NFL Week 16 Power Rankings: NFC East is center of attention

The NFC East doesn’t have a team with a winning record, but it’s the most compelling division in Touchdown Wire’s weekly Power Rankings.

 

 

NFL Week 16 Power Rankings: NFC East is center of attention

The NFC East doesn’t have a team with a winning record, but it’s the most compelling division in Touchdown Wire’s weekly Power Rankings.

The NFC East is the worst division in the NFL. It also is the most entertaining.

Even though no team in the division currently has a winning record, the playoff scenario got more intriguing in Week 15. Plus, there’s all sorts of speculation about which head coaches might be fired, and a New York icon may have played his last game for the Giants.

The Cowboys finally played the way a team with that much talent is supposed to play, improving to 7-7 with a 44-21 shellacking of the Los Angeles Rams. The Eagles also climbed to 7-7 after a 37-27 win over the Redskins. Dallas plays at Philadelphia in Week 16, and the Cowboys can clinch the division title with a victory.

Even though the Cowboys are in the playoff race, coach Jason Garrett’s job doesn’t appear safe. Rumors are swirling that owner Jerry Jones is considering Urban Meyer as a replacement for Garrett.

Things got even more interesting when Meyer showed up at the Redskins game on Sunday. Can you imagine a bidding war for Meyer between Jones and Washington owner Daniel Snyder?

New York Giants coach Pat Shurmur also could be on the hot seat, even though he got a win against Miami. But Shurmur wasn’t the Giants’ most interesting story of Sunday. Instead, that was Eli Manning. The veteran quarterback played what might have been his final game for the Giants, while filling in for injured rookie Daniel Jones.

Here’s where the NFC East teams — and the rest of the league — stand in Touchdown Wire’s Week 16 Power Rankings.

32. Cincinnati Bengals

David Kohl-USA TODAY Sports

(1-13. Last week: 32)

A 34-14 loss to New England was expected, but the Bengals actually kept the game close until the third quarter. But in the end, they lost to one of the league’s best teams. More importantly, the Bengals remained on pace to earn the top pick in next year’s draft. That means it appears as if newly crowned Heisman Trophy winner Joe Burrow will wear a Cincinnati uniform next season. After briefly benching veteran starter Andy Dalton in favor of rookie Ryan Finley, the Bengals have been sticking with Dalton. That’s somewhat inexplicable, because Dalton threw four interceptions Sunday. Dalton has no future with the Bengals. But he’s doing his part to make sure Cincinnati gets Burrow.

31. Washington Redskins

Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

(3-11. Last week: 30)

The Redskins lost to Philadelphia, 37-27.  The game meant nothing to the Redskins aside from impacting their draft position. The real story here is that Urban Meyer was spotted in a luxury box at FedEx Field with injured Washington quarterback Alex Smith, who played for Meyer at the University of Utah. Let the speculation grow that Meyer, who won national championships at Florida and Ohio State will be the next coach of the Redskins. Of course, current Redskins quarterback Dwayne Haskins also played for Meyer, at Ohio State. Meyer’s sighting could foreshadow an off-field showdown in the NFC East. There is widespread speculation that Dallas owner Jerry Jones covets Meyer. Given the personalities and egos of Jones and Washington owner Daniel Snyder, there could be a bidding war for Meyer.

30. Miami Dolphins

Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports

(3-11. Last week: 29)

The only real highlight of Sunday’s 36-20 loss to the Giants was that it likely was Eli Manning’s final start for New York. Injured rookie Daniel Jones is expected back in the lineup next week, and Manning probably will retire or play for another franchise next year. But there were a few bright spots for the Dolphins, too. Quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick and receiver DeVante Parker hooked up on two touchdown passes. More significantly, the loss keeps the Dolphins in the race for an early draft pick, where they can seek a long-term answer at quarterback — because there is no long-term future with Fitzpatrick or backup Josh Rosen.

29. Detroit Lions

Tim Fuller-USA TODAY Sports

(3-10-1. Last week: 28)

The Lions lost 37-17 to Tampa Bay on Sunday. That means they now have suffered 10 losses in consecutive years with Matt Patricia as coach. They also ran their losing streak to seven games. Does all that mean Patricia is on the hot seat? There are two ways to look at it. First, Patricia’s record in Detroit (9-20-1) has been unimpressive, and coaches have been fired for less. The fan base probably wouldn’t be too upset if Patricia gets canned. But on the flip side, Patricia still has his team playing hard even though the Lions are down to third-string quarterback David Blough and are dealing with a rash of injuries. For the sake of continuity, I would give Patricia one more season.

