Commanders sack Giants QB Tommy DeVito nine times… and lose by 12 points

The Commanders sacked Giants QB Tommy DeVito nine times on Sunday… and lost by 12 points. So go Jack Dal Rio’s coverage concepts.

Give credit to the Washington Commanders’ defensive line for sacking New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito nine times on Sunday. Give equal raspberries to the Washington Commanders for blowing enough coverages to allow DeVito to look like a legitimate NFL starter, sacks aside.

The sack total was especially impressive given the fact that Washington recently traded Montez Sweat and Chase Young, its two best outside pass-rushers. Seven different defenders had at least one sack, led by linebacker David Mayo’s two.

But man… when DeVito is able to complete 18 of 26 passes for 246 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 137.7, when he had completed 34 of 51 passes for 260 yards, three touchdowns, three interceptions, and a passer rating of 65.4 in his previous three NFL games in relief of injured quarterbacks Daniel Jones and Tyrod Taylor… well, we already know that any Jack Del Rio defense will feature more blown coverages than the legal limit should allow, and that happened here.

Washington Commanders having sackfest at Tommy DeVito’s expense

Tommy DeVito was being sacked over and over by Washington

Imagine what Tommy DeVito’s Sunday would have been like if the Washington Commanders had not traded Montez Sweat and Chase Young.

The New York Giants’ quarterback was being manhandled by the Commanders in an NFC East game.

DeVito had been sacked 9 times for 45 yards in losses with the game early in the fourth quarter.

David Maye had a pair of sacks, KJ Henry and Jonathan Allen had 1.5 each, Jamin Davis, Benjamin St-Juste, Casey Toohill and Darren Payne each one.

Somehow, still, the Commanders trailed the Giants, 21-12, after DeVito connected with Saquon Barkley for a second TD pass. This scoring play happened in the fourth quarter.


Statmuse.com offered the fact Philadelphia had 14 sacks against the Giants in 1952.

Seven times teams accounted for 12 sacks. Three of those were by the Chicago Bears.

The Xs and Os with Greg Cosell: Previewing Week 11’s biggest NFL matchups

Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar get into Week 11’s biggest NFL matchups in this week’s “Xs and Os.”

It’s time for Week 11 of the NFL season, and as always, Greg Cosell of NFL Films and ESPN’s NFL Matchup, and Doug Farrar of Touchdown Wire and the USA Today Sports Media Group, get you ready with tons of tape study and advanced metrics.

This week, Greg and Doug get deep into these games:

Bengals at Ravens — Why the Ravens could be ready to give Cincinnati’s run defense a very bad time.

Cardinals at Texans — We’ve all talked about C.J. Stroud, and rightly so, but this Texans team is very good in all areas.

Vikings at Broncos — Why Vikings DC Brian Flores is making life tough for opposing quarterbacks with creative pressures, the amazing stuff Josh Dobbs is doing, and the reasons behind Denver’s drastic defensive improvement over the last five weeks.

49ers at Buccaneers — The addition of Chase Young to the 49ers defense has DC Steve Wilks and his staff doing new and interesting things!

Eagles at Chiefs — Steve Spagnuolo’s defense might be the NFL’s ideal right now, and here’s why.

Greg and Doug also take a deep dive on the best way for the Buffalo Bills to design the right kind of offense for Josh Allen.

You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar” right here:

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

…and on Apple Podcasts.

Worst of the Week for Week 10: Patriots and Giants bottom out, more bad officiating, Frank Reich

Frank Reich, the Patriots and Giants find the bottom, more horrid officiating, and one weird fumble return. 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 10 of the 2023 NFL season.

Why was Commanders CB Emmanuel Forbes ejected against the Seahawks?

Commanders cornerback Emmanuel Forbes was ejected for his hit on Seahawks receiver Tyler Lockett. Here’s why that doesn’t make any sense.

With 10:40 left in the first quarter of Sunday’s game between the Washington Commanders and the Seattle Seahawks, Washington rookie cornerback Emmanuel Forbes was ejected from the game for this helmet-to-helmet hit on an incomplete pass from quarterback Geno Smith to receiver Tyler Lockett.

Per the 2023 Official Playing Rules of the National Football League, there are multiple reasons for disqualification, and what Forbes did — an incidental helmet-to-helmet hit — does not rise to that level.

