseason trying to maximize the window they have while Jared Goff is still on his rookie deal. And so now a splashy offseason is put to the test.

As a result, Aqib Talib, Ndamukong Suh, Marcus Peters and Brandin Cooks are all aboard and will be front and center tonight in Oakland. Of course, we’ve seen these chemistry experiments—adding big-time names/egos to a contender to try to get it over the top—fail in the past.

Why won’t this one? Sean McVay’s track record in Washington and L.A. has shown he has an ability to manage big personalities and different types of players, which has allowed the Rams to cast a wide net for talent. And the best part is that he doesn’t mind much that all the splashy moves put a little pressure on everyone to win now.

“I don’t want our players ever to fear failure,” McVay told me a little while back, when we discussed the moves. “We always talk about attacking success.”

One thing’s for sure, starting tonight, it won’t be boring.
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FITZMAGIC FALLOUT: A QB QUESTION IN TAMPA?

Chris Godwin didn’t take the bait, just so you know. I did ask the Bucs’ second-year receiver if it could be a little awkward when Jameis Winston returns from his three-game start-of-the-year suspension, given how Ryan Fitzpatrick played in New Orleans on Sunday, and that coach Dirk Koetter has made it clear that Winston isn’t guaranteed his job back. Godwin at least acknowledged that the question make sense, but went no further.

“That’s not something that we worry about, honestly,” Godwin said after landing back in Tampa. “We got a really big win today, and the next task at hand is to learn from this and go play the defending Super Bowl champions. We’ll cross that bridge when we get there. Right now we’ll enjoy this win and prepare for the big challenge ahead.”

That bridge will be crossed soon, though, and it looks a little different than it did 24 hours ago. Fitzpatrick completed 21 of 28 for 417 yards and four touchdowns in winning a 48-40 defense-optional war at the Superdome. It was Fitz’s first four-touchdown game in three years, and his 156.2 rating was a career high. As Godwin noted, the Eagles are next. After that, the Steelers.

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Getty Images

What if Fitzpatrick keeps crushing it? Would Jason Licht and Dirk Koetter actually leave Winston, the quarterback they tied their futures to in 2015, on the bench? That would be hard. But it’d also be hard to see the Bucs moving away from what we saw on Sunday, given everything that’s on the line for the GM, coach and everyone else in football operations in 2018.

What’s interesting is that while Sunday’s performance will be tough to duplicate, it’s understandable why the players aren’t totally slack-jawed over it. Mike Evans is a star. DeSean Jackson is a scary downfield weapon. Godwin and fellow 2017 draftee O.J. Howard have high-end potential. Licht has invested high draft picks on the offensive line and imported tough-guy center Ryan Jensen from Baltimore in March.

Add a tough camp (the Bucs were in pads pretty much every day allowable this summer) in the Tampa heat to the equation, and the result is what you saw against New Orleans.

“After the training camp we had, we really felt like we could come out and put on a show,” said Godwin, who had three catches for 41 yards and a touchdown. “You have so many weapons that Fitz had the ability to throw to.

And he did a great job of spreading the ball around and getting guys involved, and the offensive line did a really good job blocking. Just the confidence we had from training camp, with the talent we have in the room, the combination of all of that, we ended up with the result we had.”

There are other factors, too, of course. It’s Week 1, so new play-caller Todd Monken had the advantage of holding stuff back and springing it on the Saints.

That said, you’ll notice that Godwin mentioned Fitzpatrick as one element of the operation that he expected big things from. The receiver added that the only thing that surprised him about Fitzpatrick’s performance was the 12-yard run on third-and-11 with 2:42 left in the fourth quarter, which sealed the win. “I didn’t know he was that fast, man,” Godwin said of the 35-year-old QB. “Fitz was moving!”

Clearly the guys in the locker room think he can play. We all need to stay tuned to this one.
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THE PANTHERS D IS THE FOUNDATION

I’m guilty of the same thing most everyone else is regarding the Panthers. A lot of the focus in Carolina this offseason centered on two issues: David Tepper buying the team, and Norv Turner being hired to work with Cam Newton.

It was really neither of those things that won Tepper his first game as owner and Turner his first game as OC yesterday, 16-8 over Dallas. It was, instead, what it’s often been throughout Ron Rivera’s eight years in charge: the defense. And that’s notable because the Panthers are now on their third coordinator on that side in as many years.

Sean McDermott the head coach in Buffalo now, and Steve Wilks has the Arizona job. Successor Eric Washington didn’t miss much of a beat on Sunday. Carolina held the Cowboys to 232 yards and just 4.1 yards per play.

Washington has been groomed for this for a while. Like McDermott and Wilks before him, the new DC had a long history with Rivera (he was Rivera’s intern in Chicago for the Super Bowl season of 2006, when Rivera was the Bears’ coordinator). And as was the case with his predecessors, Rivera has given Washington full play-calling authority for a defense that he and McDermott designed back in 2011.

