Jets vs. Dolphins Week 15 recap: Everything we know

The Jets had all the momentum in the world. Then they came crashing back to earth against the Dolphins. Recap:

The Jets had all the momentum in the world. Then they came crashing back to earth.

A strong first quarter had Gang Green in solid shape for a Week 15 win, but the team fell apart on both sides of the ball and once again allowed their opponent to put up over 30 points. The Dolphins had no problem coming back on their home turf, winning 31-24 following a second-half collapse by New York.

What looked to be a promising day resulted in the Jets’ 11th loss of the season. The Dolphins, meanwhile, extended their winning streak to six and improved to .500.

S Jevon Holland has been added to the reserve/COVID-19 list

The safety becomes the fourth player added to the list in less than a week.

The Miami Dolphins have announced that safety Jevon Holland is the fourth player to be added to the reserve/COVID-19 list in the last week, as he joins running backs Myles Gaskin, Salvon Ahmed, and Phillip Lindsey.

To make up for the hole at running back, the Dolphins have also announced that Duke Johnson has been elevated to the active roster from the practice squad, as he and rookie Gerrid Doaks were the only healthy backs in the organization.

Miami hasn’t been able to run with much success this season, so the loss of their running backs, while concerning, could be dealt with much easier than Holland’s. If Holland can’t go, the Dolphins’ game plan against the Jets will have to change drastically.

Veteran safety Eric Rowe, who has filled in for Brandon Jones in their last two games, will probably slide in for Holland if Jones is back in action. Rowe is capable, but he’s not quite the playmaker that Holland has shown to be through the first 13 games of his career.

The Dolphins also made two signings to the practice squad on Monday in wide receiver Tommylee Lewis and running back Dexter Williams.

Lewis was signed as an undrafted free agent by the New Orleans Saints in 2016, and while he’s bounced around to a few teams, he’s only played in games with New Orleans.

Williams was a sixth-round pick of the Green Bay Packers in 2019, and in two seasons with the team, he had seven carries for 19 yards.

[vertical-gallery id=442360]

Dolphins elevate RB Duke Johnson from the practice squad vs. Jets

The Dolphins have another back heading into the AFC East battle.

Ahead of an important matchup with the 2-7 New York Jets, the Miami Dolphins have elected to elevate running back Duke Johnson from their practice squad.

Miami signed Johnson to their practice squad back in October when Malcolm Brown was placed on injured reserve. Since then, their tandem of Myles Gaskin and Salvon Ahmed hasn’t provided much.

The Jets have allowed the fourth-most rushing yards per game (133.9) this season, so they can be exploited on the ground. However, whether or not Miami can take advantage is a completely different question.

At the very least, Johnson is a solid veteran who has been a great pass-catching back at points in his career, so he could be used to give Tua Tagovailoa more short options in the passing game while he recovers from his finger injury.

[vertical-gallery id=441488]

Dolphins sign veteran RB Duke Johnson to their practice squad

Miami adds some RB depth.

With the news that running back Malcolm Brown will be placed on the injured reserve coming on Monday, the Dolphins had a need for running back depth behind Myles Gaskin and Salvon Ahmed.

To help address that problem in a small way, Miami has signed Duke Johnson to their practice squad, according to his agent Drew Rosenhaus via Adam Schefter.

Johnson spent his college years in Miami as a member of the Hurricanes and has been with the Browns and Texans in his first six seasons in the league. His primary skill has been his pass-catching which allowed him to bring in 74 receptions for 693 yards and three touchdowns in 2017.

During his time with Houston, he was splitting time with David Johnson who was a little more versatile than the former Hurricane, so he wasn’t needed to be a big part of the offense.

Most recently, Johnson was a member of Jacksonville’s practice squad, but he was released in mid-September.

The Dolphins had an open practice squad spot after promoting wide receiver Isaiah Ford and not being able to sneak quarterback Reid Sinnett through waivers, so they might as well attempt to address a need.

[vertical-gallery id=440830]

Bears worked out Duke Johnson and other running backs Monday

With running back depth concerns, the Bears hosted four running backs for a tryout on Monday, including Duke Johnson.

While Bears rookie running back Khalil Herbert had an impressive outing in his first NFL start, Chicago is still thin at the running back position with David Montgomery, Damien Williams and Tarik Cohen all out.

The Bears hosted four running backs for tryouts on Monday, including Duke Johnson, TJ Logan, Chris Thompson and CJ Marable.

While the run game appears to be in good hands with Herbert, who had 19 rushes for 97 yards and a score, until Montgomery and Williams return, there are still some depth concerns that prompted these tryouts.

The biggest name on that list is Johnson, who spent the last two seasons with the Houston Texans, where he had160 carries for 647 yards and three touchdowns.

Montgomery is currently sidelined with a knee sprain suffered against the Lions a couple of weeks ago. He’s currently on injured reserve, and could return as soon as next week, although it wouldn’t be a surprise if they played it safe with him given the success of Herbert and Williams.