  • Repeat violation of general appearance.
  • Flagrant illegal contact with a player attempting a fair catch.
  • Flagrant unnecessary roughness, which includes:
    • a player of the receiving team who has gone out of bounds and blocks a kicking team player out of bounds during the kick. If this occurs on a kick from scrimmage, post-possession rules will apply if appropriate;
    • running, diving into, or throwing the body against or on a runner whose forward progress has been stopped, who has slid or taken a knee, or who has declared himself down by going to the ground untouched and has made no attempt to advance;
    • running, diving into, or throwing the body against or on any player on the ground either before or after the ball is dead;
    • throwing the runner to the ground after the ball is dead;
    • unnecessarily running into, diving into, or throwing the body against or on a player who (1) is out of the play or (2) should not have reasonably anticipated such contact by an opponent, before or after the ball is dead;
    • pulling an opponent off a pile of players in an aggressive or forcible manner; or 
    • a kicker/punter, who is standing still or fading backward after the ball has been kicked, is out of the play and must not be unnecessarily contacted by the receiving team through the end of the down or until he assumes a distinctly defensive position. However, a kicker/punter is a defenseless player through the conclusion of the down.

There’s also impermissible use of the helmet. Here are the provisions there. 

It is a foul if a player:

(a) lowers his head and makes forcible contact with his helmet against an opponent; or 

(b) uses any part of his helmet or facemask to butt or make forcible contact to an opponent’s head or neck area. These provisions do not prohibit incidental contact by the mask or the helmet in the course of a conventional tackle or block on an opponent.

So, either the official on the field, or the crew in New York, had to decide that Forbes’ hit to Lockett was flagrant and not incidental. Forbes appeared to be leading with his shoulder; how he was supposed to change his launch angle with that timing when Lockett flew into his “hit zone” is a mystery.

Referee Alex Kemp, who’s been part of our “Worst of the Week” series more often than he’d probably like, will make it again after this call.

New 49ers teammates Nick Bosa, Chase Young don’t take long to terrorize quarterbacks

It didn’t take long for the 49ers’ new dynamic duo of Nick Bosa and Chase Young to make a huge difference on a Trevor Lawrence sack/fumble.

When the San Francisco 49ers traded last week for Washington Commanders edge-rusher Chase Young, they did to so upgrade an outside pass rush that had mostly been absent when Nick Bosa wasn’t a part of it. It also reunited two of Ohio State’s most remarkable players in recent years. Bosa, selected second overall in the 2019 draft, and Young, selected second overall in the 2020 draft, now had the opportunity to mess with opposing quarterbacks together as they hadn’t in a while.

Turns out, it didn’t take long for Bosa and Young to reclaim their collegiate magic. With 13:26 left in the second quarter of the 49ers’ game against the Jacksonville Jaguars, Bosa and Young met at Trevor Lawrence, causing a fumble which Bosa recovered.

Coming into this game, Bosa led San Francisco’s edge defenders with 44 total pressures. Drake Jackson and Clelin Ferrell tied for second with 14. Young was having a bit of a career year with 38 pressures, and you can see the cumulative effect of that trade right away.

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.

How Sam Howell has transcended the Commanders’ offensive line

Sam Howell of the Commanders has transcended his leaky offensive line with stellar movement in and out of the pocket. Here’s how it’s happening.

Through the first month of the 2023 season, we had no idea what the Washington Commanders’ offense would look like with new offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, because second-year quarterback Sam Howell, in his first season as a full-time starter, couldn’t stay off the ground.

In Weeks 1-5, per Pro Football Focus, Howell was pressured on 38.1% of his dropbacks, and he took a league-high 29 sacks in five games. He threw two touchdowns and four interceptions under pressure. 

In Weeks 6-9, Howell has been pressured on 36.2% of his dropbacks, and he’s been sacked just 14 times in four games. He’s thrown one touchdown and two interceptions under pressure, but he’s creating explosive passing plays under pressure all of a sudden. 

It’s not because Washington’s offensive line got any better; it’s because Howell has upped his game with knowing how to bail to throw – both with movement outside the pocket, and pocket movement inside the pocket. 

In late October, Howell talked about the pressure problem, and what he hoped to do about it.

“It’s one of those things where we want to… obviously the sack problem is definitely an issue and we want to try to avoid that and try to limit those numbers. But at the same time, I still want to go out there and play how I’m coached to play and still keep my eyes downfield and be able to locate those guys and not be too worried about the rush and let those guys up front do their job. There’s definitely a balance of trying to avoid sacks, but also trying to still play quarterback for sure.”

Now, Howell is doing both things at a higher level.

