5 things to know about Colts new CB Brandon Facyson

Here are five things to know about Colts new CB Brandon Facyson.

The Indianapolis Colts have agreed to terms with pending free agent cornerback Brandon Facyson on a one-year deal.

This is the first move the Colts have made in terms of signing a pending free agent who didn’t play for Indy in 2021. The move isn’t official until Wednesday at 4:00 p.m. ET.

Here are five things to know about the Colts’ new cornerback in Facyson:

Colts to sign CB Brandon Facyson to one-year deal

The Colts have agreed to a one-year deal with pending free agent CB Brandon Facyson.

The Indianapolis Colts agreed to a one-year deal with pending free agent cornerback Brandon Facyson, first reported by Mike Garafolo of NFL Network.

The first outside free agent the Colts bring in comes at a position that could use some veteran depth like this. Facyson played for the Las Vegas Raiders in 2021 and has played most of his career under current defensive coordinator Gus Bradley.

Almost exclusively an outside cornerback, Facyson fits the physical mold that Chris Ballard likes in his cornerbacks. At 6-foot-2 and 197 pounds with 32 5/8-inch arms, the 27-year-old will be joining a cornerback room that currently includes Kenny Moore, Rock Ya-Sin and Isaiah Rodgers.

Undrafted in 2018, Facyson joined Bradley’s defense with the Los Angeles Chargers where he spent three seasons. In 2021, he followed Bradley to the Raiders.

In 56 career games (13 starts), Facyson has 115 tackles (87 solo), one interception and 14 passes defended. According to Pro Football Focus, Facyson allowed a 107.1 passer rating on 46 targets in 2021.


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Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 18 vs Chargers

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 18 vs Chargers

This game was so absolutely insane, it became challenging to sift through it to find the heroes and the goats. The game swung in completely different directions four times in regulation. And back the other direction in the overtime period.

The Raiders jumped out to a 10-0 lead in the first quarter. Midway through the second quarter, that lead turned into a 14-10 deficit. Then early in the fourth quarter, it ballooned to a 29-14 lead again. But two long touchdown drives in the final eight minutes would tie the game up at 29-29 and keep the game alive.

Each team scored on their drives in the overtime period. But no one scored a touchdown and since the Raiders got the ball first, that meant their second field goal was for the win.

Ballers

DE Maxx Crosby

As much energy as Crosby usually brings, he was a man possessed in this one. He made mincemeat out of Storm Norton to terrorize Justin Herbert and company all night.

Crosby nearly ended the Chargers’ first scoring drive when he got pressure to bat a Herbert pass down on third and two. But as happened a lot in this game, the Chargers went for it on fourth down and converted to keep the drive alive and finish with a touchdown.

Late in the second quarter, after the Raiders retook the lead 17-14, Crosby again burst into the Chargers’ backfield. Norton was flagged for holding and Crosby still affected Herbert’s throw. It fell incomplete and the penalty was declined to force a punt and end the first half.

The Chargers weren’t overly concerned because they knew they would be getting the ball first to begin the third quarter. A 42-yard reception put them at the Vegas 22-yard-line. Two plays resulted in losses and Crosby stopped the screen attempt at two yards. Dustin Hopkins came in to try and 51-yard field goal and missed it.

Crosby was in on the stop on third down on the Chargers’ next drive as well. This time they made a risky decision to go for it on fourth down at their own 18 and the run was stuffed for a loss and a turnover on downs.

The next drive on third and three, Crosby’s relentless pursuit led to a sack and a three-and-out. The next drive, Crosby was in Herbert’s face as he threw and was intercepted by Casey Hayward.

A field goal made it 29-14 with just over eight minutes left. The Chargers went on two long drives, but Crosby did everything in his power to stop them. He had a QB hit on third and six for an incompletion. Later, with the Chargers with a first down at the 12, he sacked Herbert for an 11-yard loss. They would end up converting on fourth and 21 to score the touchdown.

On the final drive that lasted 19 plays, Crosby had two QB hits that resulted in incompletions. He put up ten pressures in this game, putting him over 100 pressures on the season (101). His two sacks gave him eight on the season, surpassing his 2020 total (seven).

RB Josh Jacobs

Despite still fighting through a rib injury, Jacobs just seemed to get better as this game went along. He had 20 yards rushing at the half. By the end of regulation, he had 67 yards. And in the overtime period alone, he had 69 yards rushing.

Jacobs scored the Raiders’ second touchdown of the day from one yard out.

