NFL reveals Week 8 announcer schedule

As we head into the eighth week of the NFL season, the feature attraction is the undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers against the Baltimore Ravens. That’s a great AFC North matchup. For the coverage map, click here. As for who is on the calls around the …

As we head into the eighth week of the NFL season, the feature attraction is the undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers against the Baltimore Ravens. That’s a great AFC North matchup.

For the coverage map, click here.

As for who is on the calls around the league:

Thursday

Atlanta at Carolina, FOX|NFL|Amazon 8:20 p.m.
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Erin Andrews & Kristina Pink

Sunday

Pittsburgh at Baltimore, CBS 1 p.m.
Jim Nantz, Tony Romo & Tracy Wolfson

New England at Buffalo, CBS 1 p.m.
Ian Eagle, Charles Davis & Evan Washburn

Tennessee at Cincinnati, CBS 1 p.m.
Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta

Las Vegas at Cleveland, FOX 1 p.m.
Kevin Kugler, Chris Spielman & Laura Okmin

Indianapolis at Detroit, CBS 1 p.m.
Andrew Catalon, James Lofton & Michael Grady

Minnesota at Green Bay, FOX 1 p.m.
Kevin Burkhardt, Daryl Johnston & Pam Oliver

NY Jets at Kansas City, CBS 1 p.m.
Kevin Harlan, Trent Green & Melanie Collins

LA Rams at Miami, FOX 1 p.m.

Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma & Shannon Spake

LA Chargers at Denver, CBS 4:05 p.m.
Greg Gumbel, Rich Gannon & Jay Feely

New Orleans at Chicago, FOX 4:25 p.m.
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman & Erin Andrews

San Francisco at Seattle, FOX 4:25 p.m.
Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth & Lindsay Czarniak

Dallas at Philadelphia, NBC 8:20 p.m.
Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth & Michele Tafoya

Monday

Tampa Bay at NY Giants, ESPN 8:15 p.m.
Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick & Lisa Salters

NFL Week 7: How to survive and advance in your knockout pool

NFL Week 7: How to survive and advance in your knockout pool

What is 5-18-1? The NFC East after 6 weeks, of course

The NFC East is a shocking and embarrassing 5-18-1.

This is beyond weak. It is beyond the NFC Least. It is awful bordering on shameful.

After the Arizona Cardinals blasted the Dallas Cowboys in Texas on “Monday Night Football,” the worst division in the NFL, possibly in league history, is 5-18-1.

Here are the standings:

Dallas Cowboys 2-4

Philadelphia Eagles 1-4-1

New York Giants 1-5

Washington Football Team 1-5

One of these teams is going to win the division and earn a playoff spot. The division collectively has been outscored by 184 points in six weeks.

There are six individual teams that have as many victories as the entire NFC East.

Remember, the Washington victory came against Philadelphia and the Giants’ victory came over the WFT, 20-19, in Week — Weak? — 6.

The division will see at least two wins — barring ties — in Week 7. The Eagles play host to Big Blue on Thursday. The 1-4-1 Eagles will be without running back Miles Sanders and TE Zach Ertz, both injured.

Then, on Sunday, the rivalry that has delivered so many incredible games will produce what will likely be a forgettable one as Dallas goes to Washington.

 

NFL Week 6: How to survive and advance in your knockout pool

NFL Week 6: How to survive and advance in your knockout pool

NFL Week 6 announce assignments revealed

What announcers have drawn what assignments for Week 6 of the NFL season?

The NFL announcer schedule for Week 6 is out and about. Time to look at who will be wear and what games they will be calling.

Cleveland Browns (4-1) at Pittsburgh Steelers (4-0): Jim Nantz, Tony Romo

Baltimore Ravens (4-1) at Philadelphia Eagles (1-3-1): Ian Eagle, Charles Davis

Denver Broncos (1-3) at New England Patriots (2-2): Kevin Harlan, Trent Green

Houston Texans (1-4) at Tennessee Titans (4-0): Greg Gumbel, Rich Gannon

New York Jets (0-5) at Miami Dolphins (2-3): Andrew Catalon, James Lofton

Chicago Bears (4-1) at Carolina Panthers (3-2): Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma

Washington Football Team (1-4) at New York Giants (0-5): Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth

Cincinnati Bengals (1-3-1) at Indianapolis Colts (3-2): Kevin Kugler, Chris Spielman

Atlanta Falcons (0-5) at Minnesota Vikings (1-4): Brandon Gaudin, Daryl Johnston

Detroit Lions (1-3) at Jacksonville Jaguars (1-4) : Chris Myers, Brock Huard, Greg Jennings

Green Bay Packers (4-0) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Joe Buck, Troy Aikman

Los Angeles Rams (4-1) at San Francisco 49ers (2-3): Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth

Kansas City Chiefs (4-1) at Buffalo Bills (4-1): Buck, Aikman

Arizona Cardinals (3-2) at Dallas Cowboys (2-3): Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick

For the complete TV coverage map of all the games in Week 6, click here

NFL reveals Week 5 announcer schedule

The NFL Week 5 announce schedule is out and time to check out who is where.

