Matt Stafford ruled out from Cowboys-Lions game

The Lions will be without their quarterback when they host the Dallas Cowboys Sunday.

The Dallas Cowboys will not, in fact, have to face the new-and-improved Matthew Stafford. The Texas native and long-time quarterback of the Detroit Lions missed the club’s Week 10 matchup against division rival Chicago.

Stafford has yet to practice this week due to a back injury and on Friday, he was ruled out of Sunday’s contest with the Dallas Cowboys by Detroit head coach Matt Patricia.

Stafford is one of five Lions who did not participate in Thursday’s practice.

The Cowboys will be looking to avoid their second losing streak of the season after falling 28-24 to another NFC North foe, the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday. Dallas sits at 5-4 and with a tough schedule ahead of them will need to capitalize on the 3-5-1 Lions injury situation. Dallas is suffering injuries along the offensive line, but hardly has the team-wide issues Detroit is suffering from.

Stafford, a Highland Park graduate, has faced the Cowboys four times in the regular season over the course of his 11-year career. The teams have split the contests two apiece, with Dallas winning the last two contests in 2016 and 2018.

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The Cowboys also won the lone playoff matchup with the Lions, from 2015, so they’ve won the last three head-to-head meetings.

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4 bold predictions for Bears’ Week 11 matchup vs. Rams

The Bears will face the Rams in a rematch of last season’s defensive showdown, and we’ve got some bold predictions heading into the game.

The Chicago Bears (4-5) return to primetime in what’s become an important conference game against the Los Angeles Rams (5-4), where both struggling teams are looking for a win to keep in the NFC Wild Card playoff race.

The Bears broke their four-game losing streak with a divisional win over the Detroit Lions, which hopefully provides some momentum for the team heading into an important matchup.

Here are four bold predictions for the Bears’ Week 11 contest versus the Rams.

1. Khalil Mack outperforms Aaron Donald

Joe Robbins/Getty Images

Khalil Mack and Aaron Donald are two of the NFL’s best players, period. Just look at the money the Bears and Rams, respectively, have given to two players that have altered their franchises.

While Mack and Donald don’t play the same position, their job is simply to get after the quarterback. They’re both two play makers that can wreck a game at any moment. Both haven’t replicated their statistical outputs from a season ago, but they’re still dominant forces that require offenses to game-plan around them.

Mack, specifically, has been quiet since September, where he recorded 4.5 sacks and 4 forced fumbles after the first four games. Since then, Mack has had just one additional sack. While the defense’s recent struggles don’t all fall on him, this is one of those games where Mack needs to come out like the force he is and win this game for the Bears, adding a couple sacks of Jared Goff and forcing a fumble.

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Matt Stafford’s 2019 is more than resurgence, if he plays Cowboys will face his best self

The Dallas Cowboys have a stiff test in front of them Sunday if Stafford plays, despite Detroit’s sub-.500 record.

This past weekend Dallas lost a nail-biter at home to the Minnesota Vikings. Dalvin Cook continued his sensational season, rushing for 97 yards with 64 yards coming after contact. He also added another 86 through the air on 7 catches. On the flip side, Ezekiel Elliott struggled to find running room, as he finished with 47 yards on 20 carries.

With less than two minutes to go and down by four, Dallas faced a 2nd-and-2 at the Minnesota 11 yard-line. The next two plays were handed off to Elliott, with a net result of negative three yards. This was the defining moment of the game as those two plays combined to decrease Dallas’s win probability by almost 25%. It was certainly gut-wrenching to see the ball taken out of Dak Prescott’s hands, given the MVP campaign he’s produced thus far.

The Cowboys still sit atop the NFC East, but they share the same record as the Philadelphia Eagles. With the NFC showcasing a number of competitive teams, each game becomes even more crucial to Dallas’s playoffs hopes. Now the Cowboys must travel to Detroit to face a team that is perhaps better than their 3-5-1 record would indicate.

In a division where the discussion is dominated by Aaron Rodgers and Kirk Cousins’s contract, Matt Stafford is often an afterthought. While Cousins can be a roller-coaster that may win or lose you the game, Stafford may be the model of consistency. Since his second year, the Lions have finished with less than 6 wins just once, but have reached double-digit victories just twice, generally finishing around .500. But with this as the backdrop, it can be easy to miss that Stafford may be having the best statistical year of his career.

