Reminder: Bills face Patriots, Cam Newton on primetime

Buffalo Bills and New England Patriots, Cam Newton and their 2020 NFL Schedule on Monday Night Football.

Cam Newton to the New England Patriots in the dead spot of the NFL offseason has stirred up all sorts of headlines. In regard to the Bills, it’s all about one question: Who’s the favorite in the AFC East now? The Patriots or Bills?

Because of that, we’re overlooking something pretty simple here: When the heck do the Bills and Patriots actually face each other next season?

Of course, we’ll have to see. Everything we’re about to lay out is a *tentative* schedule for the upcoming season, essentially. Due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the NFL season could be delayed or altered in some sort of way or ways. The league insists it won’t be doing so, but we also didn’t expect to be battling COVID-19 for as long as we have been.

It’s worth noting when the Bills play the Pats for the obvious, it’s a divisional game. However, there’s some twist to it this year with Newton and because of the actual layout of the schedule.

Buffalo doesn’t see New England until Week 8 this season. Typically as division rivals, the two will see one another once early in the year and once late. Not in 2020, though.

Only one time over the last decade did the Bills and Patriots wait longer to meet: 2017, which was Week 13. Of those 10 years, seven were within the first four weeks of the season.

So what are we getting at? If Newton wins the Patriots’ starting QB job over Jarrett Stidham as many expect, they’ll have seven games to work out the kinks and get on the same page before facing the Bills.

As for the second time these two face, it’ll be a bit more fun, potentially, this next time around.

After kicking things off in Buffalo first, Week 16 sees the Bills travel to New England. That could be a huge game in terms of the standings. The second-to-last game of the season will see those two go toe-to-toe on Monday Night Football. Sounds like a good time.

 

[lawrence-related id=65275,65262,65226,65219]

Marco Fabián no seguirá en el futbol de Qatar

El mediocampista mexicano Marco Fabián, no renovó contrato con el Al-Sadd del futbol de Qatar y seis meses después de su llegada se despide del futbol de aquél país. El propio club publicó la noticia a través de un comunicado donde agradeció a Marco …

El mediocampista mexicano Marco Fabián, no renovó contrato con el Al-Sadd del futbol de Qatar y seis meses después de su llegada se despide del futbol de aquél país.

El propio club publicó la noticia a través de un comunicado donde agradeció a Marco Fabián su participación pero que no se renovaría el contrato del futbolista, el cual culminó el 30 de junio.

Por su parte el mediocampista también tuvo su momento de despedida con el grupo con el siguiente mensaje:

“Quiero agradecerles por todo, claro que quería pasar más tiempo con ustedes, con el staff, lo disfruté. Sé que este tiempo con coronavirus es el peor momento para todos, pero como dijo Xavi, conozco a todos ustedes y son muy buenos jugadores, pero lo más importante es cómo son como personas”, dijo Fabián al grupo.

El mexicano llegó al Al-Sadd en enero de 2020 y empezaba a tener la confianza de Xavi con un par de anotaciones pero llegó el coronavirus y detuvo todo, ahora el futbolista tendrá que continuar su carrera en otros aires.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

Giants’ Joe Judge is not in love with New Jersey’s insane taxes

Giants head coach Joe Judge credits his wife with doing most of the unpacking.

As many homeowners in the northeast know, paying property taxes can be daunting to say the least — and New York Giants head coach Joe Judge recently learned first hand when buying a new home.

In fact, Judge says the taxes in New Jersey were “the biggest shock” to him when looking for a place to live, as he told Paul Schwartz of the New York Post.

“The biggest shock to me when we were shopping were the taxes,’’ Judge explained. “I was looking at prices and just thinking ‘OK, I can just accept it’s more expensive’ and then a lot of the taxes, I was like ‘Wow.’ And the variance of towns. We looked in Ridgewood at one point and the taxes were like, it didn’t matter where you bought, were like $60,000. I thought ‘Jeez, that better be the best snow removal in the history of the world.’’’

Welcome to New Jersey, coach.

Judge also credited his wife with doing the work of unpacking boxes while he’s been “staring at a computer.” Even with all she’s done, the Giants head coach still has work of his own to do around the house.

“We’re kinda unpacking boxes,’’ Judge said. “Really, my wife’s unpacking boxes. I’ve been staring at a computer. Now that I broke the vets on the 12th, she’s kinda reminded me I’ve got several rooms I’ve got to get to and address with her.’’

As Judge continues to settle in to his new home, his first training camp with the Giants is rapidly approaching on July 28. The first-year head coach will have his work cut out for him in trying to prepare his team for the 2020 season after what has been an abbreviated offseason thus far.