But more important than any of that is that he’s passed along a certain standard that a lot of people have had their hands in establishing, and not just coaches. Four or five years ago, middle linebacker Luke Kuechly told me he wanted to build a legacy defense in Charlotte, like the Steelers and Ravens have. By maintaining their level over the course of different play-callers, it seems Kuechly’s group is close to achieving that.

“One of the biggest things I do, and this is in all phases, they need to take ownership, they need to understand what the standard is,” Rivera said over his cell last night. “Set the standard, and hold everyone accountable to the standard, and if it slips, they’re the ones that have to be responsible to get it back on track. I tell the guys, I shouldn’t have to cheerlead every day at practice.

“It shouldn’t be me running around, yelling and screaming constantly. If they see something, correct it. And that’s been one thing that’s helped us as a football team, the willingness of our guys to take the standard, understand what it is, and then hold each other accountable.”

Never was it more apparent than at the end of the game. The Cowboys finally looked to have gotten their offensive act together early in the fourth quarter, with a 10-play, 75-yard touchdown drive. Rivera’s radar was up, at that point, for any sign of trouble within his ranks. Instead, he looked at the bench and saw a poised and calm group.

That unit closed things out from there, generating a turnover on downs, then a strip sack from Mario Addison (a Panther since 2012) to end the Cowboys’ final drive.

“Great effort,” Rivera said, “And Mario’s one of those guys who’s been here the whole time. He understands what our standard is and what kinds of things are acceptable and what aren’t.”

I expect we’ll see Newton get better in the coming weeks, because I do believe that Turner and his son, quarterbacks coach Scott Turner, have made progress with Newton that will take root on game day soon. But they do have a little time, because of the margin for error the defense gives them, and has always given the offense.


As for specifics, Rivera said Washington brings a mix of the hyperaggressive Wilks and the more conservative McDermott from a play-calling standpoint. And yes, he sees Washington as getting his head coaching shot at some point too, which is why he’s already looking at who might come after that.

He’s also shown that whoever does will get to put their own mark on the job—Rivera gives the DC full autonomy, only making suggestions periodically and never in front of players or assistants—and probably get the same familiar results.
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View: https://twitter.com/barstoolsports/status/1038889467795447811?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1038889467795447811&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.si.com%2Fnfl%2F2018%2F09%2F10%2Faaron-rodgers-packers-bears-comeback-khalil-mack-mmqb-week-1-nfl

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TAKEAWAYS

1. Le’Veon Bell’s monocled emoji after the Steelers’ mucked-up tie in Cleveland was another example of the star back twisting the knife on the team in a “You’ve made me uncomfortable the last two years, so I’m not doing you favors now” kind of way.


View: https://twitter.com/LeVeonBell/status/1038894196298539010?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1038894196298539010&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.si.com%2Fnfl%2F2018%2F09%2F10%2Faaron-rodgers-packers-bears-comeback-khalil-mack-mmqb-week-1-nfl

Do I think staying away is smart for Bell? No, I don’t. He’s losing $855K a week, and that money isn’t coming back—and most NFL people I talk to aren’t so sure there’s a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow waiting for him. He has four things working against him in that regard. First, his age. He’ll be 27 in February and going into year seven of his career, which is pretty far down the line for a running back. Second, he has a suspension history.

Third, he’s been hurt (sports hernia, MCL tear, etc.) Fourth, teams have taken note of how his teammates reacted to Bell not reporting last week. Again, Bell’s a great, great player. But if I’m another team, I’m not sure I wouldn’t just look to the draft for get younger, cheaper running backs.

2. No getting around it—Nate Peterman was awful on Sunday for Buffalo. But I’ll repeat what I’ve said before in this space. My belief is, based on the investment they’ve made, the priority in the Bills’ handling of the quarterbacks this year has to be what’s best for Josh Allen. And I have a hard time seeing where playing behind the Buffalo line is what’s right for Allen’s development right now.

3. While we’re on Peterman, his predecessor Tyrod Taylor didn’t exactly set the world on fire on Sunday either, throwing for 197 yards, a touchdown and a pick on 15-of-40 passing for the Browns against Pittsburgh.

Those numbers were a part of why Cleveland struggled to get even a tie despite generating six takeaways on defense. But Taylor struggled a bit with his accuracy from the pocket, which was a problem for him in Buffalo too. We’ll see if he can get back on track in New Orleans on Sunday.

4. Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes was mighty impressive in throwing for 256 yards and four touchdowns on 15-of-27 passing. And there were plenty of good signs beyond the numbers that the Chiefs brass took from the 38-28 win over the Chargers. There’s what they knew—Mahomes’ touchdown throw to Tyreek Hill was the kind rope that made him the 10th overall pick in the draft in the first place.