When this chart generated I had to double-check my numbers because I didn’t think it was correct.

But according to NFL NextGen Stats, Stafford is averaging over 10 air yards per attempt, a mark well above his previous career-high. Detroit is also averaging nearly .25 EPA per dropback, a result nearly .1 EPA higher than their 2011 season when Stafford was throwing to Calvin-freaking-Johnson.

So what exactly led to this new success for Stafford? Similar to last week, we can use NextGen Stats to take a look.

In 2018, Stafford threw most of his downfield targets to the perimeter, with limited success overall. This season, however, Stafford and the Lions have attacked the deep middle more frequently, and found great success in doing so.

Attacking such a wide surface-area of the field can make their passing game quite dangerous, especially when it comes to their talented receiving corps.

With a Big 3 of Marvin Jones, Kenny Golladay (Babytron) and Danny Amendola, one could argue Detroit has one of the best receiving corps in the NFL. And from a statistical perspective, that’s certainly the case.

Unsurprisingly, a large portion of Stafford’s success has come when throwing to these receivers, as they rank near the top of the league in both average depth of target, and EPA per Target (but don’t miss the fact that Dallas receivers are in the same vicinity). Managing this group will undoubtedly rise to the top of Dallas’s priority list. And when we look at how teams have chosen to attack the Dallas Defense, we can see that it will be an intriguing matchup.

Thus far, Dallas’s pass chart looks a lot closer to 2018 Stafford than 2019 Stafford. Opposing offenses have not attacked the deep middle with any frequency, instead choosing to take their deep shots down the right side, which Dallas has defended well to this point. Hopefully this fares well for Dallas this weekend.

With Stafford missing last week’s game, it becomes difficult to predict this week whether he’ll be rusty and still recovering, or fresh and ready to deliver, if he plays at all. Passing trends to this point would indicate that the Cowboys are well-equipped to handle the Detroit attack, but they’ll need better coaching decisions on the offensive-end to realize their potential in the long-run.

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Bears’ Mitchell Trubisky moves up three spots in Week 11 QB rankings

Bears QB Mitchell Trubisky’s encouraging performance against the Lions was enough for him to climb three spots in the NFL’s QB rankings.

While Chicago Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky still has plenty to prove, last week’s performance against the Detroit Lions was encouraging.

After completing 69% of his passes for 173 yards and three touchdowns for a passer rating of 131.0, Trubisky moved from 31st to 28th in NFL.com’s Week 11 QB rankings.

Not exactly where the Bears expected their quarterback would land this season, but any improvement is significant at this point.

The Bears snapped their four-game losing streak in a divisional 20-13 win over the Lions to improve to 4-5 on the season.

Here’s a snippet of what was said about Trubisky’s performance against the Lions:

Skeptics of the value of passer rating as a stat might want to take note of Trubisky’s day against the Lions, which he finished with the third-best mark of his career (131.0) while also leading an offense that produced seven three-and-outs, tied for the most by any team in any game this season. The degree of difficulty wasn’t exactly high for Trubisky against the Lions’ 28th-ranked pass defense.

In eight games this season, Trubisky has a 63.6% of his passes for 1,390 yards with eight touchdowns and three interceptions.

As for the rest of the NFC North, Aaron Rodgers ranks fifth, Matthew Stafford ranks sixth and Kirk Cousins ranks 11th.

Bears RB David Montgomery’s status for Week 11 in jeopardy

The Bears might be without starting RB David Montgomery against the Rams, as Montgomery nurses a rolled ankle injury.

As the Chicago Bears, who are clinging to their playoff lives, prepare for a do-or-die primetime matchup against the Los Angeles Rams, they might have to play without their starting running back.

Rookie David Montgomery was held out of Thursday’s practice after “lightly” rolling his ankle Wednesday.

Bears coach Matt Nagy remained mum on Montgomery’s status other than they’re going to take it day-by-day and make sure he’s good to go, should he play Sunday.

“I can’t say either way,” Nagy said, via the Sun-Times. “We’ll just kind of keep an eye on it as it goes here and see how it is [Thursday]. We’re working through [Thursday], and see how he goes.”

