Peter King predicts the Eagles to defeat Bills in Super Bowl LVIII

Long time columnist Peter King explains on FMIA why he’s picking the Philadelphia #Eagles to defeat the Buffalo Bills in Super Bowl LVIII

Peter King has been around many outstanding NFL teams, so fans and experts should take notice when he goes out on a limb to predict a Super Bowl confidently.

During his Week 1 unveil for Football Morning In America, King previewed the storylines and teams to watch, predicting a Philadelphia Eagles win over the Buffalo Bills in Super Bowl LVIII.

I’m buying Philly stock. I don’t think there’s a clear weakness on the Eagles. Corner depth, maybe. Backup quarterback. But the offensive line is top-three in the league, defensive-front-seven depth is unrivaled and the quarterback is about to take his place with Mahomes and Joe Burrow at the very top of the QB pantheon. There’s no reason why Jalen Hurts doesn’t pick up where he left off in the postseason: 34.7 points per game in three starts, eight TDs produced, one turnover, going shot-for-shot with Mahomes in the Super Bowl. I have a Philly-Dallas NFC title game, which could be epic.

King has San Francisco securing the No. 1 seed in the NFC, followed by Philadelphia, Detroit, Atlanta, Dallas, Seattle, and Green Bay.

The Birds defeat the Packers in the Wild Card move past Detroit in the divisional round, before taking out the 49ers on the road.

In the Super Bowl, King has the Eagles beating the Bills by four, as All-Pro Jalen Hurts earns his first regular season MVP award.

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Geno Smith credits Pete Carroll for Seahawks’ success: ‘He knows how to coach ball’

If you needed another sign of his ascendance, Smith is the lead story on today’s Football Morning in America column by Peter King.

The Seahawks will be facing the Giants this coming week, making for a matchup between the two most-surprising good teams in the NFL this year.

How Seattle started the season 4-3 and is currently leading the NFC West is a complicated story with a lot of moving parts. That said, at the top of the list one has to mention their quarterback play – which accounts for the most shocking progression from any pro since Josh Allen went from being a bottom-end starter to a top-two superstar overnight.

At this point, Geno Smith should no longer have to convince anyone that he’s arrived. His numbers make the case themselves – he leads the league in completion percentage, ranks fourth in QBR and second in PFF grades. If you needed another sign of his ascendance, Smith is the lead story on today’s Football Morning in America column by Peter King.

Smith spoke at length about his time in the desert between starting for the Jets in 2013-2014 and his rise this year in Seattle. He credited coach Pete Carroll with the team’s success this season.

“Our success so far starts with the trust and belief of our head coach. Not many coaches would start two rookies on the offensive line, a rookie running back, two rookie cornerbacks. Not many coaches would be comfortable starting a quarterback who hasn’t played in many years. But Pete does it because he knows what he’s looking at. He’s played young guys before, lots of times. He’s taken chances on players, lots of time. He knows how to coach ball. You can see that this year.”

Carroll was roundly villified for trading Russell Wilson (we are no exception) to the Broncos, but after nearly half a season it’s starting to look like the sharpest move that was made in the NFL this offseason. Not only has Wilson’s game crashed and burned somewhere in the Rocky Mountains, but Smith is far outplaying the guy he spent the last three years backing up.

Smith’s rise has coincided with an incredible performance by a rookie class that may turn out to be even better than the Saints’ 2017 class and Seahawks’ 2012 class, considered the gold standard in this era.

Perhaps the most surprising twist of all is that Carroll has abandoned his greatest weakness: a conservative, run-first philosophy on offense that kept a low ceiling on his teams during the Wilson era. The Seahawks have one of the most pass-first attacks in the league this year and it’s a big factor in Geno’s success as well as the quality returns in the run game.

Heading into Week 8, the whole picture appears to be coming together. Seattle’s defense had a brutal start to the season but they’ve made a dramatic turnaround over the last three weeks. The sky is now the limit for this team.

A lot can happen in the second half of the season, but right now it looks like Carroll is going to have this job as long as he wants it.

