Raiders DE Maxx Crosby named AFC Defensive Player of the Week

Raiders DE Maxx Crosby has been named AFC Defensive Player of the Week for Week 11 Against the Bengals, Crosby had 4 sacks and 1 FF in the Raiders’ win The rookie now has 6.5 sacks and 11 QB hits on the season

Raiders DE Maxx Crosby has been named AFC Defensive Player of the Week for Week 11 Against the Bengals, Crosby had 4 sacks and 1 FF in the Raiders’ win The rookie now has 6.5 sacks and 11 QB hits on the season

Do not listen to Star Wars fans. Baby Yoda is a baby and is Yoda.

Baby Yoda.

There’s a new Star Wars show out on Disney+ called The Mandalorian, and if you want smart analysis of it, you should read my colleague Henry McKenna who has written about the show.

This article is not that. This article is about Baby Yoda.

Baby Yoda is the star of The Mandalorian. You might believe that The Mandalorian is the star of The Mandalorian, but you would be wrong. The star is Baby Yoda, who is a baby and is Yoda.

Apparently, Star Wars fanatics are quick to point out that Baby Yoda is not actually Yoda, and is also not a baby, as he/she is 50 years old, as was revealed in the show.

To that I say: No, you’re wrong. He’s Baby Yoda.

I don’t know much but I know that. That is Baby Yoda, he is a baby and he is Yoda. I love Baby Yoda.

Baby Yoda. Baby Yoda.

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Bears add former Titans RB Jeremy McNichols to practice squad

Former Tennessee Titans running back Jeremy McNichols has found a new NFL home.

Former Tennessee Titans running back Jeremy McNichols has found a new NFL home.

The rusher was signed by the Chicago Bears on Tuesday, and will be a part of team’s practice squad.

McNichols was originally drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at No. 162 overall in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL Draft. His latest stop in was with the Titans in Nashville, Tennessee.

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McNichols was an intriguing player who many fans hoped the Titans would hold onto, despite already having names like Derrick Henry, Dion Lewis and David Fluellen on the roster.

The 5-foot-9, 205-pounder had a successful college career at Boise State, where he recorded over 2,100 yards from scrimmage in 2016.

Before the Titans, McNichols also saw time with the San Francisco 49ers, Indianapolis Colts and Denver Broncos.

He’s played in three regular season games, with two rushing attempts for four yards.

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The Bears also waived linebacker James Vaughters and signed outside linebacker Dewayne Hendrix to the team’s practice squad on Tuesday.

Bills QB Josh Allen named AFC Offensive Player of the Week

Bills QB Josh Allen has been named AFC Offensive Player of the Week for Week 11 Against the Dolphins, Allen had 256 yards, 3 TDs, and 56 yards rushing with 1 TD Allen now has 13 TD passes and 7 INTs on the year, adding 331 yards rushing and another 7 TDs

Bills QB Josh Allen has been named AFC Offensive Player of the Week for Week 11 Against the Dolphins, Allen had 256 yards, 3 TDs, and 56 yards rushing with 1 TD Allen now has 13 TD passes and 7 INTs on the year, adding 331 yards rushing and another 7 TDs

Bills QB Josh Allen named AFC Offensive Player of the Week

Bills QB Josh Allen has been named AFC Offensive Player of the Week for Week 11 Against the Dolphins, Allen had 256 yards, 3 TDs, and 56 yards rushing with 1 TD Allen now has 13 TD passes and 7 INTs on the year, adding 331 yards rushing and another 7 TDs

Bills QB Josh Allen has been named AFC Offensive Player of the Week for Week 11 Against the Dolphins, Allen had 256 yards, 3 TDs, and 56 yards rushing with 1 TD Allen now has 13 TD passes and 7 INTs on the year, adding 331 yards rushing and another 7 TDs

Jalen Hurts earns final Davey O’Brien National Quarterback of the Week award

After leading Oklahoma to a 25-point comeback win over Baylor, Jalen Hurts has earned the last Davey O’Brien National Quarterback of the Week award of the year. 