If Montgomery can’t go, Ryan Nall, who made his first career start last week against the Detroit Lions, would likely take over Montgomery’s role and get a bulk of the offensive load, along with Tarik Cohen. Nall played on special teams against the Lions, but he didn’t play a single offensive snap.

Chicago could also employ receiver Cordarrelle Patterson in the run game, as he’s been used as a power back at times this season.

Mike Davis would’ve been next in-line to replace Montgomery, but the Bears released Davis last week in order to better their odds at securing a fourth-round compensatory pick in the 2020 NFL Draft.

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Garrett-Rudolph fight invokes memories of other helmet incidents, Cowboys involved

The fight that broke out at the end of Browns-Steelers wasn’t the first, nor will it be the last, helmet incident in the NFL. A recap.

The NFL world was placed on it’s head in the final moments of what should have been a celebratory situation for the Cleveland Browns in Thursday night’s win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. Only it’s the Cleveland Browns and nice things rarely happen to that organization. A few seconds before defeating their rivals for the first time in the same season they also took out the Baltimore Ravens, all hell broke loose when defensive end Myles Garrett took down QB Mason Rudolph a few ticks after Rudolph had released the ball.

The takedown was late-hit flag worthy, but on it’s own probably wouldn’t be much of a big deal. What happened after, certainly was. On the ground, Rudolph and Garrett tussled, with Rudolph attempting to take off Garrett’s helmet.

This could be Rudolph’s hand getting stuck in Garrett’s facemask and him trying to get it out, as some have speculated, but what is going on with Rudolph’s left hand cannot be seen by the currently available angles.

There is clear animosity here as Rudolph grabs the back of Garrett’s helmet and almost pulls it off. Just as none of us outsiders know the full intent of Rudolph’s hands, none of us outsiders know what was being said during this tussle and it’s irresponsible to speculate on the specific words being used.

It is, of course, doubtful the two were exchanging pound cake recipes.

As they rose from the ground, Rudolph appears to have made contact with Garrett in the groin area not once, but twice. The intent, and the intensity, is unknown.

Garrett went apoplectic and not only retaliated by trying to remove Rudolph’s helmet — it’s a safe bet to assume Garrett didn’t take Rudolph’s action as a mild-mannered attempt to remove a hand from a facemask — but succeeded, and then things turned surreal.

Rudolph, helmet-less, still decides to pursue confrontation. Garrett, backpedaling, winds up and makes a mistake that could have cost Rudolph his season, career or possibly worse, by swinging the QBs helmet and connecting with his head.

Fortunately, the  open end of the helmet where there is padding is what connected, and not the crown of the helmet, or things could have ended badly. The incident will now get turned over to the league and suspensions will likely be coming for all involved. Steelers’ OL Maurkice Pouncey will likely be suspended for throwing punches in defense of his quarterback, Rudolph will likely be suspended for trying to rip off Garrett’s helmet and moving the situation from a penalty-worthy play to a fight, and Garrett certainly will be suspended for escalating the fight to a place things should never, ever go.

Except, they sometimes do.

This is hardly the first helmet-swinging incident the league or organized football has seen, despite the over-the-top reactions some in the media are having. They happen from time to time, including earlier this season in practice, they just haven’t been on primetime television in front of a national audience and during the age of social media where one instance spawns 10’s of thousands of responses.


Kyle Long vs Jalen Dalton (August 2019)

This tiff wasn’t caught on publicly available camera, though as teams record their practice sessions, video of it does exist somewhere .

For The Win reported on it at the time:

Bears offensive lineman Kyle Long had himself an interesting day at training camp on Wednesday. And by interesting, I mean that he took off a fellow player’s helmet and tried to beat him with it.

No, really, he did.

The three-time Pro Bowler was ejected from a mock scrimmage session after he got into a fight with rookie defensive lineman Jalen Dalton. Long apparently took exception to an earlier block by Dalton during an interception return. And frustrations boiled over when Long removed Dalton’s helmet and started hitting him with the helmet.


Richie Incognito vs Antoine Smith (August 2013)

Smith, the Houston Texans defensive lineman, scuffled with notorious bad boy and the oft-maligned offensive lineman, then of the Miami Dolphins. Yes, the threaten-everyone-in-a-funeral-home-with-guns-and-is-back-in-the-NFL Richie Incognito.

