Packers will have healthy TE group for first time in 2019 vs. 49ers

Robert Tonyan is expected to make his return against the 49ers on Sunday night.

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The Green Bay Packers will have their top four tight ends available for the first time this season on Sunday night against the San Francisco 49ers.

According to Rob Demovsky of ESPN, Robert Tonyan is expected to make his return against the 49ers after missing five straight games with a hip injury.

Coach Matt LaFleur said the bye week was big for Tonyan to get over the injury.

“He’s looked good out there,” LaFleur said Thursday.

Tonyan will re-join a tight end group that includes veterans Jimmy Graham and Marcedes Lewis and rookie Jace Sternberger, who came off injured reserve on Nov. 2 and played in the last two games.

In the first five games, Tonyan caught four passes on five targets for 66 yards, including two receptions over 20 yards. He was injured in Dallas on Oct. 6 and hasn’t played since.

The Packers went into the 2019 season with Graham, Lewis, Tonyan and Sternberger as the team’s top four tight ends. Sternberger got hurt to end the preseason, and Tonyan went down in Week 5.

Having both Tonyan and Sternberger available should provide LaFleur with a pair of athletic “move” tight ends who can threaten in the passing game and also hold up as inline blockers in certain personnel groupings.

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Watch: Panthers RB Christian McCaffrey reacts to getting a 99 rating in ‘Madden’

Watch McCaffrey and his teammates react to his joining the 99 club.

Realistically, the chances of Christian McCaffrey winning the MVP award this year are not good. Team success is ultimately what determines that more than anything else and the Panthers simply aren’t winning enough games. However, there are still records to break and accolades to earn.

Getting a boost in your ‘Madden’ ratings is always a nice feather in the cap. Watch McCaffrey and his teammates react to his joining the 99 club.

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Seahawks can remain unbeaten on the road with win in Philadelphia

The Seattle Seahawks are undefeated on the road at 5-0 this season and can extend that record against the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday.

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The Seattle Seahawks are known throughout the NFL for their daunting home-field advantage at CenturyLink Field. However, they have been less stellar as a road team in the Pete Carroll era. That has changed substantially this season, as the Seahawks are undefeated on the road with a 5-0 record in 2019. This is already one win away from the record for most road victories in franchise history, behind the 2013 season in which they finished 6-2 away from the friendly confines of CenturyLink Field.

Conversely, Seattle suffered their two losses at home against the Saints and  Ravens. Most of the Seahawks’ wins have been close shaves, but they keep finding ways to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. This is particularly evident on the road, as four of their five victories away from Seattle have been by one possession. At the end of the day, what matters is the fact that the Seahawks keep winning, not the method by which they achieve the victories.

The Seahawks (8-2) have a chance to keep their 2019 road record perfect when they face the Eagles (5-5) in Week 12. Seattle has performed well in the City of Brotherly Love, compiling a 4-0 record there over the past 14 years. This could work to the Seahawks’ advantage, especially considering the Eagles are coming off a devastating loss to the Patriots. The game against Philadelphia will take place on Sunday at Lincoln Financial Field at 10:00 a.m. PT.

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2 Under-the-radar keys to Cowboys finding weakness in Belichick’s defense

The Cowboys have a tough task ahead of them in solving an all-time great defense. Here are a couple of tips they should act on.

The Dallas Cowboys’ offense, led by Dak Prescott, leading the league in total DVOA and top-3 in both passing and rushing DVOA, are quite simply, the most efficient and potent offense in the NFL. Their opponent on Sunday afternoon, the New England Patriots’ defense, lead the NFL in defensive DVOA, and have posted historically great performances all season. On Sunday in Foxboro, that unstoppable force, meets that immovable object, and the resulting collision is sure to be epic.

By now everyone knows Patriots head coach Bill Belichick will be looking for any and every possible edge he can create to give his team an advantage and an opportunity to win, and that one of his key tactics in doing so is to focus his entire scheme on taking away his opponent’s ability to use their primary play-maker on offense.

The Patriots primary coverage is Cover-1, which is man coverage on each eligible receiver, with a single safety in the deep middle of the field.  Assuming a four-man rush, with five defenders covering eligible receivers, and a middle of the field player, that leaves one “extra” defender.

Belichick will deploy this defender  in a number of ways to create confusion for his opponent and to give his defense flexibility.

One of his favorite ways to deploy this extra defender, to take away an opponent’s primary receiver, is what he calls “One-double”.

This call, made famous by a pre-game interaction between Belichick and former Bengals wide receiver Chad Ochocino will be followed by the jersey number of the primary receiver, in Ochocinco’s case, “One-Double 85” which instructed the Patriots secondary to double cover Ochocinco, no matter where he lined up in the formation.