And there’s what the Chiefs are still learning—how good he is extending plays in live action. He showed that part of his game in converting a third-and-13 to Hill for 34 yards late in the third quarter. Mahomes is going to be fun to watch from here on out.

5. What I liked about the Eagles on Thursday: It was ugly for a while, and they rode their defense, until the offense got the running game in gear, and they just found a way—which illustrates how they’re a team that wins by a lot of different means. That’s a great sign for Philly, and coach Doug Pederson agreed when I asked him about it on Thursday. “There are a lot of ways to win a football game.

That’s a great thing, because until all three phases catch up and click, it’s great to see the defense step up, and it’s great to see the offense make some plays in the second half, the special teams cover some kicks, [punter] Cam [Johnston] kicked the heck out of the football tonight. It’s coming. it’s a slow process, but we’ve got some time and we’ll keep working.”

6. Kirk Cousins looked very comfortable in Week 1, and his numbers reflected that—and he looked a player who doesn’t feel like he has to do everything to win. Vikings safety Harrison Smith wound up as the star of the afternoon, with a fumble recovery, a sack and game-clinching interception, and the run/pass breakdown was pretty close to 50/50, with the Vikings running the ball 32 times for 116 yards. I think all of that is just find with the $84 million man.

7. I wouldn’t worry too much about Jimmy Garoppolo’s worst day as a Niner. I don’t think anyone paying attention expected John Lynch and Kyle Shanahan to have the team fixed in 20 months, so it should come as no surprised that the roster isn’t quite where they need it to be yet.

8. Case Keenum threw three picks, so his Broncos debut certainly wasn’t perfect. But you have to like the way Keenum kept swinging. His teammates certainly did. “We’re not going to get down, that’s Case, that’s some of us other players as leaders on this team,” receiver Demaryius Thomas told the Denver media. “Forget those things and play on. That’s going to be our personality. We’re not going to carry all that negative stuff around with us.” On the game-winning drive against Seattle, Keenum was nails: 4-for-4 for 39 yards and the clinching touchdown.

9. I can’t believe I’m saying this in 2018: Adrian Peterson looked really, really good in Week 1. His performance—166 yards from scrimmage (on 28 touches)—was one of the better surprises from Sunday.
 

Psycho_X

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7. I wouldn’t worry too much about Jimmy Garoppolo’s worst day as a Niner. I don’t think anyone paying attention expected John Lynch and Kyle Shanahan to have the team fixed in 20 months, so it should come as no surprised that the roster isn’t quite where they need it to be yet.

8. Case Keenum threw three picks, so his Broncos debut certainly wasn’t perfect. But you have to like the way Keenum kept swinging. His teammates certainly did. “We’re not going to get down, that’s Case, that’s some of us other players as leaders on this team,” receiver Demaryius Thomas told the Denver media. “Forget those things and play on. That’s going to be our personality. We’re not going to carry all that negative stuff around with us.” On the game-winning drive against Seattle, Keenum was nails: 4-for-4 for 39 yards and the clinching touchdown.

9. I can’t believe I’m saying this in 2018: Adrian Peterson looked really, really good in Week 1. His performance—166 yards from scrimmage (on 28 touches)—was one of the better surprises from Sunday.

7. - Every media member this morning "It's not Jimmy G's fault he couldn't throw an accurate pass most of the day it's everyone around him's fault!"

8. - Yeah, if you don't care about the bone head interceptions that Keenum likes to throw in between the good plays then he's a great QB!! Who cares about turnovers!

9. - Literally exactly what everyone said after Peterson's debut last season with the Cardinals. Then they played the Rams and Peterson was nothing from there on out. Let's see how a 33 year old RB looks after 8 games of excessive use.
 

KJD_Ram

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If Kyle Fuller picks that pass that was right in his hands, well, there'd be a lot less Erin talk this AM....just sayin
 

SoCalRam78

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A lot of bears fans were upset Nagy didn't turn Trubisky into Goff week 1. Maybe McVay and Goff are just special?
 

Elmgrovegnome

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7. - Every media member this morning "It's not Jimmy G's fault he couldn't throw an accurate pass most of the day it's everyone around him's fault!"

8. - Yeah, if you don't care about the bone head interceptions that Keenum likes to throw in between the good plays then he's a great QB!! Who cares about turnovers!

9. - Literally exactly what everyone said after Peterson's debut last season with the Cardinals. Then they played the Rams and Peterson was nothing from there on out. Let's see how a 33 year old RB looks after 8 games of excessive use.


You read my mind
 

RamFan503

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But Taylor struggled a bit with his accuracy from the pocket,
A”bit”? What the hell defines struggled mightily to this guy?
Do I think staying away is smart for Bell?
His replacement is making it less smart by the yard. Almost 200 yards from scrimmage? Hey Bell. You may want to give a little credit to your team for your success.