Dan Campbell suggests Lions are hunting for a pass-rusher (Maxx Crosby?) in a trade

The Lions feel like they’re on the verge of a blockbuster trade.

For all intents and purposes, the Detroit Lions are a bona fide Super Bowl favorite. They are easily the best and most complete team in the NFC. But every top-flight contender could still use a little help. The Lions, now without star pass-rusher Aidan Hutchinson for the season, are no different.

That’s why it was eye-opening to see Lions head coach Dan Campbell allude to the possibility of Detroit making a big trade over the next couple of weeks.

In an appearance on Detroit sports radio station 97.1 The Ticket, Campbell hinted at the Lions “needing a little bit [more pressure]. As the Lions peruse their options, Campbell maintained that people they’ve brought in for try-outs could also always be a possibility.

But the obvious elephant in the room would be taking a big swing in a potential Super Bowl year. You know, a home run like Las Vegas Raiders All-Pro Maxx Crosby, who happens to be a Michigan native:

https://twitter.com/DetroitOnLion/status/1848544980266049886

I firmly believe that the Lions have enough if they want to go all the way. Because of their dominant offensive line, they have an unstoppable offense no one has an answer for. And even without Hutchinson, they have enough defensive playmakers to flip a big game.

With that said, Detroit’s core is already locked up for the foreseeable future. Now would be the time to take a calculated risk and bring in a superstar to a heavyweight team. Can you imagine someone like Crosby in Detroit wreaking havoc off the edge? Furthermore, can you imagine him teaming up with Hutchinson next year?

If the Lions make a move — and it sure seems like they will — that’s the outcome I’m rooting for.

Aaron Rodgers unsurprisingly took a shot at Jets media after the team’s SNF loss to the Steelers

Aaron Rodgers will always have silly priorities.

Aaron Rodgers is one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time. At his various peaks — namely, his four MVP awards — he felt impossible to defend. Based on his unserious approach and reaction to the New York Jets’ disappointing 2-5 start, we’ve likely seen the clear end of any consistent Rodgers dominance. Adding Davante Adams was always going to be a failed mask.

After the Jets took a 37-15 loss on the chin from Russell Wilson’s Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday night, Rodgers was asked about how he and his teammates can keep morale up as New York’s season starts circling the drain.

Unsurprisingly, rather than take any responsibility for throwing six interceptions in the Jets’ four-game losing streak, Rodgers took a shot at the media for (rightfully) not believing in his team:

The absolute irony of this kind of statement to come from Rodgers. We are talking about a guy who probably listens to what people say about him and his team more than anyone while constantly claiming that “actually, he doesn’t care.” And for Rodgers to say this as the Jets’ season officially goes off the rails is vintage Rodgers. He would likely always be the first NFL player, I’d guess, who would take a shot at the press over a mess of his own doing.

Everyone else is always the enemy. He is never at fault. He is special, and everyone else only need acknowledge that. Internal retrospection seemingly just does not exist in his heart.

And that, dearest readers, is why the Jets’ tailspin with the quarterback they sold their soul for will likely continue indefinitely.

Fox’s weird hologram Tom Brady added nothing useful to its broadcast just like the real Tom Brady

Fox’s Tom Brady hologram was just as useless and boring as the real one.

The more you listen to Tom Brady analyze Fox’s No. 1 NFL game live every week, the more you wonder why he’s getting paid nearly $400 million over 10 years to offer milquetoast critiques that add nothing noteworthy to the broadcast. And when considering Brady’s limitations as an announcer now that he’s a co-owner of the Las Vegas Raiders, you really start to question how thoughtless giant corporations can be when handing out generational wealth by the tenfold.

But gosh dang it, Fox made Brady the mediocre face of their pro football coverage, and they’re clearly going to try to get their money’s worth at all possible costs. Even if their brazen uses for his broadcast “talents” are silly, weird, useless, and seemingly shoe-horned into their coverage without a second thought.