In this case, the extra defender is used to double cover the single wide receiver on the backside of the offenses 3×1 formation.


This shot shows the potential flexibility of “One double” where the call adjusts to double the No. 2 receiver on the trips side, by having the extra defender roll to the middle of the field so that the near side safety can bracket the ID’d receiver.


Any sane observer would expect Belichick to use this call to double cover Cowboys wide receiver Amari Cooper. But Belichick has another weapon at his disposal to try to slow down Cooper, and that is corner back Stephon Gilmore, who in his time with the Patriots has been perhaps the best man coverage corner in the NFL.

So while there are likely to be snaps where Cooper is double covered, there will be other snaps where Belichick plays Cover-1 and deploys that extra defender in other ways. He could be deployed as a “Rat” in the underneath areas, with orders to cut off any short crossing routes.


Or he could roll to the middle of the field and allow the near side safety to cover one of the trips side receivers while another defensive back blitzes into the back field.


Or he could come down and take responsibility for the running back out of the backfield, allowing the linebacker to attack the pocket.


When you combine the flexibility of their Cover-1 package, with the dominance they exhibit in Cover-0 the Patriots’ man coverage schemes are enough to stifle almost any offense.

So what can Kellen Moore, Dak Prescott and the Cowboys offense do to counter the schemes they’ll see from New England on Sunday?

The first key is the same as it should be against any man-coverage heavy team, use Prescott’s legs.

Prescott is extremely effective as a runner, and the Cowboys offense, and chances of winning improve when he uses his legs. Belichick coached teams have often struggled with quarterbacks who can run, likely as a result of the amount of man coverage they play, and their only loss of the season was to the most mobile quarterback in the league, Lamar Jackson, who ran 16 times for 61 yards and 2 touchdowns in the Ravens 37-20 win over the Patriots in Week 9.

Prescott is not likely to run 16 times, but if he is able to use his legs to convert a few key third downs, or is able to escape from pressure and turn a few negative plays into a positive ones, it could make the difference in a win or a loss for the Cowboys.

The second key, and one that will make the most difference for the offense, will be the play of the Cowboys secondary weapons. You can count on Belichick to have a plan for guys like Cooper, and Ezekiel Elliott, and even Michael Gallup, Randall Cobb and Jason Witten.

So for the Cowboys to win, they will need significant contributions from secondary weapons like Blake Jarwin and most importantly Tony Pollard.

The reason why is quantified in an interview with former Belichick assistant Pepper Johnson. Where Johnson discussed what bothers Belichick from a schematic standpoint.

“Bill never likes two running backs. He never liked playing against two skillful running backs. It’s a problem because he can’t really cover them with his different combination of coverages with the secondary. The linebackers have to get them. And you need good linebackers.”

The Patriots linebacking core, featuring Jamie Collins, Dont’a Hightower, and Kyle Van Noy are an elite and versatile group, but using two running backs, especially those with skill sets like Elliott and Pollard, provides the opportunity to create easy completions in the passing game.

In the Cowboys bye week, this space talked about Kellen Moore’s use of multiple running backs to attack defenses and how it would be a key in the second half. This game is the reason why.

If Moore can use Pollard and Elliott in a variety of ways to create issues for the Patriots coverage rules in their man coverage package, the two runners should be able to prosper on Sunday, and give the Cowboys a chance to come out of Foxboro with a W.

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Capsized cargo ship catches the eye at RSM Classic

Back in September, the Golden Ray, carrying 4,200 vehicles, listed and tumbled before capsizing off the Georgia coast.

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At first glance, you’re not quite sure what it is.

Then you start to wonder if it’s supposed to be there.

What exactly is that off the Georgia coast?

Viewers of the PGA Tour’s RSM Classic most certainly want to know.

RSM Classic: Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Well, it’s a capsized cargo ship, a 656-foot-long behemoth named the Golden Ray.

Back in September, the ship, reportedly carrying 4,200 vehicles, listed and tumbled in St. Simons Sound shortly after leaving Brunswick, Georgia, and bound for Baltimore, before capsizing.

Twenty people were quickly rescued. Four others were pulled off the ship a day later. The ship is owned by Hyundai Glovis, based in South Korea.

David Lingmerth looks on from the 18th green during the first round of the RSM Classic on the Plantation course at Sea Island Golf Club on November 21, 2019 in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

During the week, the talk up and down the practice range was this remarkable sight. Golfers in the field for the RSM Classic took picture after picture of the ship and asked members of the media what they knew about it.

“That is the second most popular question I’ve been asked after ‘Can I get a parking pass?'” said Davis Love III, who shot a 2 under 68 to open his tournament week.

Removal could take more than a year

When the event is played again in 2020, the ship is likely to still be there.