[lawrence-related id=651311,651285,651277]

How Kevin Stefanski can turn Baker Mayfield’s slump around

Last season the Cleveland Browns limped to a 6-10 finish. How a lone bright spot for Baker Mayfield points to a rebound in 2020.

(In this series, Touchdown Wire’s Mark Schofield takes a look at one important metric per NFL team to uncover a crucial problem to solve for the 2020 season. In this installment, it’s time to look at where things went wrong for Baker Mayfield and the Cleveland Browns in 2019, and how a lone bright spot and a new head coach might make for a beautiful pairing in 2020).

Every offseason a champion is crowned.

For example, many are looking at what the Arizona Cardinals accomplished over the past few months and moving them up in their pre-season power rankings. (Touchdown Wire is no exception to this rule). After all, they acquired one of the NFL’s best wide receivers in DeAndre Hopkins and are pairing him with a rising, second-year quarterback in Kyler Murray and an offensive-headed head coach in Kliff Kingsbury.

Does that sound, in any way, like last summer?

Remember when the Cleveland Browns acquired Odell Beckham Jr., another of the game’s best wideouts? To pair him with a rising, second-year quarterback in Baker Mayfield and an offensive-minded head coach in Freddie Kitchens? The Browns were on the tip of everyone’s tongue as a team on the rise in the AFC, and were in the mix during the preseason as Super Bowl contenders.

Then, the games began.

Kitchens failed to live up to the hype as a head coach, showing that he was probably best suited at this point in his career as an offensive coordinator. Beckham had a solid season, with 74 receptions for 1,035 yards, but saw the end zone just four times, his lowest TD output since the 2017 season when he caught three touchdown passes in just four games.

Then there was Mayfield, who could not produce the kind of second-year leap as a passer Browns fans were hoping to see. He completed less than 60% of his passes for 3,827 yards and 22 touchdowns, along with 21 interceptions. His NFL quarterback rating dropped from 93.7 in 2018 to 78.8 in 2019. His interceptions soared from 14 to 21, and his Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt dropped from 6.77 to 5.27. That ANY/A of 5.27 placed him 27th in the league among qualified passers, behind Josh Allen, Sam Darnold and Lamar Jackson (the other starting quarterbacks who were drafted along with him in the first round in 2018) and behind the aforementioned Murray.

Cleveland finished 6-10, and Kitchens was fired.

So, where did it go wrong for Mayfield?

As the sage Doug Farrar pointed out recently, a glaring weakness for Mayfield in 2019 was his production when throwing from a clean pocket. Using charting data from Sports Info Solutions, Farrar found that when he was kept clean, Mayfield posted these numbers: “When he wasn’t harassed, Mayfield still threw a league-high 16 interceptions on 394 attempts, and a league-worst 84.0 quarterback rating.”

Making matters worse for Mayfield, from a clean pocket Pro Football Focus charted him with an Adjusted Completion Percentage of 72.7.

That was dead last among 27 qualified passers.

To set the stage for how Mayfield and the Browns can right the ship in 2020, there is an area of his game that stood out in 2019: Play-action. Mayfield had an NFL passer rating of 102.5 in 2019 when using play-action, which put him 11th in the league in that category. Furthermore, Mayfield saw an increase in his completion percentage of 10.1% on play-action versus non play-action throws, and that increase was the biggest in the league. In terms of Yards per Attempt, Mayfield’s YPA of 9.0 on play-action throws was an increase of 2.6 over his YPA of 6.4 on non play-action designs, and that increase was the third-most in the league. Mayfield had a TD/INT split of 11/6 on play-action throws, but 11/15 on non play-action passes. Those 15 interceptions on non play-action throws trailed only Jameis Winston and Philip Rivers.

Enter Kevin Stefanski.

While Mayfield was good on play-action in 2019, there was a passer who was better: Stefanski’s former quarterback Kirk Cousins. As highlighted just yesterday when discussing the Minnesota Vikings, Cousins led the league with an NFL passer rating of 129.2 on play-action throws. Stefanski built an offense based on an outside zone running scheme, with play-action designs flowing naturally off of that structure:

This is your textbook flood design working off of an outside zone look to the left side. On this play the Vikings have 20 offensive personnel in the game, and after making his run fake to the left Cousins boots back to the right. The route he throws is a pivot route to Adam Thielen, who starts on the right side, shows the defense a potential slant route and then breaks back towards the right sideline to mirror his quarterback. The other two, deeper, options are an intermediate crossing route from left to right and a deep comeback route along the right sideline.