28. New York Giants

Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

(3-11. Last week: 31)

A 36-20 victory against the Miami Dolphins may not seem like much. But there was a big storyline for the history of New York’s franchise. This almost certainly was the last start of Eli Manning’s tenure with the Giants, as he threw for two touchdowns and Saquon Barkley ran for two more. Daniel Jones is New York’s quarterback of the future. Jones has been out with an ankle injury, and that’s the only reason Manning has been back as the starter. But Jones returned to practice on a limited basis last week and is expected to return as the starter for the final two games of the season. This win was important for Manning, who could decide to retire after the season. It got his career record back to .500. Manning is a borderline Hall of Famer. A .500 record sounds a lot better than a losing record to Hall of Fame voters.

27. Jacksonville Jaguars

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

(5-9. Last week: 27)

The Jaguars went to California and beat the Raiders in their final game in Oakland before moving to Las Vegas next season. But the win doesn’t mean all that much in the grand scheme of things. Prior to the game, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that significant changes will be made in Jacksonville in the offseason. That could mean coach Doug Marrone, executive vice president of football operations Tom Coughlin and general manager Dave Caldwell are on the hot seat. Any or all of them could be gone after two disappointing seasons since a berth in the AFC Championship Game. The other big question in Jacksonville is who will be the quarterback next season. Rookie Gardner Minshew has outplayed the high-priced Nick Foles. Minshew has earned the right to at least compete with Foles in the preseason.

26. New York Jets

Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

(5-9. Last week: 24)

Thursday night’s game against Baltimore went exactly as expected. Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, the likely NFL Most Valuable Player, threw for 212 yards and five touchdowns and also ran for 86 yards. That’s no surprise, since Jackson has put up huge numbers all season. What is surprising, and concerning, is that the Jets suddenly seem to be a team in turmoil. During Sunday’s game, coach Adam Gase and quarterback Sam Darnold had a heated exchange on the sideline. They downplayed the incident after the game, but it still wasn’t a good sign. Running back Le’Veon Bell, the source of controversy in Week 14 when he supposedly missed the game with the flu but was seen bowling the previous night, returned and rushed for a season-high 87 yards. Maybe Bell should go bowling more often. The Jets also clinched their fourth straight losing season. That’s their longest such streak in the Super Bowl era.

25. Carolina Panthers

Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports

(5-9. Last week 23)

On the surface, a 30-24 loss to Seattle isn’t embarrassing. The Seahawks are one of the best teams in the NFL, after all. But this one was embarrassing when you look at it from another perspective. The Panthers now are 2-5 at home this season. That’s embarrassing because the Panthers have good fans, and Bank of America Stadium has given the team a home-field advantage in the past. But the Panthers have lost six games in a row, and their future has more questions than answers. Will Kyle Allen, who threw three interceptions Sunday, be the starter next year? Or will it be longtime franchise quarterback Cam Newton? The bigger question is who will be the coach next year? Don’t be surprised if Urban Meyer’s name surfaces. Carolina owner David Tepper has the funds and the desire to compete with the big boys — Dallas’ Jerry Jones and Washington’s Daniel Snyder — for Meyer’s services.

32-25 | 24-17 | 16-9 | 8-1

Urban Meyer coaching the Redskins is a beautiful disaster waiting to happen

Urban Meyer is apparently at FedEx field with Redskins owner Daniel Snyder today.

Urban Meyer is suddenly a hot target for NFL teams. The former Ohio State and Florida coach has already been linked to the Dallas Cowboys, and as USA TODAY’s Nancy Armor so astutely pointed out, that would be an epic clash of egos that would make for unbelievable theater.

But now another NFC East team is jumping into the fray, as Meyer has apparently been spotted at FedEx Field, where the Washington Redskins — who, unlike the Cowboys, already fired their coach — are hosting the Philadelphia Eagles in a drudge match that once held some allure but now just reminds us that we all wish this division would slink off a cliff and into the crashing waves of the sea below.

Man oh man oh man oh man. Who doesn’t want to see Jerry Jones and Dan Snyder in a bidding war? The rest of the country’s billionaires are running for president, so let’s keep these two distracted trying to woo the big fish (who has a penchant for letting things slide and “forgetting” the truth.)

I’m not sure which of these scenarios I’m more excited for, but I’m leaning toward Redskins now because Jones has at least had success before and could get there again. Snyder runs a football operation about as well as Meyer makes sure assistant coaches on his team aren’t abusive, so the whole thing is sure to be an utter catastrophe.