Following the Hayward interception, Jacobs broke off a ten-yard run, then a seven-yard run and a five-yard run that put them in scoring range and the Raiders added a field goal to take a 29-14 lead.

He was nearly the Raiders’ entire offense in the overtime period. He broke off a 28-yard run followed by an 18-yard run that put the Raiders in field goal range inside the 30.

On the final drive, he had a seven-yard run and a six-yard run. At that point, the Raiders were content to run out the clock rather than even attempt what would be a 57-yard field goal, but the Chargers called a timeout and out of it, Jacobs burst through for ten yards. Making for a 47-yard attempt, which is far more manageable and it was the game-winner.

K Daniel Carlson

That game-winner was off the leg of Daniel Carlson. It was the fifth such field goal by Carlson in this game. He also had field goals from 24, 31, 52, and 40 yards out along with three extra points. He misses any of those and we might be telling a different story about this game. But he didn’t. Because he doesn’t in that building. He is lights out at Allegiant.

DT Quinton Jefferson, DT Darius Philon

The first drive of the third quarter saw the Chargers reach the 22-yard-line. They were down 17-14, so they were set up to at least tie the game. But then on second down, Jefferson crashed the pocket to sack Herbert for a ten-yard loss. It turned what would have been a manageable field goal outside of 50 yards and Dustin Hopkins would miss it.

The next possession, they were stuck inside their own 20-yard-line. On third and one, Philon got in on the stop for no gain. The Chargers shocked everyone by going for it on fourth and one and Philon was there again, this time stuffing the run for a loss to give the Raiders the ball at the 16-yard-line.

On the Hayward interception, it was Crosby who got in Herbert’s face on the pass, but it was Jefferson who got the initial pressure. Jefferson would had three more pressures on the Chargers’ final drive of regulation including a hit. All resulting in incompletions.

WR Hunter Renfrow

The first big pass play of the game was the 47-yarder by Foster Moreau. That pass went about five yards in the air, but Moreau was off to the races in part because of a find block Renfrow laid to allow him to get up to speed and find some space. On the next play, in first and goal at the seven, Renfrow’s moves led to a holding penalty to make it first and goal at the three. Unfortunately, it didn’t lead to a touchdown.

Later in the first quarter, off a turnover on special teams, the Raiders were once again in the red zone. This time they converted. And the series of moves the Renfrow put on this time shook CB Michael Davis out of his shoes making for an easy touchdown. Or at least he made it look easy.

Late in the third quarter, the Raiders would drive back in the red zone. And in third and goal from the two, Renfrow again got the pass from Carr and he made the catch for the score.

To begin the overtime period, Josh Jacobs found open space on the right side and was able to turn it into a 28-yard gain thanks to a Renfrow block. That put the Raiders in LA territory and helped them move in range for a field goal to open the extra period.

Honorable Mention

QB Derek Carr — He played with house money for a while in this one. Nearly being picked off at the end of the first drive, overthrowing a wide-open Zay Jones to end the second possession only to get the ball back on a fumbled punt return, a terrible pass interference call on Chris Harris Jr that not only wasn’t actually a PI, but the ball wasn’t catchable, and late in the fourth Carr fumbled the ball after a double-clutch near his own goal line that Brandon Parker luckily recovered.

That said, Carr threw a couple of touchdowns and made two big throws in overtime to set up the game-winning field goal. He also extended a couple of plays in the game that led to positive results.

WR/RS Tyron Johnson — Johnson is the Raiders’ kick returner. But he also plays on coverage teams. And he made everyone aware of that when he batted the ball out of the hands of Andre Roberts to give the Raiders the ball back at the LA 23. That led to the Raiders’ first touchdown.

WR Bryan Edwards — With the Raiders leading 20-14 late in the third quarter, they set up in third and five. Carr moved around the pocket to keep the play alive and Edwards saw it, broke off his route and got open deep for a gorgeous 30-yard catch. That drive would lead to a touchdown to make it a two-score game early in the fourth. He also made a 17-yard catch to start out the Raiders’ game-winning drive in OT.

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Raiders get CB Brandon Facyson, two others back from reserve/COVID-19 list

Raiders got starting cornerback Brandon Facyson back from reserve/COVID-19 list along with two others.

While Wednesday saw TE Darren Waller and DT Kendall Vickers head to the reserve/COVID-19 list, the Raiders did get three players back as well. Offensive lineman Jermaine Eluemunor, CB Brandon Facyson, and S Roderic Teamer all came off the list today.

