PSU in NFL: Week 6 NFL recap from former Nittany Lions

Here are the top moments from Week 6 of the NFL season from former Penn State players.

We are through another week of the NFL season, and we are still seeing former Nittany Lions continuing to shine.

There have been multiple Penn State players that we have mentioned, like [autotag]Micah Parsons[/autotag] and [autotag]Saquan Barkley[/autotag].

However, the teams some play for are struggling. The Green Bay Packers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are perfect examples of that.

We were also without some key Nittany Lions players like [autotag]Jahan Dotson[/autotag], who was ruled out of Sunday’s game with an injury. [autotag]Allen Robinson[/autotag] was also on a bye.

On top of that, there are also some key Penn State players who are coming up on contract years after this season. Barkley, [autotag]Mike Gesicki[/autotag] and [autotag]Miles Sanders[/autotag] are examples of that. Gesicki has been shaky, while Barkley and Sanders have been going off so far this season.

So, let’s take a look at this past week of the NFL season and recap the performances of some former Penn State players.

Adrian Amos returns to practice, Jaire Alexander full participant on Thursday

Thursday’s injury report brought two upgrades for the Packers: Adrian Amos returned, and Jaire Alexander was a full participant.

Two starting members of the Green Bay Packers secondary took meaningful steps towards playing in London against the New York Giants during Thursday’s practice, the last before the team flies overseas for Sunday’s Week 5 showdown.

Safety Adrian Amos returned to practice in a limited capacity, meaning he took a step forward in the concussion protocol and could still play Sunday. He suffered the head injury in the first half of last week’s win over the Patriots.

Cornerback Jaire Alexander was upgraded from a limited participant on Wednesday to a full participant on Thursday, suggesting he’s on track to return after missing last week with a groin injury.

The only bad sign on Thursday’s injury report was for rookie Devonte Wyatt, who didn’t practice while dealing with a quadriceps injury. He’s been nothing more than a rotational player during the first four games of his NFL career and now could be inactive for Week 5.

Veteran tight end Marcedes Lewis got a rest day. Left tackle David Bakhtiari, right tackle Elgton Jenkins, center Josh Myers, receiver Allen Lazard and safety Tariq Carpenter were all limited again.

The Giants upgraded two players on the injury report but still had six non-participants on Thursday. Quarterback Daniel Jones was limited again but looks capable of playing Sunday.

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Rudy Ford steps in at safety for Packers but impact on special teams is missed

The Packers got 44 quality snaps out of Rudy Ford at safety against the Patriots, but the special teams missed his presence.

The depth of the safety position was always one of the bigger question marks on this Green Bay Packers defense, and it may continue to be tested this week as Adrian Amos remains in concussion protocol.

Amos can come out of the protocols at any time once he is cleared, but it remains to be seen if that will be the case before the Packers take on the New York Giants in London this week.

Behind Amos and Darnell Savage on the depth chart are Rudy Ford, Dallin Leavitt, and Tariq Carpenter.

Ford has 594 career defensive snaps, according to PFF, with 423 coming last season. Leavitt, meanwhile, has 376 career defensive snaps of his own, with 255 coming in 2021. So it’s not as if either has never seen the field, but it’s quite clear that both are in Green Bay to be special teams players.

Prior to the season, GM Brian Gutekunst would mention that the Packers went “out of character” this offseason by signing players whose primary impact will most likely be on special teams. And while he didn’t mention Ford or Leavitt by name, you can include them in that group.

With the addition of Quay Walker at linebacker, and perhaps along with the question marks around the safety depth, the role of the third safety has all but disappeared from the Packers’ defense this season. But with Amos exiting last Sunday’s game early on, Ford was called upon.

In total, Ford played 44 defensive snaps, including 16 in the box and 24 at free safety, while totaling seven tackles, no misses, and allowing zero receptions on two targets. He was even the Packers’ second-highest graded defender by PFF’s metrics.

Overall, head coach Matt LaFleur was very pleased with Ford’s performance.

“I think he did an outstanding job. Playing with great effort first and foremost, but just doing his responsibility,” said LaFleur on Wednesday. “Certainly, you felt his presence out there in terms of his physicality; I want to say he had seven tackles. I thought he did a really good job.”

With Bailey Zappe at quarterback for New England, the Packers and Ford weren’t exactly facing a pass-first offense, and in all likelihood, that won’t be the case again this week, even if Daniel Jones is under center. Entering Week 4, the New York Giants, who are led by Saquon Barkley, rank fourth in rush attempts per game.

The trickle-down effect, however, of Ford taking defensive snaps is that he wasn’t utilized as often on the punt coverage unit, playing just nine total special teams snaps (or 28%) against the Patriots.