The Brunswick News reported on Thursday that the Coast Guard said it’s likely to take more than a year to remove the ship, which is slowly sinking in the sand. In fact, a quarter of the ship is in sand more than 20-feet deep. That means it cannot be turned upright without breaking apart.

Players warm up on the range as the capsized Golden Ray cargo ship is seen in the background at the 2019 RSM Classic in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

Crews have removed more than 317,000 gallons of oil from the ship, in an effort to stem the environmental damage. Still on board: those 4,200 passenger cars.

The cause of the capsize is still under investigation.

“It’s disappointing when I come down the 18th hole with the Commissioner of the PGA Tour, the CEO of RSM, one of his guests, and (rock star) Darius Rucker and it’s the prettiest day of the year and you see a barge with port-o-lets on it and a sunken ship in the background,” Love said.

And, for the curious, it’s been confirmed that the ship is too far out to hit with a golf ball.

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Giants Coordinator Corner: Preparing for final leg of 2019 season

The New York Giants coordinator met with reporters on Thursday to discuss bye week changes, rookies and preparing for the Chicago Bears.

The New York Giants head to Chicago to face Khalil Mack and the 4-6 Bears on Sunday. On Thursday, their three coordinators update the media on their respective units coming out of the bye week.

Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

Offensive coordinator Mike Shula

The Giants’ battered offensive line will face a talented Bears front on Sunday with Mack leading the way. The coaching staff has been widely criticized for not making adjustments quick enough or not at all.

Shula was asked if he has to do anything special this week with both starting tackles (Nate Solder and Mike Remmers) and tight ends Rhett Ellison and Evan Engram banged up.

“Those guys are really good players, and they’re not the only two that can rush the passer,” Shula said of Mack and linebacker Leonard Floyd. “But yeah, we have to mix our protections. We have to get the ball out. We have to stay out of third and long. As we say, stay ahead of the chains. Stay on schedule. Then whether or not it’s having a guy help chip, as we say.

“But you can’t do it every play, and they know that. They’re good at that. They’re not just good pass rushers. They have good schemes and they understand when you’re trying to keep guys in, it’s harder to throw the ball down field with less guys. It’s going to be a combination of all of those things. We have to be able to make things happen on first and second down. Stay out of third down. Make first downs on first or second down.”

Texans’ Deshaun Watson is always talking to Drew Brees, Tom Brady, other greats

Houston Texans third-year quarterback Deshaun Watson possesses a contact book of some of the greatest quarterbacks to ever play football.

Sometimes, it pays off to be a star NFL quarterback. Among the benefits are fame, money and glory. For some, a comprehensive contact book follows.  Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson is one with a contact book so big he may have to buy a new phone.

While talking business with former NBA player Jay Williams on Kevin Durant’s “The Boardroom,” Watson revealed the bundle of NFL greats, retired or active, at his disposal to chat football, life or business ventures.

“I can hit up Drew Brees. He will talk to me. Tom Brady, he will talk to me, Aaron Rodgers, Russell Wilson, Cam Newton,” said Watson. “All these guys, they will hit me back, Philip Rivers. Even guys that are already retired and played a lot like Kurt Warner and guys like Steve Young, Warren Moon. If I want to talk, they open their phone lines are always open for me.”

Watson has not won a Super Bowl. Nevertheless, he is prepared to do so; Building relationships with Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers, Steve Young and Drew Brees will certainly help. Talking success is chief among the 24-year-old’s conversations with the greats.

“How to handle the success, when they win a Super Bowl, how are they coming back? I haven’t won a Super Bowl yet, but I want to make sure that I’m prepared for that moment. … I am going to win one, sooner than later. And then, just all types of stuff about life, about dealing with different coaches, new coaches, different systems,” said Watson.

Though taking advice, Watson isn’t here to copycat. Similar to Lamar Jackson, he plays Deshaun Watson football — not Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers or whoever football.

“I can’t be Drew Brees, I can’t be Tom Brady,” Watson said. “But I can be the best of Deshaun Watson as I can, and something that they’re doing. I can probably do, and turn it put it in my spin my flavor my style.”

Watson is keen on taking defenses to flavor town, but only the one he envisions and, subsequently, built. A Rolodex of the names that defined the game is just assistance.

CeeDee Lamb, Jalen Hurts named Earl Campbell Award semifinalists

Both CeeDee Lamb and Jalen Hurts have been named semifinalists for the Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award.

As the college football season begins its end, award season is just beginning.

Both CeeDee Lamb and Jalen Hurts have been named semifinalists for the Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award. The award is given to the best offensive talent in Division I football from the state of Texas that also exemplifies the characteristics of Texas Longhorn and NFL legend, Earl Campbell.

Both Lamb and Hurts have quite the list of awards and watch lists between them already.