Facyson is the starter in the bunch. He was starting in place of the injured Trayvon Mullen much of the season and was expect to resume those starting duties last week when Mullen headed to a second stint on IR. But the positive COVID test mean the Raiders looked to fourth string cornerback Desmond Trufant.

Teamer may have started last week in place of Johnathan Abram who was lost for the season to a dislocated shoulder. Instead Dallin Leavitt played every snap at strong safety.

Other transactions today included sending guards Jeremiah Poutasi and Lester Cotton to the practice squad reserve/COVID-19 list. There are also 11 Raiders roster players on the reserve/COVID-19 list.

Raiders place CB Brandon Facyson on reserve/COVID-19 list following matchup with Browns

CB Brandon Facyson joins Nate Hobbs on reserve/COVID-19 list as Raiders set to face rival Broncos

Three teams this past weekend were riddled with positive COVID-19 tests. One of those teams was the Browns, who the Raiders faced on Monday. That game was originally on Saturday, but postponed in the hopes all the possible positive tests would be revealed.

As of yet, no additional Browns players have been placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list. But an additional Raiders player has.

CB Brandon Facyson has headed to the reserve/COVID-19 list. He joins fellow cornerback Nate Hobbs who landed on the list the day of the Browns game, ruling him out.

Hobbs was replaced by Keisean Nixon while Facyson was replacing Trayvon Mullen who was placed in injured reserve last week.

Facyson is vaccinated, which means, per the protocol, he will need to test each day and should he test negative twice on consecutive days leading up to the team’s game on Sunday against the Broncos, he’ll be cleared to play. If not, the Raiders will be down to their third option at outside corner and possibly again without Hobbs as well.

Raiders Week 6 snap counts vs Broncos: New CB Brandon Facyson steps up

Raiders Week 6 snap counts: New CB Brandon Facyson steps up, gets first career interception

It wasn’t even two weeks ago that the Raider signed cornerback Brandon Facyson. And Sunday the fourth-year cornerback stepped into a big role with the team.

The former Chargers corner came in off the street on October 6, four days prior to the team’s week five meeting with the Bears. That game he saw only six snaps, all on special teams.

Facyson didn’t get the start Sunday against the Broncos either. It was Amik Robertson getting his second start due to injuries to Trayvon Mullen and Damon Arnette. But not long into the game, Robertson was struggling both against the pass and the run and was pulled from the game, giving Facyson his shot to see what he can provide.

On the first drive of the game with Facyson on the field, he picked off Broncos QB Teddy Bridgewater. It was the first interception of Facyson’s career. He finished out the game, playing 59 snaps (73%) with the one pick and two pass breakups. Robertson saw just 13 snaps (16%).

Here are all the Raiders snap counts for the game:

OFFENSE Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Kolton Miller T 56 100% 7 23%
Brandon Parker T 56 100% 7 23%
Alex Leatherwood G 56 100% 7 23%
John Simpson G 56 100% 7 23%
Andre James C 56 100% 0 0%
Derek Carr QB 56 100% 0 0%
Darren Waller TE 46 82% 1 3%
Bryan Edwards WR 43 77% 1 3%
Henry Ruggs III WR 37 66% 1 3%
Josh Jacobs RB 36 64% 1 3%
Hunter Renfrow WR 32 57% 5 16%
Foster Moreau TE 25 45% 20 65%
Alec Ingold FB 15 27% 20 65%
Zay Jones WR 15 27% 13 42%
Kenyan Drake RB 12 21% 4 13%
Jalen Richard RB 8 14% 0 0%
Willie Snead WR 6 11% 5 16%
Nick Bowers TE 5 9% 17 55%
DEFENSE Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Trevon Moehrig FS 81 100% 12 39%
Johnathan Abram SS 81 100% 1 3%
Casey Hayward CB 78 96% 4 13%
Denzel Perryman LB 68 84% 0 0%
Nate Hobbs CB 64 79% 11 35%
Yannick Ngakoue DE 60 74% 0 0%
Brandon Facyson CB 59 73% 7 23%
Cory Littleton LB 56 69% 12 39%
Maxx Crosby DE 56 69% 4 13%
Damion Square NT 52 64% 0 0%
Solomon Thomas DT 46 57% 4 13%
Quinton Jefferson DT 42 52% 4 13%
Carl Nassib DE 27 33% 4 13%
K.J. Wright LB 21 26% 0 0%
Clelin Ferrell DE 19 23% 4 13%
Kendal Vickers DT 19 23% 0 0%
Dallin Leavitt FS 16 20% 23 74%
Roderic Teamer CB 14 17% 11 35%
Keisean Nixon CB 13 16% 15 48%
Amik Robertson CB 13 16% 5 16%
Nick Kwiatkoski LB 6 7% 19 61%
SPECIAL TEAMS Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Divine Deablo LB 0 0% 19 61%
Tyree Gillespie SS 0 0% 16 52%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 14 45%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 11 35%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 11 35%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 0 0% 7 23%
Nick Martin C 0 0% 7 23%

