Commanders release Carson Wentz

Carson Wentz is out in Washington after one season

Carson Wentz was one and done in Indianapolis before being shipped to Washington.

The former second-overall pick in the NFL draft, by the Philadelphia Eagles, is now one and done with the Washington Commanders.

Washington released Wentz on  Monday.

He started seven games as a Commander, completing 62.3% of his passes for 1,755 yards with 9 picks.

Wentz was bumped in favor of Taylor Heinicke.

The Commanders finished their season last in the NFC East and wound up starting rookie Sam Howell in the final game of the season.

Wentz played 5 seasons in Philly and is 46-45-1 overall as a starter with 22,129 passing yards, 151 touchdowns, and 66 interceptions.

Daniel Snyder thwarts Amazon’s Jeff Bezos from bidding for Commanders

It doesn’t sound like Daniel Snyder has any interest in selling the Commanders to Jeff Bezos

It was never going to be easy to pry the Washington Commanders from Daniel Snyder.

According to the New York Post, the sales process hasn’t reached the heights the team owner wants, and one potential bidder isn’t welcome.

Late Friday, the paper reported Snyder has prevented Amazon owner Jeff Bezos from entering the bidding process for the football team.

Seems there are plenty of hard feelings from Snyder over the journalistic work Bezos’ Washington Post has done in unearthing alleged sexual harassment in the NFL team’s organization.

An unidentified bidder came in with an offer of around $5.5 billion by this week’s deadline, which was similar to the amount offered by 76ers and Devils owner Josh Harris, New York Post sources close to the situation said.

A decision on whether Snyder will finally walk away from the team he rooted for as a child is expected by the annual owners’ meeting that begins March 26.

 

Washington vs UCLA Prediction, College Basketball Game Preview Odds TV

Washington vs UCLA preview, prediction, and breakdown for the college basketball game on Thursday, February 2

Washington vs UCLA prediction, game preview, odds, how to watch. Thursday, February 2


Washington vs UCLA How To Watch

Date: Thursday, February 2
Game Time: 9:00 ET
Venue: Pauley Pavillion, Los Angeles, CA
How To Watch: FS1
Record: Washington (13-10), UCLA (17-4)
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Washington vs UCLA Game Preview

Why Washington Will Win

The Huskies can play some defense.

They’re great at coming up with blocked shots, they’re strong at guarding the three, and when they keep teams to under 45% from the field, they win.

They’re 13-2 when the defense can keep teams under 45%, and 0-8 when allowing offenses to shoot that or better.

This is a good shooting UCLA team that gets a whole lot of points on the move, but there isn’t much happening on the outside. Getting into the interior plays into the Washington defensive style, and …

Why UCLA Will Win

Yeah, all that is great and all, but UCLA won at Washington 74-49 a month ago.

The Bruins dominated by holding their own on the boards against the good rebounding Huskies. There were plenty of chances – the home side couldn’t hit anything from three.

Yes, the offense is good, but it’s the defense that wins games. It’s great at forcing mistakes, it doesn’t give teams easy points on giveaways, and …

What’s Going To Happen

UCLA is struggling.

It couldn’t get the O going against Arizona, and the defense buckled against the USC threes. Now it’s on a two-game losing streak, but that’s about to change with the defense.

11-0 at home, UCLA hasn’t allowed 70 points in Pauley and that’s not about to change. The team will get its groove back after the last two losses.

Washington vs UCLA Prediction, Line

UCLA 70, Washington 58
Line: UCLA -17.5, o/u: 136
ATS Confidence out of 5: 2.5
Must See Ranking: 2.5
CFN Fearless Predictions

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Legendary NFL executive Bobby Beathard dies at 86

Pro Football Hall of Fame executive Bobby Beathard has died at 86

Bobby Beathard died Monday at the age of 86 after suffering from Alzheimer’s for recent years.

Beathard spent 11 seasons as Washington’s general manager from 1978-88 before joining the Bolts. Under his tenure, Washington captured a pair of Super Bowl titles (XVII, XXII).