And the schedule for Week 5 of the NFL season … for the announcers, of course.

Thursday

Tampa Bay at Chicago: FOX|NFL 8:20 p.m. – Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Erin Andrews & Kristina Pink

Sunday

Carolina at Atlanta: FOX 1 p.m. – Chris Myers, Brock Huard & Jen Hale

Cincinnati at Baltimore: CBS 1 p.m. – Greg Gumbel, Rich Gannon & Amanda Balionis

Jacksonville at Houston: CBS 1 p.m. – Andrew Catalon, James Lofton & Sherree Burruss

Las Vegas at Kansas City: CBS 1 p.m. – Ian Eagle, Charles Davis & Evan Washburn
Arizona at NY Jets: FOX 1 p.m. – Kevin Kugler, Chris Spielman & Laura Okmin

Philadelphia at Pittsburgh: FOX 1 p.m. – Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma & Shannon Spake
Buffalo at Tennessee: CBS 1 p.m. – Tom McCarthy, Jay Feely

LA Rams at Washington: FOX 1 p.m. – Brandon Gaudin, Daryl Johnston & Pam Oliver

Miami at San Francisco: FOX 4:05 p.m. – Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth & Lindsay Czarniak

Indianapolis at Cleveland: CBS 4:25 p.m. – Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta

NY Giants at Dallas: CBS 4:25 p.m. – Jim Nantz, Tony Romo & Tracy Wolfson
Denver at New England: CBS 4:25 p.m. – Kevin Harlan, Trent Green & Melanie Collins

Minnesota at Seattle: NBC 8:20 p.m. – Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth & Michelle Tafoya

Monday

LA Chargers at New Orleans: ESPN 8:15 p.m. – Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick & Lisa Salters

NFL reveals Week 4 announcer schedules

What announce teams got the best assignments for Week 4?

The end of the first quarter is upon us. Announce teams have settled in after not having preseason work, either. Who will be on the call for what games you will watch this weekend (and Monday)?

Sunday

Arizona at Carolina, FOX 1 p.m. – Kevin Kugler, Chris Spielman & Laura Okmin

Indianapolis at Chicago, CBS 1 p.m. – Greg Gumbel, Rich Gannon & Amanda Balionis

Jacksonville at Cincinnati, CBS 1 p.m. – Tom McCarthy, Jay Feely

Cleveland at Dallas, FOX 1 p.m. – Kevin Burkhardt, Daryl Johnston & Pam Oliver

New Orleans at Detroit, FOX 1 p.m. – Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma & Shannon Spake

Minnesota at Houston, FOX 1 p.m. – Chris Myers, Brock Huard, Greg Jennings & Jen Hale

Seattle at Miami, FOX 1 p.m. – Dick Stockton, Brady Quinn & Sara Walsh

LA Chargers at Tampa Bay, CBS 1 p.m. – Ian Eagle, Charles Davis & Evan Washburn

Baltimore at Washington, CBS 1 p.m. – Andrew Catalon, James Lofton & AJ Ross

NY Giants at LA Rams, FOX 4:05 p.m. – Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth & Lindsay Czarniak

New England at Kansas City, CBS 4:25 p.m. – Jim Nantz, Tony Romo & Tracy Wolfson

Buffalo at Las Vegas, CBS 4:25 p.m. – Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta

Philadelphia at San Francisco, NBC 8:20 p.m. – Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth & Michelle Tafoya

Monday

Atlanta at Green Bay, ESPN 8:15 p.m. – Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick & Lisa Salters

Leonard Fournette will need to do more if he wants to ‘matter’ in the NFL

If now-free agent running back Leonard Fournette is to succeed in the NFL, he’ll have to expand his skill set in the right system.

When people say that “running backs don’t matter,” the point is not, of course, that teams can win without running backs or running games altogether. The Baltimore Ravens, San Francisco 49ers, and Seattle Seahwaks, with their run-led offenses and 41 combined wins in the 2019 season could tell you that. The actual point of the “running backs don’t matter” meme has more to do with the thought that, with exceedingly rare exceptions, the skill set required to excel at the position is common enough, and scheme-dependent enough, to render running backs ill-advised players when it comes to high draft picks and lucrative contract extensions.