That’s exactly what I thought of when I saw Fox’s NFL studio show debut a hologram Brady (yes, really) “live” right next to Terry Bradshaw, Jimmy Johnson, and the rest of the gang.

(Jeff Goldblum in a movie about prehistoric animals voice.)

Seriously, did no one stop to think about whether they should do this when they realized they could?

Look, again, I get it. Fox paid a retired Brady nearly as much money as an active Patrick Mahomes to simply talk about football. The network is probably and understandably looking for returns on its investment everywhere. But this insistence on making the NFL’s preeminent boring Wonder Bread personality such a fixture will inevitably lead to unremarkable little episodes like this.

Fox is trying to make Brady — the real one and the fuzzy virtual one — much more interesting than he really is, and we all have to suffer for it as a result.

Amari Cooper hilariously asked for help after a Bills pre-snap audible and still scored a touchdown

Amari Cooper didn’t know the Bills’ playbook at all and it didn’t matter.

In due time, the Buffalo Bills’ recent trade acquisition, Amari Cooper, and franchise quarterback Josh Allen will likely have impeccable chemistry. Both the receiver and quarterback are simply too talented not to be on the same page for long.

But for now, Cooper is still acclimating to Buffalo, learning the playbook, and trying to ingratiate himself into an AFC heavyweight’s roster mix.

We saw a perfect example of this early in the third quarter during the Bills’ battle with the Tennessee Titans on Sunday.

With the Bills facing a second-and-long in the red zone, it appeared that Cooper didn’t know what route to run from the slot after Allen audibled to a different play. You could even see a confused Cooper asking rookie playmaker Keon Coleman for help.

Cooper amazingly wound up scoring his first Bills touchdown on the sequence anyway, but it’s unclear whether Coleman successfully pointed him in the right direction:

Note to self: Ad-libbing often works! Note to star receivers like Cooper: Improv with confidence usually works out, too!

Jerod Mayo questioned the Patriots’ ‘soft’ character in deflating rant after blowout London loss

Jerod Mayo is so disappointed with the terrible Patriots.

To say the New England Patriots are struggling in Jerod Mayo’s first season as coach would be an understatement. Through seven games, the Patriots are just 1-6. They have the NFL’s second-worst scoring offense at less than 14 points per game, and they have a bottom-third scoring defense to boot.

They genuinely don’t do anything well.

The Patriots’ issues were particularly glaring during Sunday’s nondescript 32-16 blowout loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars in London. That’s because the Jaguars — who could be on the verge of firing Doug Pederson at any moment — are no picture of stability, either. And yet, Trevor Lawrence and Co. had their way with the Patriots, who provided little visible resistance for most of the game.

After the loss, Mayo refused to let the Patriots roost in their listless failure. He called them out for being “soft” across the board in a defeated rant:

Mayo makes a good point, but at a certain point, a spade is a spade.

With Christian Barmore out for the season and Matthew Judon in Atlanta, the once-stout Patriots’ defense is in tatters. They’re a long way away from being a functional, difference-making unit. On offense, Drake Maye has promise, but he’s a rookie quarterback surrounded by one of the NFL’s worst supporting casts from top to bottom.

It’s frankly remarkable that the awful (and rebuilding) Patriots even have a win at all at this point in the season. So, I guess, from this respect, kudos to Mayo for still coaching his team hard. He’s doing his job.

Maybe it’ll pay off in the future, though it likely won’t lead to anything now.

Browns fans loudly booed Deshaun Watson during his home intro as benching talks heat up

Browns fans are so done with Deshaun Watson.

As Deshaun Watson, once accused by more than 20 women of sexual misconduct in what the NFL would later characterize as “predatory behavior,” turns in one of the worst-quarterbacked seasons in league history, talks about benching the Cleveland Brown have only started to heat up.

Of course, Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski continues to insist Watson will remain the starter, much to the chagrin and frustration of many people who call Cleveland home. It’s also worth noting that the Browns brought this Watson fiasco upon themselves, and it’s all completely deserved.