As all can see, Incognito gets his hands into the face and helmet of Smith first, just like Rudolph and Garrett, and the response is the escalation of violence. Smith is able to successfully remove Incognito’s helmet, and swings it at him in retaliation. He just doesn’t connect.


Flozell Adams vs Marcus Thomas (Summer 2008)

The Cowboys aren’t immune to being in such instances. During a joint practice with the Denver Broncos, things got heated leading the Dallas lineman to swing a helmet in a big scrum.

The reactions at the time come courtesy of the Denver Post, including Broncos HC Mike Shanahan being pleased no one threw a punch.

“That’s all part of football,” Cowboys receiver Terrell Owens said. “When you get all this testosterone going out here, it gets a little out of hand.”

“When you’re going against other guys, guys that you’re not friends with, sometimes tempers flare,” Broncos linebacker D.J. Williams said. “I guess two guys got into it a little extra at the end of the play, and once that happens, your friends come, everybody’s friends come. It’s a big pile-on, just grabbing and pushing.”

Asked about the fracas, Broncos coach Mike Shanahan retorted: “That wasn’t a fight. It wasn’t a fight. You know what a fight is. That was just a little pushing. It happens all the time. But they kept their composure and they didn’t swing. And that’s what you want.”


Don Joyce vs Les Lichtner (1954)

These things are of course nothing new. Here, Twitter user @DanDalyOnSports finds an old-school incident involving a current Hall of Famer.

The league’s response? Very interesting.

Lyle Alzado also got frisky back in the 1980s.


Albert Haynesworth vs Andre Gurode (2006)

Of course the most notable helmet incident prior to this one didn’t involve a helmet swing, but did involve a member of the Dallas Cowboys.

After a Julius Jones touchdown, the then Tennessee Titans defensive lineman stood over the Cowboys center Andre Gurode, ripped off his helmet and unsuccessfully tried to step on his face. Undeterred, he went for a second stomp, causing several lacerations to Gurode’s face that would require multiple stitches.

Haynesworth was suspended five games the very next day. It will be interesting to see how long, and how quickly the parties in Thursday night’s events are punished.

Nothing happens in today’s world without being captured in a contemporary meme, and all should be grateful the scream-at-the-too-cool-cat meme is what’s hot right now. Enjoy.

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Injury Report: Cowboys entire offensive line hurting ahead of Week 11

The Thursday injury report for the Dallas Cowboys and Detroit Lions leading up to their Week 11 matchup.

The Dallas Cowboys most recent loss has put their backs against the proverbial wall. With that in mind, all hands on deck will be required, not only due to the increased significance of the remainder of the games to be played, but because injuries are mounting. Here’s the latest injury report ahead of the Week 11 game against the Detroit Lions.

There’s positive movement in some aspects. WR Amari Cooper, who’s been dealing with a plethora of nagging lower body injuries this season, was upgraded to limited after not practicing Wednesday. Also limited was guard Zack Martin, and CB/core special teamer C.J. Goodwin.

The rest of the offensive line continues to be banged up. While LT Tyron Smith has participated in both practices this week despite his ankle, his bookend La’el Collins has yet to get any work with ailments to both his knee and his back. Of course, guard Connor Williams was not available due to the arthroscopic knee surgery he underwent earlier in the week, knocking him out of commission for the time being.

At this point, it’s going to largely be on the medical staff to get the players ready to go for game time. Hopefully this rest early in the week will help those who need it play at a high level on Sunday, even without much practice.

The situation is more dire for the Detroit Lions, as their QB Matthew Stafford has yet to practice after missing last week’s game. A back injury is threatening to keep him out of this upcoming contest as well. CB Darius Slay, who did not appear on the official injury report on Wednesday, was downgraded to limited due to an issue with his neck.

Bears haven’t committed to attending Colin Kaepernick’s workout…yet

The NFL said that 11 teams have committed to attend Colin Kaepernick’s workout in Atlanta this Saturday. But the Bears aren’t among them.

The NFL has announced that 11 teams have committed to attend Colin Kaepernick’s workout in Atlanta this Saturday.

As the Bears search for stability at the quarterback position, you’d believe they were among those teams. But you’d be wrong.

