Can Jared Goff finally solve his Brian Flores problem?

Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores has been Lions quarterback Jared Goff’s white whale through his career, and the two face off again on Sunday.

When the Detroit Lions travel to U.S. Bank Stadium to meet the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday, Lions quarterback Jared Goff will be dealing with a defense like no other in the NFL, though led by a defensive coordinator in Brian Flores who has had Goff’s number through several different teams and defensive iterations.

The last time Goff faced a defense created by Flores, it was November 1, 2020. Goff was the Los Angeles Rams’ quarterback, and Flores was the Miami Dolphins’ head coach and defensive shot-caller. And in the end, it was an absolute nightmare for Goff. Flores threw all kinds of blitzes and coverages at him, but Miami’s Cover-0 blitzes specifically drove Goff nuts — and into the throes of a 28-17 loss. Goff attempted 61 passes in that game, completing 35 of 61 passes for 355 yards, one touchdown, two interceptions, two fumbles (one of which was returned for a touchdown), and a passer rating of 65.9.

The time before that was Super Bowl LIII at the end of the 2018 season. Things were no better for Goff in that game. Then, Flores, the New England Patriots’ defensive coordinator, did a brilliant job of flipping his defenses at the 15-second mark of the play clock, when head coach Sean McVay was no longer allowed to speak to Goff in his helmet headset. Goff completed 19 f 38 passes for 229 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, and a passer rating of 57.9. The Patriots beat the Rams 10-3, and the Rams tied the Dolphins in Super Bowl VI for the lowest score in any Super Bowl.

Now, Goff has to solve a Flores defense that has planted its schematic identity at the four corners of the earth. This season, the Vikings have by far sent three or fewer rushers at the quarterback more than any other team, and they have by far sent six or more rushers more than any other team. The Vikings have also played the highest rate of Cover-0 in the league (12.1%), and they’ve played the highest rate of Cover-2 in the league (29.0%). Of course, the problem with Flores’ latest defense is that nothing post-snap is what it looked like pre-snap. Flores loves to muddy the picture with blitz looks that turn into drop-8 zone coverage, and he’s just as adept at showing you all-out blitzes that turn into two-high looks… and vice versa.

It’s a tough go for any offense right now, and given Goff’s history against Flores’ mastery, perhaps it’s a bit tougher.

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys get into how the Lions can set Goff up for better success with the precision and spacing of their passing game in an offense where everybody is an alpha dog, but there’s no one featured player.

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You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os,” featuring all of Week 16’s biggest NFL matchups (including Lions-Vikings of course), right here:

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You can also listen and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…

…and on Apple Podcasts.

Now, let’s review the previous Goff-Flores matchups, and how Goff might be able to finally bag his white whale.

Worst of the Week for Week 15: Pickens and Toney, Sean Payton’s meltdown, Ron Rivera’s folly

MIke Tomlin, Sean Payton, Kadarius Toney, George Pickens, invisible Panthers fans, and the Jets. It’s time for the NFL’s Worst of the Week!

Football is a wonderful, thrilling, inspiring game that can lift us to new heights in our lives.

But football is also a weird, inexplicable, at times downright stupid game that may force you to perform Keith Moon-level furniture destruction in your own living room.

So, as much as we at Touchdown Wire endeavor to write about what makes the game great, there are also times when it’s important to point out the dumb plays, boneheaded decisions, and officiating errors that make football all too human.

Folks, it’s time for the Worst of the Week for Week 15 of the 2023 NFL season.

The Xs and Os with Greg Cosell: Previewing Week 15’s biggest NFL matchups

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys get into Week 15’s most important NFL matchups.

It’s time for Week 15 of the 2023 NFL season, and Greg Cosell of NFL Films and ESPN’s NFL Matchup, and Doug Farrar of Touchdown Wire and the USA Today Sports Media Group, are here to get you ready for the most important games and interesting matchups:

Minnesota Vikings at Cincinnati Bengals — How Zac Taylor and his staff have made things easier for Jake Browning, and how Brian Flores’ defense can make life much more difficult.