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After leading Oklahoma to a 25-point comeback win over Baylor, Jalen Hurts has earned the last Davey O’Brien National Quarterback of the Week Award of the year. 

Hurts’ first half, though, didn’t look like an award-winning performance. He had two turnovers, one passing touchdown and the offense had accumulated just 10 points in the entire half. 

Hurts’ sprung to life in the second, scoring four touchdowns and erasing a 28-3 Baylor lead to win 34-31. He completed 30 of his 42 total passes for 297 yards and four touchdowns. Hurts also ran the ball 27 times for 114 yards.

The Oklahoma signal-caller leads the nation in points responsible for with 260, and is second in the nation in individual offense per game at 402.2 yards, only behind Washington State’s Anthony Gordon who averages 434.8. 

Oddly enough, after possibly earning himself a trip to New York, this is Hurts’ first Davey O’Brien National Quarterback of the Week award of the season. LSU’s Joe Burrow finished with three, and Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa finished with two. 

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Bills OL Ty Nsekhe listed as week-to-week

Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott listed offensive tackle Ty Nsekhe as “week-to-week” with an ankle injury ahead of the team’s Week 12 meeting with the Denver Broncos.

Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott listed offensive tackle Ty Nsekhe as “week-to-week” with an ankle injury ahead of the team’s Week 12 meeting with the Denver Broncos.

Nsekhe was carted off the field after a Miami Dolphins defender landed awkwardly on the back of his leg during the Bills’ Week 11 37-20 win.

Without Nsekhe in the lineup, rookie Cody Ford will likely take the bulk of the snaps at right tackle for the Bills. According to Pro Football Focus, Ford has had a tough start to his career.

Ford’s overall grade via the analytics outlet is a 53.7 this season, landing in the outlet’s “below average” category. On the flip side, Nsekhe has steadily improved via PFF’s grades this year and ranks as an “above average” lineman with a grade of 67.3.

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Sergey Kovalev says he had to lose 35-plus pounds for Canelo Alvarez fight

Sergey Kovalev posted an Instagram Live video over the weekend complaining about his knockout loss to Canelo Alvarez on November 3.

Excuses? Explanations? You decide.

In an Instagram Live video posted recently, former light heavyweight titleholder Sergey Kovalev sounded off – in Russian – about his knockout loss to Canelo Alvarez on Nov. 2, claiming that the deck was stacked against him from the very start and that he did not have an ideal training camp.

Alvarez, moving up from middleweight, scored a vicious knockout of Kovalev in the 11th round to take Kovalev’s piece of the light heavyweight crown. For his trouble, Kovalev earned a reported $12 million payday, a portion of which went to co-promoters Top Rank and Main Events.

Kovalev’s spiel on a recent episode of the Everlast Talk Box podcast was translated. Here are four takeaways:

  • He entered entered training camp for the Alvarez fight weighing 211 pounds (96 kilograms), when he normally walks around at 190 pounds (86 kilograms).
  • There is no guarantee that he will return to the light heavyweight division, as he suffered from insomnia and loss of appetite as he was trying to make weight.
  • He admitted that he accepted the Alvarez fight for money and asserted that he didn’t have enough time to recover from his fight against Anthony Yarde in August. Kovalev stopped the Briton in the 11th round after nearly getting knocked out himself earlier in the fight.
  • And people who bet on him to win in an attempt to “get rich quick,” as opposed to his true fans, were “losers”

 

Badgers-Phoenix is a point of pride for the state of Wisconsin

Reflections on college basketball in the state of Wisconsin before the Badgers play the Green Bay Phoenix.

This isn’t a new revelation. This is a celebration of a well-known fact. The Thursday game between the Wisconsin Badgers and the Green Bay Phoenix in the Kohl Center offers a reminder of how good basketball has been in the state of Wisconsin for a very long time. One week before Thanksgiving, it is a time for Wisconsinites — not just Badger fans — to continue to give thanks for the basketball bounty they have received for over half a century.