Before the Browns’ matchup with the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday, Cleveland home fans loudly voiced their displeasure with Watson’s struggles.

How? They really booed him during his introduction. Oof:

I think it’s safe to say that if Browns fans had a say in the Watson starter situation, he probably would’ve been on the bench a long time ago. Alas, they’ll probably have to wait a while before Stefanski (or Browns ownership) actually pulls the plug.

Troy Aikman ripped Cowboys WRs’ ‘lazy’ route-running by using Lamar Jackson’s Ravens as a benchmark (yes, really)

Troy Aikman hates the Cowboys’ receivers and loves the Ravens’ guys. What in the world???

Nailing down one definitive issue for the Dallas Cowboys in a disappointing 3-3 start seems a tad reductive. After an MVP-caliber 2023 campaign, Dak Prescott is having one of the worst seasons of his career. The Dallas defense is allowing an astonishing 28 points per game. And irrational, childish owner Jerry Jones, once again faced with the prospect of building a top-heavy team for which he paid way too much money, is lashing out.

But if there is one underlying Cowboys issue too few people are talking about, it’s probably the Dallas receivers’ consistently sluggish approach to their job.

At least, according to Cowboys legend (and ESPN’s lead NFL color analyst) Troy Aikman.

In a Dallas morning sports radio appearance on 96.7 The Ticket on Thursday, Aikman claimed that Cowboys receivers — including All-Pro CeeDee Lamb — have been letting Prescott and the rest of the offense down. How? Aikman believes that the Cowboys’ main playmakers are running “terrible routes” and have even been “lazy” while running off the line of scrimmage at the snap.

Per Aikman, this sort of approach lends itself to bad, losing habits and helps explain why the Cowboys have looked so especially uninspired:

https://twitter.com/jonmachota/status/1846909813164319125

The hapless Cowboys aside, Aikman mentioned something else that I thought was rather interesting. To tear the Dallas receivers down, Aikman used the Baltimore Ravens — a team once famous for forcing Lamar Jackson to put on a red cape just to see any semblance of success — as a leading example to follow. Most of it, per Aikman, is, in general, a foundational approach to running hard and crisp routes by guys like Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman.

That means a lot to me.

I mean … we’ve come so far, haven’t we? No wonder it feels like Jackson is on track for a second consecutive MVP award. He’s finally getting consistent help, and he can shine even more when he doesn’t have to do it all! Who would’ve thought quarterbacks need consistent support to be special? (Everyone.)

Take notes, Cowboys receivers. Be more like the Ravens. Be the receiver your quarterback needs you to be. And hey, if/when that happens, maybe one day your guy will play like an MVP again like Jackson.

Justin Fields admitted he wasn’t good enough to keep Russell Wilson from taking his job (and he’s right)

Justin Fields didn’t lie to himself about why he lost his Steelers job.

At face value, the Pittsburgh Steelers benching Justin Fields for Russell Wilson doesn’t make much sense. While Fields hasn’t played at all All-Pro-caliber level as a quarterback, Pittsburgh is currently tied for first place in the AFC North and is a firm playoff contender.

Therein lies the crux of the issue.

Fields didn’t have to play like an All-Pro to justify keeping his job over, mind you, the guy who was supposed to start in the first place before a calf injury. No, no. Fields had to be above average to show that he was better as a difference-making quarterback. That’s all.

And he wasn’t. As Fields explained on Thursday morning, he knows that, too. Which is why he wasn’t surprised to get benched:

https://twitter.com/mikedefabo/status/1846932509654970421

Kudos to Fields for admitting the truth because the numbers don’t lie.

Through six starts, Fields was just 16th in the NFL in expected points added (EPA) and completion percentage over expected (CPOE), per RBDSM.com. After a strong first three games centered around his being an athletic game manager, the more Fields got aggressive, the more mistake-prone he was. He had an 8.6 percent sack rate (sacks are a quarterback stat!) and six turnover-worthy plays (!) as the Steelers asked him to dial it up a notch over his last three starts, which only hurt them.