Chicago Bears at Cleveland Browns — The trade acquisition and under-the-radar consultant who could be the keys to the Bears’ defensive improvement.

Dallas Cowboys at Buffalo Bills — Buffalo offensive coordinator Joe Brady has a great new wrinkle, but can the Bills’ defense hang with Dak Prescott and all his targets?

Baltimore Ravens at Jacksonville Jaguars — The Jags have been underperforming on offense and defense of late, which makes it a bad time to have to deal with the Ravens.

Philadelphia Eagles at Seattle Seahawks — The keys to Pete Carroll’s unhappiness with his defense, and why the Eagles had better get things together before they travel to the Emerald City.

You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os” right here:

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You can listen and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…

…and on Apple Podcasts.

Who made the better route adjustment: Tyreek Hill or Odell Beckham Jr.?

Odell Beckham Jr. and Tyreek Hill have been competing for the best in-play route adjustment in the NFL this season.

Tyreek Hill of the Miami Dolphins and Odell Beckham Jr. of the Baltimore Ravens are two of the NFL’s more preposterously athletic receivers, allowing them to correct issues in communication on the fly when it comes to routes, and where the ball is thrown. In Beckham’s case, we saw this early on in Baltimore’s Sunday game against the Los Angeles Rams.

With 5:27 left in the first quarter, Lamar Jackson threw a nasty in cut/fade to Beckham, and Beckham had cornerback Derion Kendrick beaten all the way. But he then had to adjust to the fact that he and Jackson weren’t on the same page regarding where the ball was supposed to go, and Beckham made an outstanding adjustment right in time for a 20-yard gain.

This put us in mind of Tyreek Hill’s 60-yard touchdown catch from Tua Tagovailoa against the Washington Commanders last Sunday. The Commanders employed the highly controversial (read: insane) strategy of playing a ton of man coverage against Hill with no help up top, and Hill had a predictably enormous game as a result. On the touchdown with 9:22 left in the first half, Washington was actually in Cover-3, but it didn’t matter. Hill got off the snap at full speed out of motion, barbecued cornerback Kendall Fuller, and then had quite the adventure as he had to calibrate his route to where the ball was going.

“It’s insane,” Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel said after the game of Hill’s catch. “Specifically for really fast guys. It’s something that Tyreek has always been very adept at but to, just think of it this way, in the heat of battle you see the ball and then you just turn away from it and try to find it again. That is very difficult. He makes it look super easy. But that ability, there’s few and far between that are able to make that play down the field wide open or not. Tua knows that and he knows that if he puts it far enough sometimes that Tyreek has done that several times in practice before.

“The fact that it was in stride makes it even more impressive of a catch because a lot of times when guys go blind to the ball, they’re able to make a play if it’s by stopping them and hitting them in the stomach. To go Willie Mays on it is pretty impressive.”

No argument here, and we’ll bet that Ravens head coach John Harbaugh will have something similar to say about Beckham’s adjustment.

The Xs and Os with Greg Cosell: Previewing Week 14’s biggest NFL matchups

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys preview Week 14’s most important NFL matchups.

It’s time for Week 14 of the 2023 NFL season, and Greg Cosell of NFL Films and ESPN’s NFL Matchup, and Doug Farrar of Touchdown Wire and the USA Today Sports Media Group, are here to get you ready for the most important games and interesting matchups:

Los Angeles Rams-Baltimore Ravens — The intricacies of Matthew Stafford’s 70-yard touchdown pass to Puka Nacua against the Cleveland Browns, and how the Ravens’ defense might give Stafford some intellectual headaches.

Seattle Seahawks-San Francisco 49ers — Can the Seahawks face up against a dominant 49ers team that took them completely out of their depth on Thanksgiving night? The battle between 49ers cornerback Charvarius Ward and Seahawks receiver D.K. Metcalf will be key.

Philadelphia Eagles-Dallas Cowboys — The Eagles are trying to recover from the 49ers demolishing them (it’s happening a lot to San Francisco’s opponents these days), and it’s time for Jalen Hurts to stop doing one thing that’s hurting his offense.