In case you forgot why Meyer, who won two national titles at Florida and another with Ohio State, is even available, a quick timeline of events:

  • Meyer was suspended for the first three games of the 2018 season after an Ohio State investigation found that he’d failed to uphold the university’s standards by not reporting allegations of abuse against his assistant Zach Smith by Smith’s then wife, Courtney. And by lying about the situation at Big Ten Media Day.
  • Meyer drew scorn when, given a chance to tell the world what he’d say to Courtney if given a chance, he replied: “I have a message for everyone in this: I’m sorry we are in this situation.”
  • He returned to the Buckeyes and did the traditional national media redemption tour — where a lot of what he said still made no sense — and did not make the College Football Playoff despite a 12-1 record.
  • On Dec. 4 of last year he announced his “retirement,” in part due to concerns about his health. (This is also what caused him to leave Florida, ahead of media reports that showed wide-spread player misconduct within the program.)
  • As he did after leaving Florida, Meyer spent the last season working in television and appears, perhaps, set to coach again.

Pairing Meyer, whose success as a college coach allowed him to lord over a fiefdom where whatever he said was true and correct, with Dan Snyder, whose success as a businessman allowed him to buy a team so he could believe that whatever he said was true and correct, is extremely tantalizing. Snyder’s time with the Redskins, once one of the league’s most prestigious franchises, has been an abject failure. Since purchasing the team in 1999 it has gone to the playoffs only five times; it hasn’t been past the wild card round since 2005.

Snyder’s heavy-handed leadership style has been criticized for the entire two decades he’s owned the team. USA TODAY’s Mike Jones examined the root causes of Snyder’s failures earlier this year:

Several figures throughout the league, who spoke to USA TODAY Sports on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the organization, blame Snyder’s decision-making for the failures. When he isn’t meddling, he has left the decision-making to top lieutenants Vinny Cerrato (1999, 2002-09) and Allen (2010-present), who have no track record of success.

Others around the league — some of them former employees, who spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity so they could speak freely — believe Washington’s never-ending struggles are a result of karma.

They surmise Snyder’s track record of treating people poorly – scrimping on employees’ pay and benefits, suing season ticket holders for trying to get out of their contracts because of financial hardships, clinging to a team name some view as racist – prevents his organization from thriving. Others believe Snyder has sabotaged efforts by refusing to ever hire, or stick with, a head coach he allows to operate with the authority necessary to produce a winning team.

Oh. Yeah. Dan Snyder should definitely hire Urban “Operates with Impunity” Meyer and then try to dictate to him how to do things. We need that.

It worth noting that Snyder already went the Splashy-College-Coach-With-Ties-To-Florida route when he hired Steve Spurrier in 2002, handing him a five-year deal that was the most lucrative in NFL history at the time.

Spurrier lasted two years, going 12-20 before resigning because he resented Snyder’s meddling — like forcing him to use QB Patrick Ramsey.

This time Meyer and Snyder would agree on the QB. Presumably. For a little while, at least.

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And the meek Bengals, Dolphins, Redskins shall win

And the meek shall inherit the NFL fields. At least in Week 13, that is. It’s unlikely that anyone in Las Vegas or wherever sports betting is allowed these days put money on a parlay of the Bengals, Redskins and Dolphins winning Sunday. They were a …

And the meek shall inherit the NFL fields.

At least in Week 13, that is.

It’s unlikely that anyone in Las Vegas or wherever sports betting is allowed these days put money on a parlay of the Bengals, Redskins and Dolphins winning Sunday. They were a combined 4-29 heading into the weekend and appeared like the only contenders for the top spot in next April’s draft.

Now, with their eight-game skid, the Giants might wind up with the inside track to starting off the draft, particularly if the Bengals again perform anything like they did in dismantling the, well, bungling Jets 22-6. Of all the tail enders in action Sunday, the Giants were the only also-ran to get run over, by Green Bay at a snowy Meadowlands.

Cincinnati had lost 13 in a row dating to last season, 11 of those in 2019 under new coach Zac Taylor. It was the flat, unprepared Jets — coming off a huge upset of Oakland no less — who looked like the team searching for its first victory, though.

Of course, the Jets also handed a winless Miami its first victory this season, becoming the first franchise to lose to opponents with at least an 0-7 record twice in the same year.

With Andy Dalton reinserted at quarterback after a failed experiment with rookie Ryan Finley, it was all Cincinnati.