Stefanski also did a great job of showing the opposition plays like this, and then changing a route or two to hit them in the downfield passing game. Take this touchdown against the now Las Vegas Raiders:

Facing a 1st and 10 against the Raiders, Cousins lines up under center and the offense has 11 offensive personnel in the game. Thielen aligns in the slot to the left. Cousins carries out a run fake to the right and then boots back to the left. Given what we have seen, we might expect the Vikings to give him a three-level with Thielen running a deep corner route, drawn in with the black arrowed line. Instead, Thielen works all the way across the formation, and Cousins hits him on a deep throwback for a touchdown.

The elements are in place for the Browns, under Stefanski, to build an offense drastically similar to what Cousins was running last year with the Vikings. Cleveland still has Beckham and Jarvis Landry, two ideal wide receivers for this kind of system. The offensive line should be much improved, with the acquisition of right tackle Jack Conklin in free agency and the selection of potential starting left tackle Jedrick Wills Jr. in the first round. They also have a tandem of running backs in Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt that fit well in an outside zone running scheme. Finally, Austin Hooper, another acquisition this off-season, given Stefanski the potential security blanket of a tight end that this offense needs.

These are the ideal pieces to run such an offense, and as he showed at times in 2019, Mayfield is comfortable on such designs:

Cleveland shows the Buffalo Bills an outside zone running play to the right, before the quarterback boots back to the left. Mayfield has a flood design to choose from, but with Landry open immediately in the flat he simply takes the easy throw. His receiver bursts upfield for an easy 18-yard gain.

So, the pieces are certainly in place for Stefanski and the Browns.

Now it is up to Mayfield to deliver. But given what he did on play-action designs in 2019, even during a down season for him, betting on a rebound in 2020 might be a safe investment.

11 notable Bears who are unrestricted free agents after 2020 and whether they should be re-signed

Let’s take a look at 11 notable unrestricted free agents and whether the Bears should re-sign them, as well as the to-be-determined group.

We’re just a few months from the hopeful start of the 2020 season. But it’s never too early to take a look at what lies ahead in 2021. Particularly on the unrestricted free agent front.

Bears general manager Ryan Pace has some important decisions to make regarding some of his big-name free agents, some that will have to earn that next contract and others that are shoe-ins for another deal. (Looking at you, Allen Robinson.)

Let’s take a look at 11 notable unrestricted free agents and whether the Bears should re-sign them, as well as the to-be-determined group that features a slew of one-year prove-it deals.

*Contract details courtesy of Spotrac

WR Allen Robinson

2020 salary: $14M

Adam Bettcher/Getty Images

Allen Robinson has been the best thing about the Bears offense in his two short seasons in Chicago, and he’s proven to be the No. 1 receiver this team has been looking for. He’s managed to thrive in some pretty average or bad offenses in Chicago — even managing a 1,000-yard season in one of the league’s worst offenses — and it should be a no-brainer for Pace to lock up Robinson long-term.

Verdict: Re-sign

Ezekiel Elliott, Ryan Shazier make BTN All-Decade football squad

BTN revealed its All-Decade running backs and linebackers, and Ohio State’s Ezekiel Elliott and Ryan Shazier made the Second Team.

By now, hopefully you know that the Big Ten Network has been going through a journey of identifying the best conference basketball and football players over the last decade. It has completed its efforts with hoops and is now on to football. Ohio State might be a so-called football school, but it actually had more representation on the All-Decade basketball teams than any other program in the Big Ten. In fact, Aaron Craft, D’Angelo Russell, Evan Turner, and Jared Sullinger all made the cut.

So, you know there’s going to be a lot scarlet and gray with the football reveals, and we already have our first two. BTN named its All-Decade football running backs and linebackers on Monday, and both Ezekiel Elliott and Ryan Shazier made Second Team All-Decade.

You know Elliott’s story well, but what many forget is that during the 2014 national title run at Ohio State, he wasn’t really a household name until the postseason when he went on an unbelievable tear — going for over 200 yards on the ground in each of the three games. That catapulted him to being arguably the best back in the country in 2015. That year, he took home the Big Ten’s MVP, Running Back of the Year, and Offensive Player of the Year.

For Shazier, many know him more for his continued recovery from a devastating spinal chord injury while playing with the Pittsburgh Steelers, but he dominated on the field at Ohio State as a fast-twitch playmaker at the linebacker spot. In 2013, Shazier was a First Team All-Big Ten and First Team All-American.

 

Zion Williamson joins Damian Lillard as NBA 2K21 cover athlete

Pelicans rookie Zion Williamson was announced Wednesday as the NBA 2K21 Next-Gen cover athlete on the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X.