Green Bay Packers-New York Giants — Jordan Love is coming into his own as a franchise quarterback, and his ability to succeed against the blitz is a big part of that. How will Love fare against a Giants defense that blitzes a ton, and covers very well behind it?

You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os” right here:

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You can also listen and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…

…and on Apple Podcasts.

Anatomy of a Play: How Matthew Stafford’s vision led to Puka Nacua’s 70-yard touchdown

Matthew Stafford’s 70-yard touchdown pass to Puka Nacua against the Browns was a result of Stafford’s football genius, and Sean McVay’s belief.

The Los Angeles Rams, who went into their Week 10 bye with a 3-6 record, have won their last three games since then, and quite out of nowhere, are currently second in the NFC West, and are currently eighth in the NFC playoff race. It’s a new iteration of the offense orchestrated by head coach Sean McVay and personified by quarterback Matthew Stafford, and last Sunday, these Rams blew out the Cleveland Browns’ outstanding defense with 399 total yards in a 36-19 win. Stafford completed 22 of 37 passes for 379 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 110.1.

The most explosive play for the Rams in that game was Stafford’s 70-yard touchdown pass to receiver Puka Nacua with 4:08 left in the first quarter. As impressive as the play was (we’ll get to that in a moment), the interesting was how it came about because McVay and Stafford collaborated on a certain look they expected to see from Cleveland’s defense.

“That’s a check that he ended up making up where I’m saying, ‘Shoot, what the heck am I supposed to do? You know, you’re playing quarterback and you’re doing our job,'” McVay said of his quarterback. “But it just goes to show you what a special player he is to be able to say, ‘Hey if we get a certain look and I recognize it, how would this be to try to attack the back end of the coverage contour and what protection?’ And I’m sitting there saying, ‘That’s a pretty good idea. I should have thought of that earlier in the week.’ And he made it come to life. And then Puka being able to finish for a 70-yard touchdown was big early in the game. But Matthew’s a baller. He had another great game, and he’s going to continue to play really well for us.”

When Stafford was queried about the play, there was only so much he was willing to disclose.

“Can’t give away my secrets,” he said. “No, but that was something actually that we had talked about, Sean and I had talked about. I kind of wanted to try to get to something like that if I could feel that one coming and was able to bounce out back into the shotgun. Obviously, Puka did a great job of kind of late hands[ing] that thing, not letting the linebacker know the ball was coming and then finishing it off with the touchdown was huge, big momentum play. A team like that that’s holding teams to 100 and whatever it is, 15, 20 yards passing, anytime you can get 70 in one play is a huge one. It was great to get that one done.”

Here’s the play, and let’s get into how it may have popped open.

The Rams were in a 3×1 set with tight end Tyler Higbee to the right formation, Nacua in the slot, and Cooper Kupp wide. Nacua flew into his seam route off the snap, and caught the ball 21 yards downfield while linebacker Sione Takitaki tried to keep pace. Takitaki didn’t do a horrible job here, but Stafford made one his patented ridiculous Matthew Stafford throws, and that was that.

Now, I don’t know exactly what the check was here — what the look Stafford saw was — and I probably wouldn’t unless I talked to either McVay or Stafford with a bottle of truth serum handy. But there’s one thing to know about Jim Schwartz’s Browns defense — Schwartz likes to send defensive backs in blitzes from either side, and he did so on this play. Safety Juan Thornhill blitzed from the play side, and safety Grant Delpit did so from the other side. The Browns had inverted Cover-2 on the back end, with cornerbacks acting as the deep defenders.

Stafford saw something similar with 9:20 left in the first quarter. The 3×1 motion was to the other side after receiver Tutu Atwell motioned to it, but you’ll notice that Delpit and cornerback Martin Emerson were blitzing from each side. Notice also that with this defensive look, linebacker Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah was responsible for extending out as the flat defender to the offensive right side. Stafford still got the ball to Nacua on that side.