As the gunner, Ford played a key role in Tampa Bay, where we saw five of Pat O’Donnell’s seven punts downed inside the Tampa Bay 15-yard line. In a close game where field position was vital, Ford, O’Donnell, Keisean Nixon, and the rest of the Green Bay punt coverage team didn’t allow the field to flip.

This past Sunday, however, O’Donnell had just one fair catch on five attempts, along with a punt out of bounds and one ball downed. On the two return attempts, we saw Marcus Jones of the Patriots average 24.5 yards per return. For some context, 15.2 yards per punt return is the league high through four games this season. Ford’s absence may not be the sole reason for this, but it certainly didn’t help.

Ford held his own defensively on Sunday, but the depth of the safety position still remains an unknown, especially if the Packers find themselves without Amos against a pass-happy team. Green Bay may also feel the effects of Amos’ absence on special teams if they choose to take the same approach with Ford moving forward, as they did against New England.

Packers S Adrian Amos suffers concussion, ruled out vs. Patriots

The Packers ruled out S Adrian Amos after he suffered a concussion on Sunday against the Patriots.

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The Green Bay Packers will have to finish Sunday’s showdown with the New England Patriots without veteran safety Adrian Amos, who left the contest in the first quarter after making a tackle on running back Damien Harris.

The Packers ruled out Amos after evaluating him in the locker room for a concussion.

Amos appeared to get kicked in the helmet by Harris while making the tackle in the flat after a short catch. The play resulted in a two-yard loss but Amos immediately took himself out of the game and was briefly evaluated in the blue medical tent on the team’s sideline.

The Packers replaced Amos in the secondary with Rudy Ford.

Amos has played in 52 straight regular-season games since signing with the Packers before the 2019 season. He played 100 percent of the defense’s snaps in 2019, 98 percent in 2020, 97 percent in 2021 and 100 percent through the first three games of 2022.

Amos will have to pass through the league’s concussion protocol before returning to the playing field. The Packers travel to London to play the New York Giants next week.

The Packers didn’t have a plan for Justin Jefferson, and it showed

The Packers let Vikings receiver Justin Jefferson destroy their defense. Here’s the evidence that Green Bay didn’t have a plan for Jefferson — at all.

Jaire Alexander is the Green Bay Packers’ best cornerback. But he was injured in 2021, missing all but the first four games of the season due to a shoulder injury. As a result, Alexander missed both Packers games against their NFC North opponent, the Minnesota Vikings.

So, maybe the Packers’ defensive staff forgot that Alexander was available in Week 1 of the 2022 season to cover Justin Jefferson, one of the best receivers in the league?

That’s certainly what it looked like. In a 23-7 Vikings win, Jefferson went all thermonuclear against the Pack, as is his wont. He caught nine passes on 11 targets for 184 yards and two touchdowns. That 184 yards, by the way, was just 11 yards less than the 195 passing yards Aaron Rodgers had in this entire game.

But we digress.

Back to the Packers’ defense, and the plan — such as it was — for covering Jefferson. After the game, head coach Matt LaFleur was quizzed about why Alexander wasn’t following Jefferson all around the field.

“Yeah, it doesn’t necessarily always work that way in terms of — if you just commit to playing man coverage the whole game, sure, you can do it. But they do a nice job of putting them in different positions, whether it’s in the slot, whether it’s motioning. It seemed like he was in motion quite a bit, just moving him all over the place. You’ve got to give them credit. They put him in premier spots and attacked our coverage well, and certainly we had a couple blown coverages, as well, where we’re cutting him loose, and if there’s anybody you don’t want to cut loose, it’s No. 18. We’ll go back and look at the tape. Obviously, again, we have to coach so much better.”

The Packers’ plan was to zone it up a lot, and have different defenders on Jefferson. This certainly was a pleasant surprise for Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins.

“I would be a little surprised, yep,” Cousins said when asked if he expected Jefferson to get better and more compressed coverage. “Whenever he has a game at that magnitude, not because of him, but you expect him to get taken way a little bit, and he will at times. Our coaches are trying to find ways to still keep him involved, and we were able to do that today. So it’s going to be kind of a conversation we had a lot last season, and we’ll have this season each week of how does he get defended.”

It was not a pleasant surprise for Alexander.

Based on my charting, Alexander was not the closest defender to Jefferson on any of his 11 targets. New Vikings head coach and offensive play-designer Kevin O’Connell, fresh off his two-year tenure as Sean McVay’s offensive coordinator with the Rams, did a masterful job of aligning and motioning Jefferson away from Green Bay’s most formidable pass defender. LaFleur brought this up, of course (one offensive coach appreciating another offensive coach), and it certainly showed up on the field. Here’s how the Jefferson distribution looked on Sunday:

Safety Darnell Savage, Jr.: Three targets, two catches, 57 yards, one touchdown.

