Josh Allen seemingly went out of his way to bury the hatchet with Stefon Diggs in postgame handshake

What a classy exchange between Josh Allen and Stefon Diggs.

The underlying storyline to the Buffalo Bills’ battle with the Houston Texans in Week 5 was Stefon Diggs’ “revenge” game. Diggs was traded from the Bills to the Texans in the offseason after qualifying for a Pro Bowl in four consecutive seasons with Buffalo. The most notable point of that deal was Diggs’ relationship with star quarterback Josh Allen, who some have assumed wasn’t always all sunshine and rainbows.

And while the Texans would get the last laugh in a win after some truly horrific Bills’ clock management, it didn’t look like Allen and Diggs harbored any notable resentment toward each other after the game.

As everyone on the Bills and Texans talked on the field after the fact, it sure seemed like Allen went out of his way to find Diggs and greet him:

If there were any ill feelings between these two superstars, you wouldn’t be able to tell based on this business-like exchange. Finally, both the Bills and Diggs can move on.

The Bills’ clock management on their weirdly aggressive last possession was foolish coaching

What on Earth was the Bills’ Sean McDermott thinking here?

After what felt like a tough slog for most of the afternoon, the Buffalo Bills valiantly fought back against the Houston Texans on Sunday.

At one point, the Bills faced a 20-3 deficit before battling all the way back to knot things up at 20-20 in the final minutes. And after the Buffalo defense got off the field in the last minute, Josh Allen and the Bills’ offense probably should’ve just played for overtime while starting against the shadow of their goal line. Especially given that there were only 32 seconds left and Buffalo had no timeouts.

Instead, offensive coordinator Joe Brady and head coach Sean McDermott gave Allen the green light to launch three straight deep passes. All were incomplete, and Buffalo would punt after a three-and-out with 16 seconds left on the clock:

What was the plan here?

That was more than enough time for the Texans to set up a long 59-yard game-winning field goal for kicker Ka’Imi Fairbain. It was never in doubt:

Again, I’m just so confounded by what Brady and McDermott were thinking in that last sequence.

The likelihood of the Bills mounting an extremely long scoring drive with just over 30 seconds on the clock and no timeouts was minimal. I appreciate general aggressiveness from coaches when the situation calls for it. That moment called for playing for overtime rather than gifting the Texans a short field and another chance to win it. You don’t go for the kill when missing will hurt you in the worst possible way.

It was coaching mismanagement of the highest order and a mistake the Bills will likely think about for weeks.

Lamar Jackson’s magical series of moves on 4th-quarter TD pass has to be seen to be believed

LAMAR JACKSON IS A WIZARD!

By now, we’re well accustomed to Lamar Jackson pulling off incredible wizardry for the Baltimore Ravens. There’s a reason the superstar quarterback has two MVP honors to his name.

But Jackson’s work on Sunday afternoon against the Cincinnati Bengals might have taken the cake.

With Baltimore trying to mount a late fourth-quarter rally in a shootout, Jackson bobbled the snap on a second-and-goal play. However, it didn’t impede him from accomplishing anything. Instead, Jackson scrambled right, broke the tackle of Bengals defensive end Sam Hubbard, and launched a perfect off-platform dime into the end zone to tight end Isaiah Likely while veering out of bounds.

Jackson is truly the closest thing we have to Houdini in professional football:

Announcer Kevin Harlan’s call of the play was even better:

Every part of this magical touchdown pass sequence boggles the mind. From the bobbled snap to the broken tackle on a solid defender to the perfect touchdown pass from a less-than-ideal position. It’s all so sublime from one of the best quarterbacks in the game.

Remarkable plays like this make you think Jackson might even win his third MVP this year. Don’t rule it out.

Jaguars RB Tank Bigsby lived up to his nickname on an unbelievably powerful TD run

Jaguars RB Tank Bigsby looked like an actual tank on this awesome run.

Entering Sunday, the winless Jacksonville Jaguars looked like the NFL’s worst team in 2024. It got so frustrating for Jacksonville that Trevor Lawrence seemingly argued with his own receiver, Gabe Davis, on the sideline early on against the Indianapolis Colts.

Well, it’s funny how quickly matters can shift on a dime in this league.

After early struggles, the Jaguars opened the floodgates on the Colts, accumulating 34 points and over 450 yards of offense from the second to fourth quarter. Jacksonville’s dominance was best epitomized by this bruising “Tank” Bigsby touchdown run.

Talk about living up to your nickname in the best possible way:

I’m sorry, did Bigsby just break four tackles after taking ON contact?

Are the Jaguars back? I’m not sure yet, but they definitely haven’t thrown in the towel if runs like this are any indication.

Caleb Williams’ beautiful deep TD pass to D.J. Moore shows how quickly the Bears QB has grown

Caleb Williams already looks so mature and confident.

Through the first month of the 2024 NFL season, it would’ve been fair to describe Caleb Williams’ play as a work in progress. Overall, the Chicago Bears offense struggled to consistently gain meaningful traction, even though Williams really did make meaningful progress each week.

All of that changed during a barnstorming offensive performance against the Carolina Panthers in Week 5.

In the first half alone, the Bears scored a touchdown on four of six possessions. Williams, in particular, was very sharp, staying consistently in rhythm while getting big chunk plays when he could.