In 2017, the Jacksonville Jaguars ignored this philosophy and selected LSU running back Leonard Fournette with the fourth overall pick. In doing so, the team held fast with the idea of Blake Bortles at quarterback, and banked on Fournette becoming the epicenter of an offense that would lead with old-school power, and remain mistake-proof enough to let the Jaguars’ top-flight defense be the real story. And with that commitment to Bortles, the very definition of a replacement-level player, Jacksonville made a quarterback-level commitment to the fungible player, and revealed a remarkable misunderstanding of the importance of the quarterback position in the modern NFL. The Jaguars left Patrick Mahomes and Deshaun Watson on the board because they didn’t want to be wrong about Bortles, and they’ve paid the price for that ever since they came within a few plays of beating the Patriots in the 2017 AFC Championship game.

With the Monday news that the Jaguars released Fournette, the 2017 draft pick seems even more erroneous in retrospect. Because Fournette never lived up to his billing as a power back who could define an offense. Among running backs with at least 300 total attempts from 2017 through 2019, Fournette ranks fifth with 666 attempts, seventh with 2,631 yards, tied for 10th with 17 rushing touchdown, and 33rd in the NFL with a ghastly 3.95 yards per attempt. Green Bay’s Aaron Jones, who the Packers took in the fifth round of the 2017 draft, leads the NFL over that period of time with 5.02 yards per carry, and Jones’ 2019 total of 16 rushing touchdowns is one less than Fournette’s career total.

But wait. as they say, there’s more!

For an alleged power back, Fournette doesn’t do as much as you’d expect to create additional yards in power situations. Per Pro Football Focus, he ranked fifth in the NFL last season with 886 yards after contact, but that played out to just 3.34 yards after contact per carry, which ranked 11th. And his 42 missed tackles on rushing attempts was far below the league-leading 69 put up by Josh Jacobs of the Raiders. Fournette is not a predominant factor in the passing game, he’s not a top-flight blocker, and it’s going to be hard for him to rise above the idea that he’s an 1980s running back in the new millennium. Guys like this aren’t the foundation of their offenses — they’re rotational entities at best.

And even given the proposition that Fournette would be better-served in a rotation, his success will be far from automatic. Fournette is a running back who generally needs open space to make things happen — he’s not going to work his way out of difficult situations on a consistent enough basis for that to be a hallmark of his style.

Let’s go to the tape.

NFL Shop alternate camouflage helmets are selling fast

The NFL is selling team helmets with a camouflage design.

Check out some of the cool Camo Alternate helmets the NFL popped out Wednesday.

The video shows how the helmets come together — rapidly — and some of them have really cool looks.

If you like them enough to buy one, click here. It will set you back anywhere from $54.99-$429.99 per helmet. And they are selling fast, per the site.

Report: Washington NFL team’s recent executive hires questioned

The Washington NFL team’s recent hires are being questioned with regard to the NFL’s Rooney Rule.

The splashy, recent hires by the Washington NFL football team and its owner Daniel Snyder are being questioned by the Fritz Pollard Alliance, which assists the NFL in enforcing compliance of the Rooney Rule,  ESPN’s The Undefeated reported Wednesday

Terry Batemen was named executive vice president and chief marketing officer Monday. This is the third go-round with the team for Bateman, who was the president of Snyder Communications marketing services from 1994-97.

The franchise followed that Tuesday by hiring Julie Donaldson as senior vice president of media. According to the team’s news release, Donaldson “will be the first female to be a regular on-air member of an NFL radio broadcast booth.”

The question is whether the team followed the procedures outlined in the league’s Rooney Rule …

Per The Undefeated:

… approved by owners May 19, clubs and the league office are required to interview “minorities and/or female applicants” for positions such as team president and “senior executives in communications, finance, human resources, legal, football operations, sales, marketing, sponsorship, information technology and security positions.” Moreover, there must be a credible process in which owners, or those they empower to make hires, interview multiple candidates and deliberate before picking one.

In a text message to The Undefeated,  the Fritz Pollard Alliance’s top decision-maker, Rod Graves,wrote, “The Fritz Pollard Alliance has sent inquiries to the NFL and to the Washington Football Team regarding the hiring process for Terry Bateman and Julie Donaldson.”

The article states there are questions whether Washington conducted thorough hiring processes as required by the Rooney Rule, two NFL club executives told The Undefeated.

The team is in crisis mode as its corporate sponsors are among those that forced it to undergo a “thorough review,” which led to the decision to change its nickname from what is considered a racist slur toward Native Americans.

That was followed by a Washington Post report detailing the awful corporate culture, where 15 women who formerly worked with the organization detailed sexual harassment. within it.