Pac-12 Predictions, Schedule, Game Previews, Lines, TV: Week 7

Pac-12 schedule and previews for the Week 7 games, highlighted by USC at Utah, Cal at Colorado, Arizona at Washington

Pac-12 schedule and previews for all of the Week 7 games of the 2022 season, highlighted by USC at Utah, Cal at Colorado, Arizona at Washington, and Washington State at Oregon State 


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Click on each game for the preview and prediction

Results So Far
Straight Up 41-10, ATS 27-24, o/u 24-27

Saturday, October 15

Cal at Colorado

2:00 Pac-12 Network
Line: Cal -14.5, o/u: 48.5

Arizona at Washington

5:30 Pac-12 Network
Line: Washington -14.5, o/u: 73

Stanford at Notre Dame

7:30 NBC/Peacock
Line: Notre Dame -17, o/u: 53

USC at Utah

8:00 FOX
Line: Utah -3.5, o/u: 65

Washington State at Oregon State

9:00 Pac-12 Network
Line: Oregon State -3.5, o/u: 53

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CFN 1-131 Rankings | Rankings by Conference
Bowl Projections | Week 6 Scoreboard
What 12-Team Playoff Would Look Like
Top 10 Hot Seat Coach Rankings

Carson Wentz delivers crushing block on Bears’ Roquan Smith

Carson Wentz delivered a stiff block on Roquan Smith of the Bears

Carson Wentz had a bum hand and a bad ankle.

The ankle of the Washington Commanders quarterback was actually taped up during the game with the Bears on Thursday at Soldier Field.

The quarterback didn’t care. When he had a chance to make a block to spring Brian Robinson Jr. on a run after a turnover in the fourth quarter, Wentz delivered.

Check it out as the 6-foot-5, 237-pound Wentz delivers a solid blow to Bears LB Roquan Smith, who is 6-foot-1 and 232 pounds.

Brian Robinson Jr. scores TD in return after being shot in August

Brian Robinson Jr. with a feel-good TD for the Commanders

A good story in an otherwise bad game.

In the fourth quarter, the Bears’ Velus Jones Jr. muffed a punt and Washington recovered at the 6.

Two running plays later and Brian Robinson Jr. was in the end zone for the Commanders.

Robinson, who played college ball at Alabama was the Commander who was shot in August during an attempted carjacking.

He has worked his way back to be able to play and on Thursday not only took the field but scored a TD that put Washington up 12-7.

The 2-point conversion failed.

Justin Fields pass picked by Jonathan Allen after deflecting off lineman’s helmet

A deflected pass became a Washington interception by Jonathan Allen

The Chicago Bears appeared to be on their way to a score in the first quarter of the game with the Washington Commanders on Thursday Night Football.

Justin Fields had the team on the move at the 5-yard line of Washington and attempted a pass.

Unfortunately for the Bears’ struggling second-year quarterback it deflected off Efe Obada’s helmet and floated into the air.

When it came down it was in the arms of Washington defensive lineman Jonathan Allen and the Commanders had forced their second turnover of the season,

For those of you counting quarters, there was no touchdown in the first 15 minutes. That makes five quarters and overtime without a TD if you add in the Colts-Broncos last week.

Al Michaels and Kirk Herbstreit on the Amazon Prime broadcast were joking about no touchdowns. Seriously.

Patriots, Saints, Steelers, Lions, Dolphins best fits for Commanders CB William Jackson III

Washington Commanders cornerback William Jackson III wants out of town. Which teams would give Jackson the best opportunity to be the player he should be?

When the then-Washington Football Team signed former Cincinnati Bengals cornerback William Jackson III to a three-year, $42 million deal with $26 million guaranteed, I gave the deal an A+ grade, opined that Jackson was one of the best press cornerbacks in the NFL, and also opined that this might mean that Washington might be playing more press coverage from then on.

For multiple reasons, Jackson’s tenure in the nation’s capital has been an unmitigated disaster. Let’s check off the fact that Jack Del Rio is the Commanders’ defensive coordinator, because we’ve already gone over all the coverage busts seemingly inherent in the defense Del Rio is running.

Can the Washington Commanders fix their godawful defense?

Answer: No. The Commanders currently rank 29th in pass defense DVOA, and they’ve been terrible against the pass at all levels. And Jackson, who used to be a dead-red lockdown cornerback, has suffered along with the rest. This season, per Pro Football Focus, he’s allowed 16 catches on 19 targets for 219 yards, 60 yards after the catch, two touchdowns, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 149.8.

Now, with head coach Ron Rivera pulling Jackson against the Titans in Week 4, and Jackson not even making the trip to Chicago to face the Bears on Thursday night, Jackson wants out.

Per Ian Rapoport, Mike Garafolo and Tom Pelissero of the NFL Network, Jackson now wants a new home. From the report:

Once a key cog in the Commanders’ secondary, Jackson is not frustrated specifically with the team.

Rather, he considers himself more of a man-to-man cornerback and Washington has run a lot of zone thus far. When Jackson signed, he envisioned himself as a true lockdown corner, covering a team’s top receiver.

It hasn’t worked out that way.