Williams is on the reserve/COVID-19 list, which caused him to miss Sunday’s game against the Packers. Matt Nagy said there was no change with Williams as of Monday.

[listicle id=486325]

[listicle id=486311]

Saints try out running backs with Tony Jones Jr. facing 3-4 week absence

Saints try out running backs with Tony Jones Jr. facing 3-4 week absence

[sendtonews_embed video_id=”Wl7Vl9TuRY-1543296-7498″]

We haven’t learned many specifics about the ankle injury Tony Jones Jr. suffered against the New York Giants, but ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported Tuesday afternoon that the New Orleans Saints’ backup running back is facing an absence of three to four weeks while recovering.

While New Orleans could get by with Alvin Kamara and Dwayne Washington in a pinch, that prompted the team to bring in a group of five free agents for workouts while searching for a third runner:

Panthers working out RB Duke Johnson on Friday

No single player can replace RB Christian McCaffrey. But the Panthers are going to have to hold it down, possibly with some outside help, until he returns.

Unless they can swing a trade for Alvin Kamara or Dalvin Cook, there’s no way the Carolina Panthers can replace what Christian McCaffrey means to their offense. But they can at least try to hold it down until he returns.

A possible reinforcement could come in running back Duke Johnson, who the team is working out on Friday. As first reported by ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the 28-year-old back will get a look from the Panthers following the news that McCaffrey is expected to miss at least a few weeks with his hamstring injury.

Johnson is a decent dual-threat back in his own right, having amassed seasons of 61, 53 and 74 receptions throughout his six-year career. The former third-round pick of the Cleveland Browns most recently spent a pair of seasons in Houston, where he totaled 160 carries for 645 yards (4.0 yards per attempt) and three touchdowns along with 72 catches for 659 yards.

If signed, Johnson, of course, wouldn’t be expected to shoulder the majority of the workload left behind by McCaffrey. In fact, he may not even see more than rookie Chuba Hubbard or backup Royce Freeman.

He could, though, help give offensive coordinator Joe Brady some different looks and play this out by committee.

[lawrence-related id=641173]

[listicle id=641136]

Report: Jags to sign veteran RB Duke Johnson to their practice squad

The Jags lost Travis Etienne this preseason due to a foot injury and it left a void to be filled at the RB position. With six days left before their season opener, they’ve decided to add a veteran with similar abilities.

The Jacksonville Jaguars only named three running backs to their initial 53-man roster, so many fans came into this week expecting a signing at the position. On Monday, the team did just that by bringing in veteran running back Duke Johnson, who is signing with them as a practice squad player, according to his agent Drew Rosenhaus.

Johnson, 27, is a Florida native who went to high school in Miami, Fla. (Miami Norland Senior High School) and attended The University of Miami (Fla.). He was drafted by the Cleveland Browns and spent four seasons with them (2015-18). Afterward, he joined the Houston Texans from 2019-20 and will enter his career with the Jags with 459 carries for 1,931 rushing yards and eight touchdowns. He also has 307 career receptions for 2,829 yards and 12 receiving touchdowns.

The Jags lost Travis Etienne for the season as he sustained a Lisfranc injury in their second preseason game against the New Orleans Saints. He was a player the Jags invested a first-round pick in this April and they clearly had plans for him to help out in the receiving game. That’s an area where Johnson thrives and it’s not shocking to see that Urban Meyer wanted his speed on the roster.

Starting Johnson off on the Jags’ practice squad will give the veteran time to get acclimated in terms of conditioning and the playbook. Once he’s clear on that end, it probably won’t take long for the Jags to start making him active on game days.

Fantasy football free agency roundup

NFL free agency will drastically help reshape the fantasy football landscape as the new league year begins.

Now that NFL free agency is upon us, here is where we’ll run through the fantasy football outlooks for trades, re-signings, midrange players, and tag recipients.

This analysis will be updated as players sign/re-sign in free agency, so be sure to check back regularly.

Signed with new team or traded

RB Mark Ingram, Houston Texans: The 31-year-old inked a one-year, $2.5 million deal in Houston to pair with fellow well-aged runner David Johnson. The duo will create a one-two punch, so long as what we saw from Baltimore making Ingram a healthy scratch late last year wasn’t foreshadowing. Some of that was due to him not playing special teams and the team wanting to get a closer look at rookie J.K. Dobbins. Presuming quarterback Deshaun Watson returns, Ingram still has a dicey outlook. The Texans’ porous defense has so many needs that it’s tough to see the offense being able to consistently run the ball if the other side cannot contain opposing offenses. Ingram needs bulk to make a mark in fantasy lineups, which rarely will be the case, unless he finds regular success around the goal line, consider the veteran merely roster depth or a handcuff to Johnson.

Re-signed/extensions

QB Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: There’s no surprise associated with the four-year, $160 million extension Prescott signed prior to free agency opening. He wasn’t ever going to be allowed to leave the building, as evidenced by a formality of being tagged again. As long as his ankle rehab goes according to plan, this potential No. 1 overall fantasy quarterback has the tools to pick up where he left off.