Pete Carroll, whose Seattle Seahawks face Howell’s Commanders at home this Sunday, clearly understands the challenge.

“He moves a lot,” Carroll said Wednesday of Howell. “They move him out of the pocket, so he can do all of that stuff. He’s not a runner but he scrambles; he’s got 157 yards and he’s got a five-yard average when he runs, but that’s not the feature part of it. He is in the mold of what Kansas City looked like; they’re using the quarterback in the same way. Everyone is familiar with seeing that and they’re counting on Sam to do his stuff. He’s a dropback guy, good rhythm, he’s strong and physical, and he can throw the ball all over the field. The main thing you can see with the young guy, the confidence that they have in him and how they’re calling their stuff. It’s impressive.”

Linebacker Bobby Wagner is also on the case.

“Teams have been able to get after [Howell] and been able to sack him a lot. For every sack or whatever, he’s able to escape some plays. There’s a play, he got a third-and-23 by using his legs. We need to be mindful and understand. They know that they’ve been getting pressured a lot, but he’s also getting comfortable with it and being able to trust his legs a little bit more and escape. We just need to be on our job and make the plays we’re supposed to make.”

Let’s start with the third-and-23 run Wagner mentioned; this was last Sunday against the New England Patriots. Given the situation, the Patriots were right to play with deep drops in coverage, but the pressure gave Howell an opening to run, and the void in the middle of the defense allowed him to gain 24 yards on the run to extend the drive.

Now, let’s get into two examples of Howell using pocket movement to beat pressure, starting with this 26-yard touchdown pass to Jamison Crowder against the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 8. Crowder ran an over route as the inside slot receiver in trips right, and Howell moved to his left as Josh Sweat and Milton Williams collapsed everything inside. Crowder ran through Philly’s Cover-4, but that would have not mattered had Howell not adjusted his launch point in a subtle way to extend the play. Then, it was up to Howell to make a ridiculous throw to Crowder over Reed Blankenship and James Bradberry, and Howell’s got the arm to do that. 

Then, there was this 24-yard completion to Jahan Dotson against the Patriots. Again, Howell faced pressure, and again, he moved subtly to extend the play. This time, edge-rusher Anfernee Jennings, end Deatrich Wise Jr., and DI Christian Barmore crashed the edge protections, overwhelming tackles Charles Leno and Andrew Wylie. Not a problem for Howell, who survived it by using that sense of pocket movement to make the outstanding throw.

And as he showed on this 22-yard completion to Terry McLaurin against the Atlanta Falcons in Week 6, Howell is perfectly comfortable moving outside the pocket against pressure, and recovering from that to make another bang-on throw.

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys get into how Howell’s adjustments to pressure have put the Commanders’ offense at a new level.

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You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os,” featuring all of Week 10’s biggest NFL matchups, right here:

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

…and on Apple Podcasts.

The Xs and Os with Greg Cosell: Previewing Week 10’s biggest NFL matchups

Texans at Bengals, Commanders at Seahawks, 49ers at Jaguars, Browns at Ravens, Broncos at Bills. Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar discuss Week 10’s biggest matchups.

It’s time for Week 10 of the NFL season, and as always, Greg Cosell of NFL Films and ESPN’s NFL Matchup, and Doug Farrar of Touchdown Wire and the USA Today Sports Media Group, get you ready with tons of tape study and advanced metrics.

This week, Greg and Doug get deep into these games:

Houston Texans at Cincinnati Bengals — How C.J. Stroud’s game is reinforced by intelligent, calculated movement outside the pocket.

Washington Commanders at Seattle Seahawks — How Sam Howell has transcended his offensive line, and why the Seahawks’ blowout loss to the Baltimore Ravens wasn’t Geno Smith’s fault.

San Francisco 49ers at Jacksonville Jaguars — Why the 49ers’ run game and pass defense have each regressed mightily during their three-game losing streak.

Cleveland Browns at Baltimore Ravens — The Browns’ offense will have to deal with a Ravens pass rush that comes at you from everywhere, with multiple effective schemes.

Denver Broncos at Buffalo Bills — Surprisingly, the Broncos’ passing game is looking better lately, while the Bills’ passing game… well, isn’t.

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.

The NFL’s Worst of the Week: Weird NFL rules, Bryce Young, awful Giants

In this week’s “Worst of the Week,” we ask what the NFL wants from players, why the New York Giants are awful, and what’s up with Bryce Young.

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 9 of the 2023 NFL season.