Now, Jackson could find himself with a new home.

What may complicate the picture is Jackson’s contract. He has two years left on the deal, and his 2023 cap hit is $15.75 million, which means that another team could likely have Jackson for very little draft capital if there’s willingness to take on that fiscal responsibility.

We know that the Commanders’ defense is all kinds of bad, but which teams would present the best homes for Jackson as he looks to rejuvenate his career in a more hospitable environment?

Report: Commanders’ Dan Snyder has gathered ‘dirt’ on other NFL owners

Per an ESPN report, Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder is trying to prevent an ouster vote by gathering dirt on other NFL owners.

Daniel Snyder has been the owner of the professional football team in the nation’s capital since 1999. Throughout that time, but especially, Snyder and his close cohorts have engaged in behavior ranking from silly to outright repugnant, leaving a lot of people to wonder: Why is Snyder still allowed to own the Redskins/Football Team/Commanders, when he’s been more of a black eye to the NFL than any other owner in the modern era?

Report: Commanders owner Dan Snyder participated in team’s rancid culture

Per a blockbuster report by ESPN’s Don Van Natta Jr., Seth Wickersham and Tisha Thompson, the primary reason Snyder is still allowed in the NFL’s most exclusive club is the amount of “dirt” he has on other owners. The ESPN report, written after interviews with more than 30 sources, indicates that “the fear of reprisal that Snyder has instilled in his franchise, poisoning it on the field and off, has expanded to some of his fellow owners. Multiple owners and league and team sources say they’ve been told that Snyder instructed his law firms to hire private investigators to look into other owners — and Goodell.”

The sources asked for anonymity due to fear of reprisal on multiple fronts.

Most sources declined to go on the record for this story; Goodell has warned owners that they could be fined millions of dollars for leaking to reporters. Snyder “thinks he has enough on all of them,” says a former longtime senior Commanders executive. “He thinks he’s got stuff on Roger.” Another former Commanders executive routinely called Snyder “the most powerful owner in the NFL” because of what he knows, a source says.

Several owners say that they see the threats about damaging dossiers as a desperate tactic intended to scare owners from voting to remove Snyder. “He’s backed into a corner,” says a veteran owner who says he’s aware Snyder has gathered dirt on some owners. “He’s behaving like a mad dog cornered.”

It would take a vote of at least 24 other owners to boot Snyder out of his position, and to that end, Snyder has been lobbying his colleagues. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell appears to be playing both ends against the middle. Such a vote can not come without Goodell pushing for one, but Goodell has said that such things are ownership decisions.

From the report:

Indeed, it galls some owners and league and team executives that the NFL has been in lockstep with Washington on many fronts, “propping up” the franchise, in the words of one owner, by burying attorney Beth Wilkinson’s report about the team’s toxic workplace last year, and by helping the Commanders avoid penalties for repeated violations of the Rooney Rule. It’s clear, one owner says, that Goodell “doesn’t want to touch this.”

“This is what happens when you get into business with bad people,” the owner says about Snyder. “They know he’ll burn their houses down.”

The most repugnant aspect of Snyder’s tenure as owner is the wide-ranging culture of intimidation and sexual harassment that that has gone on for years, and caught the interest of the House Committee for Oversight and Reform. Goodell has steadfastly refused to release the findings from investigative reports due to a “common interest agreement” between Snyder and the NFL.

NFL, Washington owner Dan Snyder acted in concert to block investigation findings

So, with the heat increasing for Snyder, the threats of kompromat.

In recent months, Snyder has told close confidants that his private investigators dug up incriminating information about Goodell, other unnamed league office executives and an unknown number of owners. League and ownership sources say there’s lots of gossip and speculation about what investigators could have unearthed, but some wonder whether Snyder actually has anything at all and is bluffing as a scare tactic.

More than the fear of leaked information — like the leaked information that essentially ended Jon Gruden’s career — could be the fact that the Commanders aren’t making enough money to allow the other owners to overlook Snyder’s actions anymore.

“His gate is the lowest in the league, his revenues are significantly low and trending lower,” a veteran owner says. “He is costing his fellow owners significant money.” Under Snyder’s watch, FedEx Field has reduced capacity from more than 90,000 seats to around 64,000 this year. Although the team spokesperson said the team’s business prospects have turned around, including a doubling of season-ticket holders and a 30% increase in sponsorships, owners said they haven’t seen evidence of improvement.

Multiple ownership and team sources complain that ticket sales for about half those remaining seats are controlled by ticket brokers, the highest ratio in the NFL. “He’s a partner — and he’s not pulling his end of the partnership,” a senior executive of a rival team says.

One owner said in the ESPN report that if Snyder could get a new stadium built, this might all go away, but even that is under serious danger. Defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio’s comments about the January 6, 2021 riots at the Capitol Building as a mere “dust-up” — comments for which Del Rio had to apologize and was fined — had local lawmakers insisting that such a stadium wasn’t going to happen until the kind of culture re-boot promised by the team and the league actually took place.