And in the end, while Fields remains an incredibly electric runner, his passing leaves a lot to be desired. Over 200 net combined passing yards over his last two Steelers starts does not cut it in the NFL in 2024. That is not a sustainable offense for any purported contender. It’s just a fact.

Unless you want to attribute Pittsburgh’s four victories so far to #QBWinz, you’re picking cherries for Fields.

None of this is to say that Wilson will necessarily be meaningfully better than Wilson. We all saw what went wrong with the Denver Broncos. Wilson is a shell of what he once was — a nine-time Pro Bowler. Even still, all of Wilson’s passing production in 2023 was noticeably better than Fields and much more in line with what these Steelers need if they want to compete with the AFC’s heavyweights.

It is a dimension Fields simply cannot match, even on his best days.

So, does it suck for Fields that he got benched with the Steelers mostly humming along? Yes. You feel for him. But did he justify keeping his job for a pseudo-contender in a playoff push with his play?

No, and that’s why we’ll finally see Russell Wilson take real NFL snaps in a black and gold uniform.

Amari Cooper trade grades: Who won the Bills and Browns deal?

Breaking down the blockbuster Amari Cooper trade that gives Josh Allen a star receiver again.

We’re still weeks away from the NFL trade deadline, and the trades for star playmakers are already flying in.

After the New York Jets traded for Davante Adams from the fledgling Las Vegas Raiders early Tuesday morning, the Buffalo Bills arguably one-upped their AFC East rivals by acquiring Amari Cooper from the Cleveland Browns.

This is a big deal for Cooper, who escapes the NFL’s worst quarterback situation. It’s even bigger for Josh Allen, who desperately needed a go-to playmaker on a Bills team that is still rightfully dreaming of winning the Super Bowl.

Let’s break it all down and hand out some grades.

The details

  • Bills get: WR Amari Cooper, a 2025 sixth-round draft pick
  • Browns get: A 2025 third-round draft pick, a 2026 seventh-round draft pick

https://twitter.com/RapSheet/status/1846254022094635130

Buffalo Bills

Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The Bills are 4-2 and sitting in a comfortable first place in the AFC East. But they’ve shown a lot more cracks in the armor than in the past — especially on offense.

While Josh Allen remains exceptional, Buffalo didn’t have a “gotta have it” playmaker in the wake of Stefon Diggs’ departure in the offseason. While the Bills remained a strong playoff contender, it would’ve been silly to assume this set-up could’ve help them overcome actual AFC heavyweights in the postseason.

Enter Cooper, Allen’s new best friend.

A five-time Pro Bowler, Cooper has languished in the Browns’ morose offense over the last few seasons. Now, he gets one of the NFL’s premier quarterbacks going out of his way to find him downfield 10-15 times a game. He gives Buffalo a much-needed dimension to really compete with the big boys and pursue the organization’s first-ever Lombardi Trophy in earnest again.

The 30-year-old Cooper is technically a rental to the Bills, as he is set to be an unrestricted free agent this spring. But it’s worth sending off a Day 2 draft pick for a rental as a team with legitimate championship aspirations.

Grade: A

Cleveland Browns

Oct 6, 2024; Landover, Maryland, USA; Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson (4) waits for a play during the fourth quarter against the Washington Commanders at NorthWest Stadium.
Peter Casey-Imagn Images

I can’t believe the Browns finally waved the white towel. Kevin Stefanski’s steadfast refusal to bench Deshaun Watson sure made it seem like Cleveland was hell-bent on going down with the ship with a quarterback once accused of sexual misconduct by more than 20 women in what the NFL would later characterize as “predatory behavior.”

Which, to be clear, these pitiful Browns should’ve always been sellers. Kudos to them for recouping great high-end value for a slightly older playmaker that they weren’t going to resign anyway.