Per Richmond.com:

Beathard was in Washington from 1978 to 1988, including the hiring of Gibbs, as well as the signing of some of the franchise’s best-known players, names like Dexter Manley, Art Monk, and Darrell Green, as well as the bulk of the “Hogs” offensive line.

He also worked for the Chargers from 1990 to 2000, including the franchise’s lone Super Bowl appearance. The Bolts went 11-5 and won the AFC West in 1994 before pulling off a pair of thrilling playoff wins to reach Super Bowl XXIX.

Dean Spanos, the Chargers Owner/Chairman of the Board, released the following statement.

“Bobby was one of the best judges of football talent in NFL history. For most, that alone would be enough. For Bobby Beathard, it doesn’t nearly do the man justice.

“Bobby was who we all aspire to be – a friendly, caring, giving, thoughtful human being who brought people from all walks of life together. He was the best GM in football; but he was also the guy sitting on his surfboard in the ocean that you caught waves with, jogged trails alongside and chatted up in the check-out line of the local market.

“He was the guy you felt like you’d known your entire life, even if it wasn’t but for five minutes at the gas station. He was just a regular guy who happened to be anything but. Bobby was, in fact, exceptional.

“He was one-of-a-kind. And he will be incredibly missed. On behalf of my family and the Chargers organization, we want to extend our deepest condolences to his wife, Christine, and the entire Beathard family on the loss of one of the best to ever do it, be it football or life.”

 

Washington Football Schedule 2023: Analysis, Breakdown, 3 Things To Know

Washington football schedule 2023. Analysis, breakdown, 3 things to know

Washington football schedule 2023: Who do the Huskies miss on the Pac-12 schedule and what are 3 things to know?


Washington Football Schedule 2023: 3 Things To Know

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Aug 26 OPEN DATE

Sept 2 Boise State

Sept 9 Tulsa

Sept 16 at Michigan State

Sept 23 Cal

Sept 30 at Arizona

Oct 7 OPEN DATE

Oct 14 Oregon

Oct 21 Arizona State

Oct 28 at Stanford

Nov 4 at USC

Nov 11 Utah

Nov 18 at Oregon State

Nov 25 Washington State

2023 College Football Rankings 1-133: First Look

Washington Football Schedule What To Know: Who do the Huskies miss from the Pac-12 slate?

The Huskies got to enjoy missing USC and Utah – yeah, that helped the 10-2 regular season record – but now they’re back on.

Washington lost to UCLA, but now that’s not a worry. The 54-7 win over Colorado was fun, but that’s not happening this year. The Bruins and Buffaloes are off the slate, but that’s not a bad deal overall – the Huskies still get to face everyone from the former Pac-12 North, including Cal and Stanford. But …

Washington Football Schedule What Really Matters

The USC game is in Los Angeles, and that’s followed up by the date with Utah.

So last year’s two best Pac-12 teams have to be dealt with in back-to-back weeks in the second half of the season. Making this even worse is that they’re part of a run of three road games in four weeks, and going to Oregon State won’t be a picnic.

On the plus side overall, there are just our Pac-12 road games. Going to Arizona and Stanford isn’t that bad, and getting the Utes, Oregon, and Washington State in Seattle is terrific.

Washington Football Schedule What To Know: What does it all really mean?

There’s no real fluff to use as a true tune-up.

Yeah, Tulsa is close, but that’s an FBS team – there aren’t any Central Creampuff Tech’s to use as a paycheck scrimmage.

Starting with Boise State isn’t easy, and going to Michigan State should be much more difficult than the home test last year. Overall, though, it’s an okay schedule with just enough issues to keep Washington from doing better than last year’s two-loss run.

Even so, this is still a dangerous team that could put up a monster record if it wins two of three against Oregon, USC, and Utah.

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2023 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

Effective salary cap space for all 32 NFL teams in the 2023 league year

How much is your favorite team over or under the 2023 salary cap of $224.8 million?