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Peter King sheds light on Dolphins’ predraft trade in weekly column

Peter King sheds light on Dolphins’ predraft trade in weekly column

Few things in the 2021 NFL Draft cycle shook things up as significantly as the Miami Dolphins did. Entering the league calendar year in March, the Dolphins owned the No. 3 overall selection courtesy of the Houston Texans and were facing a critical decision:

  • Take someone at No. 3 overall
  • Trade the pick and try to maximize your assets

Of course, what the team did was a hybrid maneuver. The team did indeed trade out of the No. 3 overall pick, but quickly followed that up with a trade back up to No. 6 overall. Some of the more analytic minds in the football space bemoaned the move — suggesting that surrendering a future 1st-round draft selection in order to draft a non-quarterback was a foolish maneuver.

But when you begin to better understand exactly what the Dolphins’ mentality was in making the decision it helps brings things into clarity.

And thanks to NBC Sports’ Peter King and his weekly ‘Football Morning In America’ column, we now have our best peek behind the curtain yet. King spoke with both Chris Grier and Brian Flores about their major decision — and helped solidify that Miami did not ‘settle’ for Jaylen Waddle with the No. 6 pick.

King pieced the entire timeline together, starting on March 4th. That was the day 49ers general manager John Lynch offered three San Francisco first-round picks to move up.

This part of Miami’s trade isn’t breaking news. Neither is Miami putting that offer on ice and proceeding to then speak with a number of other teams across the top-10 landscape to get a feel for any other buyers and, eventually, any other sellers Miami could tap into if they did move back to No. 12 overall.

The Dolphins did, of course, find a seller to move back to San Francisco’s original pick in Philadelphia and the deal was made. But why Miami ultimately made the decision to jump up? That’s an indicator of where the hierarchy of this team thinks they currently are.

“‘One player we knew, we felt very strongly, would be there at six,’ said Flores. The intimation, to me, was that player was Waddle. I got the feeling Grier and Flores were all-in on Waddle, though they never said that specifically.

Grier probably wouldn’t move back to 12 unless he could move back up to get Waddle, or one of the offensive impact players. So when the initial 49er offer came in, Flores was clear what he wanted. “Right away,” said Grier, meaning right after the 49er offer, “Brian was like, ‘If we do this, go down to 12, we need to figure out a way to get back into the top 10.’” — Peter King, Football Morning In America

This is the most important revelation from King’s column and it comes straight from Chris Grier. Miami was never going to make a move that took them out of the strike zone of their preferred target. So viewing those late March trades as two separate deals may not be best indicative of how the Dolphins themselves view the exchange.

For the Dolphins, it was a succession of transactions with a single objective in mind — almost like a three-team trade instead of two separate deals. And when you view their move from No. 3 to No. 6 as a single collective transaction, the perspective changes. Miami got their guy all the same and in doing so they saved on financials and added multiple future picks in the first three rounds of future NFL Drafts.

Peter King believes it’s ‘likely’ Jameis Winston leaves Buccaneers in free agency

Peter King of NBC Sports believes Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston could very well end up playing elsewhere in 2020.

Could it truly be the end of the Jameis Winston era in Tampa Bay?

Peter King of NBC Sports, who has really been the gift that keeps on giving this offseason when it comes to his hot takes on the Bucs, wrote about quarterback Jameis Winston again in his Football Morning In America column today, and tried to figure out where the turnover-prone QB could wind up once free agency hits.

Per King:

“Where will everyone land? I kept asking people here about the fate of Jameis Winston, and I couldn’t find a landing spot for him. I doubt sincerely he’d be a starter on opening day 2020 if he leaves Tampa (which is likely), but where would/could he be a backup?”

King goes on to speculate about which teams could use Winston’s services once the draft comes and goes. The rumors about Winston being out in Tampa Bay seem to be coming in just as fast as those linking Tom Brady to the Bucs. Remember, too, that King made this observation about head coach Bruce Arians and his demeanor towards his quarterback as the season wore on.

Could Winston be out and Brady in?

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