Here’s the list of teams that will be in attendance, as of Thursday:

  • Cardinals
  • Falcons
  • Browns
  • Broncos
  • Lions
  • Dolphins
  • Patriots
  • Giants
  • Jets
  • Buccaneers
  • Redskins

Quarterback Mitchell Trubisky has struggled mightily in his third season in not just a mediocre offense, but a bad one. While the unit’s struggles don’t all fall on Trubisky, he’s a big point of contention.

While Trubisky will likely be on the Bears’ roster in 2020, Chicago is expected to bring in another quarterback, whether it’s a veteran like Andy Dalton or Marcus Mariota or a rookie in the NFL Draft, like Oklahoma’s Jalen Hurts or Georgia’s Jake Fromm.

Given the Bears are looking to improve at the quarterback position, they should do their due diligence in exploring every avenue, including Kaepernick. It’s just a workout. Not a commitment.

The Bears still have time before Saturday’s workout to change their minds.

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Bears injury report: David Montgomery misses Thursday’s practice with ankle injury

The Bears released their Thursday injury report ahead of a matchup against the Rams, and RB David Montgomery’s ankle injury is a concern.

As the Chicago Bears prepare for a pivotal NFC showdown against the Los Angeles Rams, there’s some concern about whether their starting running back will be ready for primetime.

Rookie David Montgomery popped up on the injury report Wednesday, where he was limited with an ankle injury. The fact that Montgomery missed Thursday’s practice is definitely concerning heading into a game where the offense really needs to establish the run game.

Coach Matt Nagy said Montgomery rolled his ankle during Wednesday’s practice.

Four other Bears players missed Thursday’s practice, including tight end Trey Burton (calf), linebacker Isaiah Irving (quad), linebacker Danny Trevathan (elbow) and newcomer to the injury report tight end Adam Shaheen (foot).

With Burton and Shaheen on the injury report, the Bears are thin at tight end, where Ben Braunecker and J.P. Holtz are currently the only healthy tight ends on the roster. Braunecker had success last week against the Detroit Lions, where he caught his first-career touchdown — a touchdown that jumpstarted three straight scoring drives.

Irving hasn’t practiced since before a Week 8 matchup against the Los Angeles Chargers, as he’s dealt with a quad injury sustained in that same game. His status will likely prompt linebacker James Vaughter’s promotion from the practice squad sometime this week.

There hasn’t been an update on Trevathan’s gruesome injury, and it’s no surprise that he didn’t participate in practice Thursday. Nick Kwiatkoski stepped in for Trevathan against the Lions, and the Bears will be looking for continued production from him.

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No changes to Saints injury report for Week 11 vs. Buccaneers

The New Orleans Saints and Tampa Bay Buccaneers updated their injury reports ahead of their Week 11 kickoff on Sunday afternoon on Fox.

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Andrus Peat will be out for up to six weeks with a broken arm after the Week 10 clash with the Atlanta Falcons. This is a large blow to the New Orleans Saints interior offensive line. Now, Will Clapp or Nick Easton will have to help shoulder the load in protecting quarterback Drew Brees.

Marshon Lattimore is on a week-to-week basis with a hamstring injury, and no one should expect the cornerback to practice this week. While the blow to the offensive line can be more easily absorbed, Lattimore’s absence from the defense could produce some unwanted results within the secondary. A combination of P.J. Williams, and C.J. Gardner-Johnson will have to pick up the slack if Lattimore misses any type of time,

The New Orleans Saints and Tampa Bay Buccaneers updated their injury reports ahead of their Week 11 kickoff on Sunday afternoon on Fox. Each player listed has a designation for practice performance; changes from the previous report will be denoted with bold text. Here’s what we learned:

From the Saints

  • KR/WR Deonte Harris (Hamstring) Did not participate
  • CB Marshon Lattimore (Hamstring) Did not participate
  • G Andrus Peat (Forearm) Did not participate
  • FB Zach Line (Knee) Limited
  • LB Demario Davis (Hamstring) Limited
  • CB Patrick Robinson (Hamstring) Full

From the Buccaneers

  • CB Carlton Davis (Hip) Limited
  • T Demar Dotson (Non injury related) Full
  • OLB Anthony Nelson (Hamstring) Did not participate
  • CB M.J. Stewart (Knee) Did not participate
  • G Ali Marpet (Ankle) Full
  • OLB Carl Nassib (Hamstring) Limited

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