When the NFL announces the salary cap for the upcoming league year, which it did on Monday, some teams are very excited by the prospect of that number.

For other teams, the accounting/reckoning is soon coming due.

As Tom Pelissero of the NFL Network reported, the 2023 salary cap will be $224.8 million, an all-time high, and quite a bump from 2022’s $208.2 million. You would think that this would have every NFL team in high cotton from a player payroll perspective, but as our friends at OverTheCap.com point out, there are just 15 teams — just under half the league — under that number in Effective Salary Cap Space (the cap number against the actual payroll, plus what it will take to sign at least 51 players and the rookie class) as we stand today.

Of course, all kinds of things are coming for the team in need of offsets. Players will be released, contracts will be restructured, and cans will be kicked down the road so that all teams can be in compliance with the cap when the new league year begins.

So, there’s a lot that’s going to happen, but as it stands now, here’s how all 32 NFL teams stand on either side of 2023’s $224.8 million salary cap, from the most under the cap to the most over. Teams over the cap have their totals represented in parentheses as negatives.

(All salary cap numbers courtesy of OverTheCap.com).

NFL announces 2023 regular-season opponents for all teams

The NFL has announced 2023 regular-season opponents for all teams. Here’s a breakdown for each of the league’s 32 teams.

On Monday, the NFL announced opponents for all 32 teams in the 2023 schedule. Per the league, the formula for the schedule is as follows:

  • Home and away against its three division opponents (six games).
  • The four teams from another division within its conference on a rotating, three-year cycle (four games).
  • The four teams from a division in the other conference on a rotating, four-year cycle (four games).
  • Two intraconference games based on the prior year’s standings (two games). These games match a first-place team against the first-place teams in the two same-conference divisions the team is not scheduled to play that season. The second-place, third-place and fourth-place teams in a conference are matched in the same way each year.

One interconference game based on the prior year’s standings on a rotating four-year cycle (one game). These games match a first-place team from one division against a first-place team in an opposite-conference division that the team is not scheduled to play that season. The second-place, third-place and fourth-place teams in each division are matched in the same way each year. The home conference for this game will rotate each season, with the AFC teams hosting the game in 2023.

The scheduling formula implemented in 2002 with realignment guarantees that all teams play each other on a regular, rotating basis.

The 2023 schedule, with playing dates and times, will be announced in the spring.

Dak Prescott absolutely insisted on throwing pick-six vs. Commanders

Dak Prescott gave Kendall Fuller one chance at a pick-six. Fuller didn’t respond, so Prescott did it again. This is a problem.

Coming into Sunday’s game with the Washington Commanders, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott was tied with Kirk Cousins of the Minnesota Vikings and Derek Carr of the Las Vegas Raiders for the NFL’s most interceptions with 14. Cousins didn’t throw any picks in Minnesota’s Week 18 win over the Chicago Bears, and Carr isn’t even with the Raiders after he was benched two weeks ago, so Prescott was going for the lead in this unfortunate category.

It didn’t take long for Prescott to do what he’s done all too often lately — throw a back-breaking interception. He did so to cornerback Kendall Fuller with 12:38 left in the second quarter, and Fuller topped it off by returning the interception 29 yards for a touchdown that put the Commanders up, 13-0.

The real indignity of this play is that on the previous play, Fuller would have had another pick-six to the same side had he not stumbled on the field, losing any chance of catching the ball.

This was also Prescott’s third pick-six of the season, breaking a tie for first he held with several quarterbacks. In a recent tape study, I hypothesized that Prescott’s recent penchant for picks could end the Cowboys’ Super Bowl hopes before they really get going, and this would once again appear to be the case.

Why is Dak Prescott throwing so many interceptions?

NFL postseason scenarios: Every possible permutation for Week 18

There’s a lot on the line as the NFL’s regular season comes to a close. Here is every possible playoff permutation for Week 18.