“How do I feel? I can’t even describe it. … It’s emotional,” Taylor said. “You go through it with all of these guys, and to finally get it, it feels really good. … Now the pressure is off of you a little bit.”

That was a classic example of a desperate team taking advantage of an opponent that never seemed to have its game face on.

That was not so much the case in Miami; the Dolphins have been competitive for a month and now have won three of five. That they fell behind by 14 points to the supposedly playoff-contending Eagles, then stormed back in a tribute to their resolve. The sort of resolve few teams “tanking” the season for a high draft selection possess.

Sure, they needed a trick play in which holder Matt Haack threw an underhand 1-yard pass to place-kicker Jason Sanders on a fake field goal, sort of. But the Dolphins never were intimidated, something bottom-level teams usually are when they fall into big holes.

And they got win No. 3 in great part because of that.

“This team knows how to deal with adversity,” said rookie coach Brian Flores. “We’re just going to keep swinging.”

They might have knocked out the Eagles. Philadelphia (5-7) has lost three in a row and will likely rue this fiasco if it falls short of equally mediocre Dallas in the NFC East.

That division also houses Washington, which has won two in a row to get to 3-9. When Jay Gruden was fired in October after five losses to begin the season, the Redskins had no fire, no true starting quarterback and, seemingly, no plan.

They’re hardly ablaze now, but there’s a bit of progress in DC, which has to be encouraging for Redskins fans who haven’t felt much of that since Joe Gibbs’ days. Gibbs’ first go-around days.

Interim coach Bill Callahan probably won’t be considered for the full-time gig as owner Daniel Snyder searches for a bigger name. Still, Callahan has instilled something with this team that could work as a foundation for future success.

“I think that we’ve got good veteran leadership and I think with any team anyone can lead it,” Callahan said. “The way you come in the building, how you prepare, how you practice, how you support each other. I’ve mentioned that many times to the team. It’s not one guy, it’s not one player with a C on his chest, anyone can lead, and that’s the beauty of leadership.”

There’s not much beauty to behold with the Bengals, Dolphins or Redskins. Any of the three is capable of dropping its final four games and securing that top draft spot.

However, for one given Sunday, Cincinnati, Miami and Washington gave it to opponents. Who would have called that?

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AP Sports Writer Joe Kay contributed.

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More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Poll shows that Redskins have fallen from the graces of the D.C. sports fan

A new poll tells us what we’ve already known; that the Redskins have fallen from the top of the pyramid in D.C. sports fans’ favorite teams.

‘Poll’ is a word you’re sure to hear spread throughout the English lexicon for the next year as we enter another Presidential Election. However, a recent Poll in the Washington D.C. area has made some waves for sports fans, and it paints a grim picture for the Washington Redskins.

The Washington Post recently conducted a poll of 905 adults in the D.C. area,  and some of the questions centered around the sporting world. As a result, the poll showed that fans overwhelmingly thought of the Washington Nationals — who are fresh off of the first World Series victory in franchise history — are clearly the city’s favorite team.

The Redskins, who have long been the dominant team among fans in the region, has dropped significantly in the standings, with only 13 percent of people saying it is their favorite team. That number is down 21 percent since 2010. Here is how the polling shook out:

  • Nationals: 28 percent
  • Redskins: 13 percent
  • Capitals: 10 percent
  • Wizards: 8 percent
  • Mystics: 8 percent
  • D.C. United: 6 percent
  • Don’t Prefer Any Local Teams: 23 percent

According to The Post:

So the results underscore the elation that surrounded the Nationals’ postseason run but also the precipitous fall for the local football team. For years, the Redskins were the toughest ticket to get in town, dominating television ratings and water-cooler chatter.

In response to the poll, an image started circulating on Twitter that perfectly depicts the turmoil around the Redskins, and exactly how fed up the fans are.

That’s less than a cup of coffee in most places!

The poll also shows a disturbing trend that paints a bleak future for the Redskins, as younger fans look to be growing fewer and far between. According to the numbers, ‘a younger generation that didn’t experience the Redskins’ glory years has less affinity for the local football team. While the Nats have steady support among all age groups, the Redskins’ highest support is among Washingtonians 65 and older (22 percent say the Redskins are their favorite team) and that support weakens with each younger age group.’

It may be the ‘Redskins’ name, or it may be that the team has continually been the laughing stock of the NFL for the better part of a decade, but it’s resulted in empty seats and a growingly fed-up fanbase. There are a few options going forward that owner Daniel Snyder could try to make things better, but he likely will be reluctant to try the one at the top of the list.

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