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With depth issues at cornerback Raiders add former Chargers CB Brandon Facyson

Another former Chargers defender is in the house for the Raiders.

At this point, any available former Chargers players should just book a trip to Las Vegas so they’re ready when the Raiders call them in. Today, the Raiders added their sixth former Chargers defender with the signing of cornerback Brandon Facyson.

The fourth-year corner spent that past three seasons with the Chargers under Gus Bradley. He rejoins Bradley in Las Vegas along with former teammates Casey Hayward, Denzel Perryman, Darius Philon, Roderic Teamer, and Damion Square.

Injuries to cornerbacks Trayvon Mullen (foot) and Damon Arnette (groin) in Monday night’s game against those same Chargers has the Raiders suddenly in desperate need of help at the position.

The first bit of help comes from the return of Keisean Nixon to practice. He was designated for return from short term injured reserve. But a fifth cornerback was needed and bringing in someone who is familiar with Bradley’s scheme who can get up to speed quickly makes sense.

Facyson played 44 games with four starts over three season with the Chargers. In that time, he has one pass breakup, one force fumble, one fumble recovery, and 60 combined tackles (45 solo).

Chargers announce 4 protected players for Week 1

The Los Angeles Chargers have submitted their list to the NFL of the four practice squad players they will protect in Week 1.

The Chargers announced their four practice squad protected players for the season opener against the Football Team.

The players are as follows: Running back Darius Bradwell, defensive lineman Joe Gaziano, wide receiver Jason Moore and cornerback Brandon Facyson.

Just like last season, teams are allowed to protect four of their practice squad players each week.

These players can not be signed off of Los Angeles’ practice squad during the week they are protected. The rule was implemented to allow for more roster flexibility during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Like last year, L.A. can elevate two players from their practice squad and increase their game day rosters to 55 spots.

Chargers activate CB Ryan Smith, waive DB Kemon Hall

Ryan Smith should provide a special teams boost.

The Los Angeles Chargers have activated cornerback Ryan Smith from the Reserve/COVID-19 list, the team announced Friday. In correspondence, defensive back Kemon Hall was waived.

Signed earlier this offseason, Smith spent nearly all of the summer on the sideline nursing a core muscle injury. Despite the injury, the team always viewed him as a lock to make the 53-man roster because of his talent on special teams.

In 73 games with the Buccaneers, Smith posted 117 tackles, an interception, four forced fumbles, and two fumble recoveries. In 2019, he led Tampa Bay with a team-high seven stops on special teams.

Hall, who is coming off a strong training camp and preseason, is a candidate to fill out the practice squad if he clears waivers. He was praised by the coaches for his versatility and special teams ability.

Chargers add 3 players to practice squad

The Chargers practice squad currently sits at 15.

The Chargers signed cornerback Brandon Facyson, defensive tackle Forrest Merrill and wide receiver Austin Proehl to the practice squad on Thursday.

Facyson and Merrill were waived to make room for safety Trey Marshall and defensive lineman Eric Banks on the 53-man roster on Wednesday.

The addition of the three brings the practice squad to 15 players, which means that Los Angeles has one remaining spot to fill.

Facyson was seen as a likely candidate to make the roster heading into the summer, but the coaching staff chose the versatility and special teams upside of Kemon Hall, Tevaughn Campbell and Marshall to round out the secondary.

Merrill made the initial cut, but the coaches felt like Banks was more of the type of defensive lineman that they wanted, which is why they made the tough decision to waive the undrafted free agent out of Arkansas even after a promising preseason.

Proehl started training camp on a strong note as a return specialist, but the Chargers ultimately decided to keep K.J. Hill. If Hill was to get hurt at any point during the season or he underperforms, there’s a possibility that Proehl could be promoted.