It all started in 1965 at West Bend High School. A young man named Dick Bennett taught the freshman team. Ever since that year, one of at least three men — Bennett, Bo Ryan, and Greg Gard — has coached basketball in the state of Wisconsin. Gard carries the torch today as the bench boss of the Badgers, but Ryan is in many ways the central nerve center for the story of basketball in the Badger State over the past 54 years.

Ryan took over the Wisconsin program Bennett entrusted to him in 2001. Ryan, albeit after a messy exit, then passed the baton to Gard in December of 2015. Since 1995, these three men have guided Wisconsin basketball. None of them have failed in the attempt to establish a standard Badger fans can be proud of. Gard’s head coaching tenure through four years has made the grade. That doesn’t mean his career has already been marked as an irrevocable success, but it does mean he is on the right track.

The reason Wisconsin’s game against Green Bay emphasizes the need for state residents to give thanks is that while Dick Bennett didn’t spend an extraordinarily long time in Madison, his tenure in Green Bay put him in position to ascend to Wisconsin’s capital city and begin a golden age of Badger basketball which resulted in the 2000 Final Four berth. Bennett’s run at UW, flowing from his Green Bay triumphs, gave Ryan a foundation he turned into one and a half hugely productive decades. Under Gard, the Badgers — who looked so quintessentially “Wisconsin-like” against Marquette on Sunday — are still reaping the benefits of what Bennett gave them after coming to UW from Green Bay.

Basketball fans in the state of Wisconsin know the stories. They know the litany of names and places where Bennett, Ryan and Gard have coached. Nevertheless, let’s name them anyway, just to emphasize the depth and breadth of this proud legacy in the Badger state on the hardwood, dating back to 1965:

West Bend. Mineral Point. Marion. New London. Eau Claire. Stevens Point. Southwestern High School. Green Bay. Platteville. Milwaukee. The University of Wisconsin. Dick Bennett, Bo Ryan, and Greg Gard have combined — over the past 54 years — to coach 104 seasons of scholastic basketball (high school and college together). They not only grew the game, they defined it. They not only defined it, they sustained it. They not only sustained it, but passed it along to successors who could keep the flame from dying out.

The Wisconsin Badgers will welcome the Green Bay Phoenix to the Kohl Center on Thursday. Emphasize the word “welcome,” since this game is regularly cause for celebration of a well-known reality. The fact that scholastic basketball has been so robust and healthy in the state of Wisconsin for the past several decades shouldn’t make anyone take this sustained success for granted. It is always worth absorbing, savoring, treasuring, how good this state has it in the realm of roundball. Thanksgiving comes one Thursday early this week — why not have two Thanksgiving days in November of 2019?

Titans have found success in the red zone in 2019

The team has been highly efficient in the red zone lately, ending 10 consecutive trips with a touchdown.

The Tennessee Titans (5-5) have had plenty of offensive struggles in 2019, especially at the beginning of the season.

But the team has been highly efficient in the red zone lately, ending 10 consecutive trips with a touchdown.

This number serves as the league’s longest active streak, and leads the NFL with a red zone touchdown percentage of 72%.

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The Titans haven’t been quite so impressive in other areas on offense, averaging 20.3 points (22nd), 319.4 yards (26th), 206.2 passing yards (26th) and 113.2 rushing yards (15th) this year.

Since Ryan Tannehill took the reins from Marcus Mariota in the middle of Week 6’s loss to the Denver Broncos, he’s posted a 3-1 record as a starter and brought new life to a practically stagnant offense.

This season, Tannehill is 97-of-136 passing for 1,161 yards with eight touchdowns and four interceptions.

The 31-year-old also has made some plays on the ground when he needs to, totaling 19 rushing attempts for 83 yards and one score.

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Tannehill and the Titans come off a bye week and a 35-32 win over the Kansas City Chiefs as the team is now back to .500 ahead of the weekend.

The Titans have a combined 105 total points in their past four games, with the latest home victory being their highest-scoring game of the season since Week 1’s 43-13 win over the Browns.

The Titans will face the Jacksonville Jaguars next at 3:05 p.m. CT on Sunday in Nissan Stadium.