Of course, the Browns’ drafting history suggests the third-rounder they get from the Cooper trade won’t turn into a meaningful player. (Sorry, Browns fans.) But it’s always better to get quality assets for the future rather than not.

For once, Cleveland did something smart compared to the last few years.

Grade: A

Haason Reddick outsmarted the Jets in a way that other NFL stars should really pay attention to

Haason Reddick forcing a Jets trade gives unhappy NFL stars a blueprint.

From a financial perspective, NFL players are technically among the most powerless professional athletes of any of the major American sports.

Haason Reddick may have just changed everything for the better.

On Tuesday morning, after an extended contract holdout where Reddick never even made a single New York Jets practice appearance, the team granted the disgruntled pass-rusher permission to seek a trade and potentially leave Gang Green within a short 12-hour window.

The news comes on the heels of Reddick refusing to give the Jets what they want after they traded for him without giving him the massive contract extension he’s seeking and without giving him any indication they would compensate him how he wanted in the immediate future.

Needless to say, Reddick’s steadfast refusal to even be around the Jets being rewarded with a potential trade should be seen as a massive victory for any unhappy NFL stars who find themselves backed into a corner.

It might change how future similar situations like this are handled altogether:

At the risk of beating a dead horse, everyone knows that pro football is a brutal game. Players’ careers and lives can be shifted on a whim.

One unlucky slip on the turf.

One routine hit taken in the wrong place at the wrong time.

A leg planted in the ground being pushed in the direction it isn’t supposed to go.

As such, there’s a reason most NFL contracts aren’t fully guaranteed. Most front-office people around the league include this fail-safe for their franchise players just in case the worst-case scenario happens. From a team perspective, it would be an outright disaster to be financially committed long-term to an unhealthy superstar who was a shell of himself … right?

But let’s not pretend this setup is player-friendly. It never has been. Let’s not pretend that difference-making NFL players — the people who actually bring money in for the league as the motivating factor for fans to watch in the first place — don’t deserve their fair share of the pot. And should an NFL star prove trustworthy, there are so many different clauses, like the draconian franchise tag, that sometimes make it impossible for some guys to make what they’re worth and have complete professional mobility during the peak earning years of their careers.

Or, in Reddick’s case, he had to eat millions of dollars in fines just because he wouldn’t give the Jets what they wanted. Never mind that they wouldn’t give him what he wanted — the NFL at large does not care about what players want.

Their concerns have almost always come second … unless they force the issue like Reddick.

So, let’s not get this twisted. Over the last few months, I saw a lot of overarching statements about how Reddick was only hurting himself with his “stupid” or “foolish” holdout. His own agency fired him for his apparent stubbornness. The common idea was that Reddick should stop being foolish, wave the white towel, be a team player, and hope the Jets, eventually, reward his patience. It was the definition of anti-player sentiment, and it made me feel even worse for guys like him.

Never mind that Reddick is 30 and likely awaiting the last major payday of his playing career. A payday that might not come if he gets injured. (His concerns don’t matter, remember?) Good for Reddick for getting the Jets to relent because it sets a new precedent.

Of course, not everyone will be able to replicate Reddick’s strategy.

An already wealthy two-time Pro Bowler, Reddick could afford to take a significant hit to his wallet in the name of a larger overall contract. Plus, he had to be patient and indignant enough to ignore the Jets any time they tried to win the battle of public pressure. Reddick’s strategy took a good mix of established security and steadfast audacity at the same time.

But it worked. That’s what’s most important here. Reddick found a hint of whatever leverage he could muster, and he squeezed it relentlessly until the Jets were forced to say “uncle.” There’s taking advantage of a desperate team, and there’s finding an opening at all costs. Reddick managed to do both.

Let his ordeal be an excellent lesson to any irritated NFL stars seeking well-deserved compensation now and in the future.

You’re not as powerless as you think if you’re literally willing to put in the time.

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