Cornerback Rasul Douglas: Three targets, three catches, 75 yards.

Cornerback Eric Stokes: Two targets, two catches, 25 yards, one touchdown.

Linebacker Quay Walker: One target, one catch, 22 yards.

Edge-rusher Preston Smith: One target, one catch, five yards.

Safety Adrian Amos: One target, no catches.

So, When you have a rookie linebacker in Walker, and a veteran edge-rusher in Smith, covering the other team’s alpha-dog receiver more than Alexander did, that would seem to be less than an ideal plan. Moreover, the strategy to play a bunch of zone against Jefferson really didn’t work because again, O’Connell did some great stuff to beat it.

So, where did the Packers get it so wrong? Let’s go to the tape.

Every Penn State player on an NFL opening day roster in 2022

Here is every former Penn State plater on an NFL roster to start the new NFL season in 2022.

The start of a new season in the National Football League is here and there will be a good amount of Penn State flavor throughout the league this season. Penn State will have the eighth most players on an NFL opening day roster this season with 34 players appearing on an NFL team’s 53-man roster to start the season (plus two additional players on injured reserve and another on the physically unable to perform list). In all, Penn State claims 44 players are on NFL rosters to start the year with the inclusion of practice squad players.

That includes nine players who were on the Penn State roster in 2021, including wide receiver [autotag]Jahan Dotson[/autotag], defensive end [autotag]Arnold Ebiketie[/autotag], and safety [autotag]Jaquan Brisker[/autotag]. Dotson is one of four Penn State players on the Washington Commanders, the most of any NFL franchise to start the season.

Former kicker [autotag]Robbie Gould[/autotag] continues to be the elder statesman of the Nittany Lions football family in the NFL. Gould, of the San Francisco 49ers, is entering his 19th season in the NFL.

Here is a look at every Penn State player on either an NFL team’s 53-man roster or practice squad at the start of the 2022 season.

Loaded everywhere, Packers defense has elite players at each level

The Packers defense is as good, at least on paper, as it’s ever been in the Aaron Rodgers era.

On paper, the Green Bay Packers have one of the most talented defensive units in the NFL. It’s arguably the most talented defensive group of the Aaron Rodgers era. 

“I like our defense on paper for sure,” Rodgers said. “It’s one of the best defenses on paper that we’ve had.”

Green Bay’s defense has elite playmakers at every level of the defense.

Pro Bowler Kenny Clark is one of the best interior defensive linemen in the league. 

For the first time in his career, Clark finally has a talented supporting cast. This offseason Green Bay’s general manager, Brian Gutekunst signed veteran defensive lineman Jarran Reed and drafted Devonte Wyatt in the first round. 

From a talent standpoint, Wyatt is hands down the most skilled defensive lineman that Clark has played with since Green Bay selected the former UCLA Bruin in the first round in 2016. 

“He can be really good on first and second down,” Green Bay defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery said. “He’s an inside guy that has some unique traits as a pass-rusher…He’s got twitch…Really, really good defensive line traits.”

Aside from the two newcomers, the Packers return Dean Lowry and T.J. Slaton to round out the defensive line unit. Lowry enjoyed a career year last season. Lowry recorded a career-high five sacks, while Slaton flashed potential in limited playing time during his rookie season. 

Rashan Gary is primed to enjoy a monster season. The 2019 first-round pick recorded 9.5 sacks and consistently got after the quarterback (87 pressures) last season.

“Rashan is a tone-setter,” Matt LaFleur said. “He’s relentless. He plays with a great motor and energy and I think it rubs off on everybody. He makes everyone around him better.”

Across from Gary, is Preston Smith, who enjoyed a bounce-back season in 2021. After posting four sacks in 2020, Smith recorded nine sacks last season. 

De’Vondre Campbell earned all-pro honors during his first season in Green Bay in 2021. Campbell will be joined in the middle by first-round selection, Quay Walker. 

In the secondary, the Packers have the best cornerback trio in the league. Jaire Alexander, Eric Stokes, and Rasul Douglas give Barry a trio of cornerbacks capable of locking up the opposing team’s top receiving weapons. 

“All three of those guys in my mind are elite players,” LaFleur said. “They’re super versatile. Whether they’re in the slot or outside, I think they have the skill set to do it all.”

Adrian Amos and Darnell Savage form a formidable duo in the back end of the secondary for Barry. 

Amos is the model of consistency. Since signing with the Packers in 2019, Amos has yet to miss a game and has recorded 84 or more tackles and eight or more pass deflections each season. This past season, Amos recorded a career-high 93 tackles to go along with eight pass deflections and two interceptions.

Is this the year that Savage puts it all together? The former first-round pick enjoyed a stellar sophomore season in 2020 after he recorded 32 tackles, four interceptions, and seven pass deflections during the final six games of the regular season.