The final week of any NFL regular season leaves us with all kinds of postseason possibilities to be decided, and never more so than in the 2022 regular season. Due to the cancellation of last Monday’s game between the Buffalo Bills and the Cincinnati Bengals because of Damar Hamlin’s cardiac arrest on the field, the NFL had to create multiple stipulations in order to try and maintain competitive balance in a league that had two teams with one fewer game in the books.

We’ll get into all that in the scenarios below. Suffice to say, there are a bunch of teams with everything on the line in Week 18. Week 18 started Saturday, with the Kansas City Chiefs clinching the AFC’s one-seed, and the Jacksonville Jaguars clinching the AFC South, and the AFC’s four-seed.

Things are less complicated in the NFC. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have clinched the four-seed, and they’ll do so even if they go into the playoffs with a losing record. The New York Giants have already clinched the six-seed no matter what happens in their game with the Philadelphia Eagles… but as you’ll see, the Eagles can move anywhere from the one-seed to the five-seed based on what they, and several other NFC teams, do on Sunday. By the time we get to who can win the NFC’s two-seed, your head may be ready to explode.

In order to provide as much clarity as possible, here is every possible playoff scenario in both conferences for all non-eliminated teams.

No, Ron Rivera didn’t know that the Commanders could be eliminated Sunday

Ron Rivera wasn’t being sarcastic when he seemed not to know the Commanders could be eliminated from the playoffs. Here’s the proof.

It was perhaps the worst “You had one job” moment for any NFL coach in the 2022 season. After the Washington Commanders lost, 24-10, to the Cleveland Browns on Sunday, they needed the Green Bay Packers to lose to the Minnesota Vikings if they wanted any hope of making the playoffs. If the Packers won (which they did decisively, 41-17), the Commanders would be out.

That apparently came as a surprise to head coach Ron Rivera, who seemed to express legitimate surprise when he was informed by Washington D.C. radio host Grant Paulsen. This was in the context of who Rivera would start at quarterback in Week 18 — Carson Wentz, who threw three interceptions and nearly four in the game, the recently benched Taylor Heinicke, or rookie Sam Howell.

People wanted to give Rivera the benefit of the doubt, because he’s a justifiably highly-regarded veteran coach. Maybe he was being sarcastic? Maybe he was just overwhelmed in the moment after a tough loss? Maybe he just had a temporary brain cramp? Hey, it happens to all of us.

Sadly, there’s another moment in the same postgame press conference which proves that Rivera had no clue.

At 1:05 into this video, Rivera was asked about the importance of controlling your own destiny as it pertained to postseason possibilities.

“Now, we’ve got to count on somebody else,” he said. “That’s not the position we want to be in. What we want to do is to take care of our business. You want to win football games when you have a chance to, and when they’re important. And we didn’t do that.”

The reporter asked Rivera a follow-up question — what was his message to the team?

“Well, it’s exactly that. We now have to count on somebody. If we don’t win on Sunday next week, then it’s over, obviously, but if we win, we’ve got to hope somebody else wins. Or loses, excuse me.”

In this context, Rivera’s reaction to the Paulsen question at 4:05 in this video becomes more clear. Rivera wasn’t being sarcastic — he was surprised that based on his understanding, his team could actually be eliminated from the postseason in Week 17, as opposed to Week 18.

How this affected his decision to keep Wentz in the game when Wentz clearly didn’t have it, as opposed to the more desperate situation the team was in? That’s something only Rivera knows, but a coach who goes into a game with a misunderstanding of his own team’s playoff possibilities can make all kinds of situation errors.

Whether this was the power of positive thinking or not, a coach has to understand all the scenarios.

As previously said, Ron Rivera is a justifiably respected head coach and leader. The Commanders had gone on a 6-3-1 run before the Browns gave to even get into playoff contention after a 1-4 start to the season, and that’s just as much on Rivera as the bad stuff is. This, though, is the kind of mistake that’s tough to live down, because of the possibility that your in-game strategy might be completely different if you’re aware of what’s actually going on.