My guess is that when Stafford saw a defensive back in a blitz look again, he took note and recognized that the underneath defender to that side — whoever was playing linebacker depth — would have to take the flat right away. On the 70-yard pass, the responsibilities changed because it was a 3×1 to the right side. Now, Emerson was responsible for the flat, and Takitaki had to take Nacua wherever he went. Which was exactly what happened, with cornerback Kahlef Hailassie giving help up top. And that gave Nacua the room for his release.

It’s always nice when your quarterback has a rocket arm; it’s even better when he’s also a rocket scientist. Stafford’s vision of what Cleveland’s defense would do, and McVay’s trust in Stafford’s football intelligence, set up the most explosive play of the day for the resurging Rams.

Worst of the Week: Clete Blakeman, Jamal Adams, Ron Rivera, Broncos in the red zone

Jamal Adams, Ron Rivera, Broncos in the red zone, Joe Flacco’s last two plays, and more bad officiating! It’s the NFL’s Worst of the Week!

Football is a wonderful, thrilling, inspiring game that can lift us to new heights in our lives.

But football is also a weird, inexplicable, at times downright stupid game that may force you to perform Keith Moon-level furniture destruction in your own living room.

So, as much as we at Touchdown Wire endeavor to write about what makes the game great, there are also times when it’s important to point out the dumb plays, boneheaded decisions, and officiating errors that make football all too human.

Folks, it’s time for the Worst of the Week for Week 13 of the 2023 NFL season.

Puka Nacua goes over 1,000-yard mark on 70-yard TD reception

Puka Nacua is over 1,000 yards as a rookie for the Rams

Puka Nacua is one of the most special rookie stories in NFL 2023.

The Rams’ wide receiver went over the 1,000-yard mark on Sunday and he did it in style against the Cleveland Browns.

Nacua was on the receiving end of a Matthew Stafford pass and the play went for 70 yards and a score.

LeBron James, who was at the game, tweeted his congratulations.

Rams sweep Seahawks as Jason Myers misses from 55

The Rams thwarted a last-gasp drive by the Seahawks to earn a series sweep

A great story fell apart on the last play of the game as Jason Myers missed a 55-yard field goal attempt that would have given the Seahawks victory over the Rams.

Instead, LA wound up with a season sweep, 17-16, ruining an injured Geno Smith leading drive that set up the field-goal attempt.

Smith had been knocked out of the game with an injury to his throwing elbow after taking a massive hit.

Drew Lock came on and the Seattle offense stalled.

The Rams overcame a 13-0 deficit and scored 10 unanswered points in the fourth quarter.

The difference in the game was a Lucas Havrisik field goal from 22 yards that capped a 14-play, 75-yard drive with 1:31 left.

Myers had hit 15 field goals in a row before the miss from long range.

2024 NFL Mock Draft: Bears rule the roost with two top-five picks

In this two-round 2024 NFL mock draft, the Chicago Bears continue with Justin Fields as their quarterback, and start to build around him with the first and fifth picks.

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The Chicago Bears’ 16-13 win over the Carolina Panthers on Thursday night was a double victory for the Monsters of the Midway. Not only did they “up” their record to 3-7 on the season, but the first-round Panthers pick, owned by the Bears as part of the trade to select Bryce Young with the first pick in the 2023 NFL draft, is now the first overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft, because the Panthers are 1-8.

That puts forth an interesting question for the Bears, and whoever’s in charge of their personnel in 2024, whether it’s current general manager Ryan Poles, or somebody else: Are they happy enough with the development of quarterback Justin Fields (when he’s healthy) to avoid taking one of the two rock star quarterbacks — USC’s Caleb Williams of North Carolina’s Drake Maye — with that first pick? Chicago also has its own fifth overall pick as a result of its own dismal record, so it’s either hold onto Fields and build around him, or punt to a new guy.

In this mock draft, the Bears do show faith in Fields, giving him a possibly “generational” receiver in Ohio State’s Marvin Harrison Jr. with the first pick, and a potential franchise edge-rusher in UCLA’s Laiatu Latu.

For the rest of the picks in this two-round mock, read below.