After a disappointing season in 2021, can Savage replicate the success he enjoyed down the stretch in 2020? If he can, the Packers could have the best secondary in the league.

“I feel like we’re loaded everywhere,” Clark said. “We got great defensive backs. We got a great front. Great linebackers. We’re fast. We can do a little bit of everything…I think we’re a stout defense on all levels.”

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Madden NFL 23: Top 25 highest-rated former Big Ten stars

What does the top 25 highest-rated former Big Ten stars list look like in Madden NFL 23? Four Iowa Hawkeyes crack the top 25.

A player’s rating on any Madden game is an indication of their star power in the National Football League. Now, the full list of player ratings for Madden NFL 23 has been unveiled.

Hawkeyes Wire took a look at which players were the overall top 25 highest-rated players. With an overall rating of 97, one former Iowa Hawkeye was among the top 25 highest-graded players on Madden NFL 23. Of course, that player is former Hawkeyes tight end George Kittle.

Kittle has carved out a reputation as one of the premier tight ends in all of the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers. In 2019, the 6-foot-4, 250 pound tight end picked up Associated Press first-team All-Pro honors. Last season, Kittle registered 71 grabs for 910 yards and six touchdowns.

With that in mind, naturally, Kittle will be one of the highest-rated former Big Ten stars in Madden NFL 23. Is he at the very top? Which other NFL players comprise the top 25 highest-rated former Big Ten stars in Madden NFL 23?

Let’s take a look below at the complete top 25 highest-rated Big Ten players in Madden NFL 23.

Adrian Amos hosts Packers secondary to week of workouts in Baltimore

The ascending Packers secondary got a week’s worth of workouts in together in Baltimore, the hometown of Adrian Amos.

Green Bay Packers safety Adrian Amos recently invited the team’s secondary for a week of workouts in his hometown of Baltimore, according to Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports. Darnell Savage, a Maryland native, was among the attendees.

Amos’ football camp was held on July 9 in Baltimore.

Amos, a free-agent signing of the Packers in 2019, has emerged as the leader of the Packers’ ascending secondary. The pieces are all in place: All-Pro Jaire Alexander is returning from injury, Rasul Douglas re-signed on a three-year deal, Eric Stokes is going into Year 2 after a terrific rookie season and Savage returns for his fourth season starting next to Amos, one of the most reliable and consistent defensive backs in football.

Adding more chemistry to the mix could help tie everything together entering the 2022 season.

“We love to be around each other,” Amos said during minicamp last month.

With some injury luck and the right development among the group, the Packers secondary will likely be among the NFL’s best.

“We’re definitely excited about it,” Amos said. “Everything comes down to how we execute when the season comes. On paper, and knowing each other, we can definitely be special, but we have to take that day by day. Execute all the time. Be consistent.”

The growing camaraderie among the secondary can’t hurt.

The Packers veterans report to training camp on Tuesday, July 26. The first camp practice is Wednesday, July 27.

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PFF ranks Packers S Adrian Amos as NFL’s 40th best player entering 2022

Packers safety Adrian Amos was ranked as the NFL’s 40th best player entering 2022 by Pro Football Focus.

Adrian Amos might be underrated just everywhere in the NFL world, but the folks at Pro Football Focus have always appropriately appreciated the work of the Green Bay Packers safety.

Amos, who has never made a Pro Bowl, checked in as the PFF’s 40th best player overall entering the 2022 season.

PFF’s Sam Monson said Amos is “one of the most underrated players in the game and has a real argument to be seen as the league’s best safety.”

Last season, Amos produced 93 tackles (trailing only De’Vondre Campbell in Green Bay), two interceptions and eight pass breakups.

Statline sound familiar? It should. During each of his three seasons in Green Bay, Amos has created at least 80 tackles, eight passes defensed and two interceptions.

The boxscore doesn’t always show just how reliable Amos is on a game-to-game, year-by-year basis.

Per PFF’s grading, Amos has never graded out at lower than 69.6. His average over the last five years is 82.7, making him one of the most consistent and well-regarded players at PFF since 2018.

Amos has played at least 1,000 defensive snaps in five of his seven NFL seasons, highlighting his incredible availability. He can play deep as a free safety, in the box as a strong safety and everywhere in between, and he’s adept in coverage, against the run and as a tackler.

Amos, who signed with the Packers as a free agent in 2019, is entering the final year of his deal in 2022. His deal will void after this season. Another strong year without injury will give the Packers all the incentive they need to bring him back on a new deal.

Amos wasn’t the only Packers defender to check in among PFF’s first 10 players on the top 50 list. Edge rusher Rashan Gary, a breakout star in 2021, ranked No. 49.

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