[jwplayer 9qcE6oU8]

New Orleans Pelicans rookie Zion Williamson was announced Wednesday as the NBA 2K21 Next-Gen cover athlete on the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X gaming systems.

Williamson joined Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard, who was named on Tuesday the Current-Gen systems cover athlete, as the two players to represent the next installment of the popular video game. The final cover athlete will be announced on Thursday.

Williamson appeared in a new trailer for NBA 2K21 during the PlayStation 5 reveal event last month. His inclusion in the trailer created speculation that he would be the cover athlete but 2K Sports clarified that he was simply included at the time because of his fit to show off the game.

Williamson has emerged as perhaps one of the most marketable players in the NBA in just his rookie season. His blend of athleticism and talent made him an easy choice as the next cover athlete for NBA 2K21 and should easily help 2K Sports usher in the next version of the video game.

[lawrence-related id=19171,19058,19030]

[vertical-gallery id=14282]

LOOK: Michigan 2021 commit ‘a scary sight’ running a blazing 40

The four-star prospective VIPER commit runs a blazing fast 40, despite being a gargantuan human.

[jwplayer 0ybW4F6X-XNcErKyb]

‘Speed in space’ — it’s not just for the offense anymore.

While the 2020 iteration of the Michigan defense may be its fastest yet, with multiple speedy players all across the unit, the team is continuing to recruit prospects that can absolutely fly, regardless of size. Such is the case for the Wolverines’ first four-star pledge on the defensive side of the ball in the 2021 class.

The offensive commits already had prowess of their own, but things didn’t start looking up for Don Brown’s side of the ball until Brentwood (TN) Ravenwood four-star Junior Colson — an inside linebacker expected to play VIPER in Ann Arbor — pledged to the class. Since, the maize and blue have picked up a bevy of four-stars on defense.

But, how quick is Colson? Well, take a look for yourself, as he runs below a 4.6 40-yard dash, despite being 6-foot-3, 228-pounds.

Colson is one of two four-star linebackers committed to the Wolverines, along with Fort Lauderdale (FL) St. Thomas Aquinas’ Jaydon Hood.

Michigan currently has 19 commits in the 2021 class, which is ranked No. 7 nationally.

MMA Junkie Radio weekly live stream on SportsCastr with guest Jon Anik (noon ET)

MMA Junkie Radio brings you a live streaming weekly show on SportsCastr to break down all the latest MMA news.

[protected-iframe id=”0a5aebb8c34cfeb7a1c785d8b8de4158-58289362-58194562″ info=”https://sportscastr.com/MMAJunkie/embed/next/1593614904″ style=”min-height:500px;”]

MMA Junkie Radio brings you a live streaming weekly show on SportsCastr to break down all the latest MMA news.

MMA Junkie Radio hosts “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” will go live Wednesday at noon ET with streaming commentary and analysis via SportsCastr, where you can chat with the guys and ask questions.

This week, UFC play-by-play commentator Jon Anik will join the live stream at 12:30 p.m. ET. The guys will also discuss the latest news and notes in MMA, including having a better idea of what “Fight Island” looks like, Brian Ortega vs. “The Korean Zombie” feud, Paul Felder, and more.

Be sure to check back and follow @MMAjunkie@MMAjunkieRadio and @SportsCastrLive on Twitter to be notified when the guys go live.

How high could Danielle Hunter get on the all-time sack list in 2020?

Hunter could crack the top-100 on the all-time sack list with a solid season.

This seems like a silly article to write considering Danielle Hunter is only 25 years.

But . . .

In 2019, Hunter became the youngest player in NFL history to reach 50 career sacks and heading into the 2020 season, Hunter has 54.5 career sacks, a mark that ranks 154th in NFL history.

How high could Hunter climb in 2020?

Let’s break it down to three tiers.

Let’s say Hunter has 10 sacks in 2020, which would be lower than each of the last two seasons. That would move Hunter to 64.5 and would tie him for 110th on the all-time list with Jason Babin and Tony Bennett.

If Hunter had 15 sacks, which is pretty realistic since he’s had 14.5 sacks in each of the last two seasons, that would put him at 69.5 sacks and would have him at 97th on the all-time list with Michael Bennett and Clay Matthews.

Now, let’s get wild and say Hunter has 20 sacks. That would put him at 74.5 and all the way up to 83rd, a mark where Everyone Griffen sits right now.

It’s something to keep an eye on. At only 25 years old, the sky appears to be the limit on how high Hunter can climb on this list.

Bruce Smith holds the all-time sack record with 200 career sacks.