Jack Del Rio’s comments could be “nail in the coffin” for Commanders’ stadium bill

“I think at this point, I don’t think there ever will be a vote,” Virginia Senator Jeremy McPike said in June, of the 200 acres of land the team purchased for $100 million, seen to be the first steps in such a stadium. “I think they’re gonna be counting heads on the numbers, the number of people voting yes or no, and my guess is the vote’s probably off the table.

“I think this is the nail in the coffin. I think you’re gonna see more legislators now that have already been cooling off to it just shake their heads and walk away. I think that’s where we’re at now.”

It would be entirely on brand for the NFL to ignore all kinds of behavior issues — up to and including one of its owners gathering dirt on all of its other owners — and then making a move because an owner isn’t bringing home the bacon.

But that, according to this report, seems to be where things stand.

Secret Superstars for Week 5 of the 2022 NFL season

Taysom Hill, Rhamondre Stevenson, Daymi Brown, Alijah Vera-Tucker, and Baron Browning are among Doug Farrar’s Secret Superstars for Week 5.

There are all kinds of reasons that NFL players are underrated and unsung.

Perhaps they’re in systems that don’t best show their skills. Maybe they’re buried on a depth chart. Or, they’re in somebody’s doghouse, and their coaches can’t see their potential. Or, their efforts are relatively unnoticed among their more celebrated teammates. Sometimes, young players haven’t quite put it all together, but there are enough flashes to make you sit up and take notice, and when it does work, it’s all good.

Week 5 of the 2022 regular season featured players at just about every position who showed up and showed out despite their underrated statuses, and here at Touchdown Wire, it’s our job to point them out.

Rhamondre Stevenson, Dameon Pierce, Daymi Brown, Taysom Hill, Ethan Pocic, Alijah Vera-Tucker, Matt Judon, Baron Browning, Osa Odighizuwa, Teair Tart, Dre Greenlaw, Camerson Dantzler, and Caden Sterns are our Secret Superstars for Week 5 of the 2022 NFL season.

Here’s why each of them made the cut.

4-Down Territory: Rookie CBs, Packers in trouble, NFC Best, and roughing the passer!

On this week’s 4-Down Territory: Rookie cornerbacks, the Packers in trouble, the NFC East as the NFC Best, and horrible roughing the passer calls!

Every week in “4-Down Territory,” Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar and Luke Easterling of Bucs Wire and Draft Wire go over the things you need to know about, and the things you need to watch, in the NFL right now. With Week 3 of the 2022 NFL season in the books, there was a lot to cover!

This week, Doug and Luke discuss:

  1. Which of the five rookie cornerbacks who had interceptions on Sunday has been most impressive through the season so far;
  2. Why the Packers are in trouble, and how they can turn things around;
  3. Whether the NFC East has become the best division in football after years of justifiable “NFC Least” jokes; and
  4. What it will take for the NFL to get roughing the passer calls right.

You can watch this week’s “4-Down Territory” right here:

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Amazon Prime Day NFL Deals: One gift for fans of each NFL team

The holidays have come early for NFL fans thanks to Amazon Prime’s Early Access Sale.

While Prime Day has come and gone for 2022, Amazon is giving Prime members another reason to be thankful this holiday season.

Amazon Prime Early Access Sale is a two-day event exclusive to Prime subscribers, who can start their holiday shopping with thousands of exclusive discounts.

We know just how challenging it can be to shop for the NFL fan in your life, so we put together a list to ensure no fan gets forgotten this year.

Looking for some team apparel? Got it. Big tailgater? No problem. Want a Halloween costume that shows your fandom? We got you covered.

If you see something you like, but it’s featured in your rival’s colors, don’t worry. Almost all of the items below can be found sporting the colors of your favorite NFL team.

 

Pac-12 Predictions, Schedule, Game Previews, Lines, TV: Week 6

Pac-12 schedule and previews for all of the Week 6 games of the 2022 season, highlighted by Utah at UCLA, Washington State at USC, and Oregon at Arizona

Pac-12 schedule and previews for all of the Week 6 games of the 2022 season, highlighted by Utah at UCLA, Washington State at USC, and Oregon at Arizona


[mm-video type=playlist id=01f1343a1wt7q817p7 player_id=none image=https://collegefootballnews.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Click on each game for the preview and prediction

Results So Far
Straight Up 38-8, ATS 25-21, o/u 21-25

Saturday, October 9

Utah at UCLA

3:30, FOX
Line: Utah -4, o/u: 64.5
Final Score: COMING

Washington at Arizona State

4:00, Pac-12 Network
Line: Washington -13.5, o/u: 58.5
Final Score: COMING

Washington State at USC

7:30, FOX
Line: USC -13, o/u: 66
Final Score: COMING

Oregon at Arizona

9:00, Pac-12 Network
Line: Oregon -13.5, o/u: 70
Final Score: COMING

Oregon State at Stanford

11:00 pm, ESPN
Line: Oregon State -7, o/u: 56.5
Final Score: COMING

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College Football Week 5 Roundup
CFN 1-131 Rankings | Rankings by Conference
Bowl Projections | Week 5 Scoreboard
Week 6 Early Lines | Hot Seat Coach Rankings
What 12-Team Playoff Would Look Like
Cavalcade of Whimsy: The Silly Coaching World