Lamb was a consensus midseason first-team All-American and is a semifinalist for both the Biletnikoff (best wide receiver) and the Maxwell Award (best all around player).

Hurts finds himself in the race for the Heisman Trophy, a semifinalist for both the Maxwell Award and the Davey O’Brien Trophy (best quarterback), as well as well as the CLASS award (best senior student-athlete). Adding the Earl Campbell Tyler rose Award would add to an already rewarding collegiate career.

Past Sooners to win the Campbell Award include Kyler Murray (2018) and Baker Mayfield (2017). Oklahoma has also produced at least one finalist for the award all but the first year of the award in 2013.

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Nuggets coach Malone compares James Harden to Michael Jordan

Nuggets coach Michael Malone compared Rockets guard James Harden to Michael Jordan, adding that Harden is the hardest player to prepare for.

Both before and after Wednesday’s game between the Nuggets and Rockets, Denver coach Michael Malone showered praise on Houston guard James Harden — who he compared to Michael Jordan and says is the toughest player he’s ever had to prepare for in 19 NBA seasons.

Via Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle, here’s what the fifth-year head coach said before the game in Denver:

I think he’s seen every single conceivable defensive coverage and he demands that kind of attention. He’s a great player. I’ve been in the league 19 years and no disrespect to all the other great players in those 19 years, but he’s, I think, the toughest guy to prepare for.

He can hit the three. He gets to the foul line a ton. He makes his teammates better. He can create his own shot. If you want to force him left, he’s going to beat you. If you want to force him right, he can still beat you. He’s one of those guys when you’re watching film, it’s like you’re watching a horror movie.

Those comments mesh with NBA.com‘s annual GM survey for the 2019-20 season, in which the league’s identified Harden as the clear frontrunner in which current player forces the most adjustments.

Even with all that praise, though, Malone’s team did a fairly good job of limiting Harden during Wednesday’s 105-95 home victory by the Nuggets (10-3). It was the first time all season for the Rockets (11-4) to be held below 100 points.

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Harden did make 50% of his shots and three-pointers, and he also had seven assists. But the Nuggets used a unique and unpredictable scheme of traps and double-teams at different points of the shot clock from possession to possession to force him into eight turnovers.

They were also successful in limiting Harden’s overall volume, with his 16 shot attempts the fewest of any game this month in which the former Most Valuable Player (MVP) has played at least 30 minutes.

“Let’s be honest, you don’t guard James Harden just one on one,” Malone said postgame. “We threw multiple looks at him, multiple defenders at him. The goal was to get the ball out of his hands.”

As of Thursday, the Nuggets now rank No. 8 in the NBA in net defensive rating. For Harden in particular, lanky 6-foot-7 forward Torrey Craig appeared to give him the most trouble.

Harden wasn’t in the mood for giving Denver’s defense too much credit after the game, though, instead focusing on what he viewed as mistakes in execution by his team.

Though his scheme was fairly successful on Wednesday, the 48-year-old Malone remained very complimentary of Harden throughout his postgame remarks, and even brought in a comparison to Jordan — viewed by many as the best player in NBA history.

While it was a relatively down night overall, Harden still leads the NBA in scoring by a healthy margin at 38.4 points per game, with Giannis Antetokounmpo in second at 30.5 points.

That gap of 7.9 points is approximately equivalent to the gap between Antetokounmpo and Boston’s Kemba Walker, who ranks 17th in the league in scoring at 22.6 per game.

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3 Chargers players that have exceeded expectations in 2019

Chargers Wire’s Gavino Borquez lists three players that have rose to the occasion, which many may have not anticipated.

Despite being hampered by injuries this season, the Chargers still possess one of the most talented rosters in the NFL. While there are players that had high expectations heading into the year, there were a few that weren’t talked about as much and have exceeded many people’s expectations.

With that, here are three Chargers players that have been good in a surprising manner in 2019.

C Scott Quessenberry

Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports

Starting center Mike Pouncey was a hit with a season-ending injury in October, which forced the Chargers to turn to the former UCLA product to fill the void.

Quessenberry, the La Costa native, grew up as a Chargers fan. He wears the number that former Charger great Nick Hardwick wore in No. 61 in hopes to have a big impact on the team that he’s always supported.

In five games played, he’s made an impact on the offensive side of the ball that many may have not been expecting from him when filling in for a four-time Pro Bowler.

But you can tell that the second-year player has used that time learning from one of the best at the center position.

Quessenberry has kept pressure away from quarterback Philip Rivers on the inside by using his high football IQ to recognize blitzes and execute his blocks, along with opening up running lanes for running backs Melvin Gordon and Austin Ekeler.

Pouncey is slated to become a free agent after the 2020 season, which means that if the Chargers feel like they have something in Quessenberry, they could move on from Pouncey and make Quessenberry the long-term center.