QB Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers:While it’s technically an extension, Big Ben’s deal was reworked to provide cap relief for the Steelers and keep him in a black-and-yellow uni for one last go of it. Roethlisberger will almost assuredly be without WR JuJu Smith-Schuster, and Pittsburgh has a new offensive coordinator in Matt Canada, but there’s still enough to like about the situation for Roethlisberger to be in the conversation of a low-tier rotational starter.

QB Cam Newton, New England Patriots: The knee-jerk reaction is to scoff at Newton getting a one-year, $14 million deal to re-sign with the Pats. A closer look should elicit a more measured response. Last year, just about everything worked against Cam finding success. He signed late (June 28), there was no offseason program, the offensive system is intricate, New England lost several key players to the opt-out, the offensive line had to shuffle talent several times, no receivers to speak of, zero tight ends of consequence, an erratic rushing attack, and Newton was returning from foot surgery prior to joining New England. Excuses, you may say … perhaps, but all of those factors are undeniable reality. Newton is finally healthy after three straight offseasons of rehabbing from surgery. Wait to see how the Patriots address wide receiver and tight end concerns, but it’s unwise to entirely dismiss a rebound by Newton.

[lawrence-related id=457182]

QB Taylor Heinicke, Washington Football Team: The former Panther parlayed an admirable playoff start into a two-year extension in Washington. He knows the system and the brain trust’s nucleus from his time in Carolina. Alex Smith’s release opens the door for Heinicke to compete for a starting job while having the upper hand against a newcomer who won’t be as familiar with the playbook. It’s unlikely, however, Heinicke is the season-long starter for this offense as an incoming rookie or free-agent acquisition will have that momentum on his side.

Franchise/transition tagged

WR Chris Godwin, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: No one paying attention expected the Buccaneers to allow Godwin to walk into free agency. Look for a stronger showing in 2021 after an injury-pocked season a year ago derailed Godwin’s campaign from nearly the onset. He’s a legit WR2 in all settings, but his upside is capped at that position overall with the bevy of talent around him in the passing game.

WR Allen Robinson, Chicago Bears: It seemed for quite some time that Chicago wouldn’t have the cap space to tag Robinson, but he was indeed slapped with the tender of $17-plus million for 2021. While he would like a long-term deal, and the team may still yet find a way to meet his demands by July 15, there also remains a chance this could get ugly. Robinson doesn’t want to play on the tag, nor must he sign the tender. He then wouldn’t play or get paid, so there’s that, and $17.89 mill is nothing to sneeze at during an offseason in which the salary cap actually goes down. At 27, Robinson could put his John Hancock on the offer sheet and still hit free agency in 2022 young enough to get one last shot at a huge deal when teams will have more money to throw around. Long story short, he mostly is quarterback-proof, but Chicago still needs to put a better product on the field. Whether it is Nick Foles or someone else under center in 2021, A-Rob is a viable PPR WR1 with a hint of downside.

Remains unsigned

  • Quarterbacks: Alex Smith, Mitchell Trubisky, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Jameis Winston, Jacoby Brissett
  • Running backs: Aaron Jones, Chris Carson, Kenyan Drake, Todd Gurley, Duke Johnson, Tevin Coleman, James White, Matt Breida, Brian Hill, Leonard Fournette, Malcolm Brown, Jerick McKinnon, Adrian Peterson, Le’Veon Bell, Kalen Ballage, James Conner, Marlon Mack, Wayne Gallman, Jamaal Williams, Mike Davis
  • Wide receivers: A.J. Green, T.Y. Hilton, Emmanuel Sanders, Larry Fitzgerald, Golden Tate, DeSean Jackson, Adam Humphries, Sammy Watkins, Marvin Jones, John Brown, Breshad Perriman, Corey Davis, Willie Snead, John Ross, Keelan Cole, Kendrick Bourne, Will Fuller, Demarcus Robinson, Antonio Brown, Curtis Samuel, Damiere Byrd, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Nelson Agholor, Rashard Higgins, David Moore, Kenny Golladay
  • Tight ends: Hunter Henry, Rob Gronkowski, Kyle Rudolph, Jared Cook, Tyler Eifert, Gerald Everett, Jordan Reed, Jonnu Smith, Trey Burton

Report: Texans release RB Duke Johnson

The Houston Texans have released running back Duke Johnson, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The Houston Texans continue to make moves to their roster as they enter free agency.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the Texans released running back Duke Johnson.

The former Cleveland Browns running back provided the Texans with 160 rushes for 645 yards and three touchdowns. Johnson also caught 28 passes for 249 yards and a touchdown.

2020 was Johnson’s worst year in terms of availability with 11 games played after playing a full 16-game complement in each of his previous five seasons.

Johnson had no guaranteed money on his contract for 2021, and was set to cost the salary cap-strapped Texans $5.025 million.

The Texans re-signed a former Browns running back in Dontrell Hilliard, who is primarily a special teams contributor.