With the Bears looking for a final first-half dagger, Williams saved his best of the first half for last on a beautiful deep touchdown pass to D.J. Moore:

Everything about Williams’ rapid growth was on display here. What began as play design for veteran Keenan Allen saw Williams simply work through his progressions to drop a dime in the bucket to Moore. It was the definition of perfect quarterbacking.

If this is how Williams grows through just five games, imagine how he’ll look at the end of the year.

Bills-Texans ref mistakenly said that Josh Allen fumbled the basketball in a hilarious gaffe

A reminder that Josh Allen is NOT a superstar basketball player.

Let the record show that Josh Allen is a superstar NFL quarterback, as he plays football, not basketball, in the NBA. This is a pretty well-known fact for anyone who follows American sports, really.

But it was apparently lost on referee Clay Martin for a second during the Buffalo Bills’ matchup with the Houston Texans on Sunday.

As Allen ran out of bounds and seemingly fumbled the ball while getting tackled by a Houston defender, Martin clarified that Allen actually didn’t “fumble the basketball” before quickly correcting himself.

Uh, wrong sport, man. There’s no court anywhere in sight, either.

It happens, right?

Let’s not bury the lede here, though. Imagine Allen creating space for himself on a jumper in isolation. Don’t tell me you can’t see it. Martin might be onto something!

Sam Darnold, Geno Smith, and Baker Mayfield prove how bad teams drag down good quarterbacks

Sam Darnold, Geno Smith, and Baker Mayfield’s success is a referendum on awful NFL teams.

In the NFL, there’s still something of a “chicken before the egg” theory when it comes to high-profile young quarterbacks.

When we talk about a quarterback’s hopeful success, we still mainly discuss this possibility in terms of them being incompetent or their organization letting them down. The grey area is minimal if seldom acknowledged in the first place. While there are exceptions, there is often a significant distinction between the two points, creating a polarizing conversation about what it takes to teach a quarterback to swim by themselves. In a recent context, Bryce Young’s benching with the Carolina Panthers comes to mind the most along these lines.

With the undeniable recent success of Sam Darnold on the Minnesota Vikings, Geno Smith on the Seattle Seahawks, and Baker Mayfield on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, we can no longer ignore what should be a well-accepted fact.

In the overwhelming majority of cases, if a highly drafted young quarterback fails on their first NFL team, the franchise deserves the most blame, not the passer.

Each of Darnold’s, Smith’s, and Mayfield’s individual stories as quarterbacks in the NFL is an indictment of the all-too-common development cycle in the league.

Smith was never a quote-unquote “generational” quarterback prospect on paper. A standout with West Virginia in the early 2010s, the Jets decided to make Smith their hopeful face of the future with only an early 2013 second-round pick for a reason.

As accurate and poised as Smith could be, he tended to lock onto his first reads. This is not a fatal flaw for young players, per se, as long as they get the breathing room to work things out in a gradual manner. At the tail end of the failing Rex Ryan era, the Jets weren’t interested in letting Smith come along as slowly as he needed. They threw him into the fire in an indiscriminate fashion.

While he still showed occasional flashes, Smith committed 37 turnovers (34 interceptions, three fumbles) in his first two seasons before an unceremonious benching.

At this inexact moment, Smith began working as a de facto understudy to more established NFL veterans like Eli Manning and Russell Wilson, hoping that, one day, he’d get another golden opportunity to show he belonged.

When the New York Jets selected Darnold at No. 3 overall in the 2018 NFL Draft, the former USC product was described as a pro-ready player. He just needed time and support to work out some of his kinks. The Jets, as is their tradition, once again never had an abundance of time or patience. When it came to supporting Darnold, his rookie year supporting cast featured “No. 1” running back Bilal Powell (yikes), “No. 1” receiver Robbie Chosen (oof), and overmatched offensive coordinator Jeremy Bates, a younger coaching mind who had little experience as a lead assistant and had never been at the helm of a top-flight offense.

The results were predictable. Within three years, Darnold would no longer wear Jets green every Sunday and would have to work on his still-developing skills as a journeyman.

Another well-touted selection from 2018, the former No. 1 overall pick in Mayfield was supposed to be the Cleveland Browns’ savior. It seemed like he’d live up to these lofty expectations for a time. Down the stretch of the Browns’ 2018 campaign, Mayfield was one of pro football’s most efficient and effective quarterbacks, as he played them into borderline playoff contention and Cleveland’s best regular-season record in over a decade.

It was, quite literally, really all downhill from here.

When Mayfield struggled to begin 2019, the Browns’ unsurprising vacuum of leadership, led by then-coach Freddie Kitchens, let his issues snowball. In an obvious place of frustration, Mayfield was as up and down as they came. He’d enjoy a solid 2020 rebound campaign en route to the Browns’ first playoff win in over a quarter-century before Cleveland decided Mayfield wasn’t worth the trouble anymore after a meager 2021, and it cast him off without much thought. Their replacement choice? Deshaun Watson, who once faced more than 20 allegations of sexual misconduct in what the NFL would later characterize as “predatory behavior,” and who is now arguably the worst quarterback in Browns history.

For emphasis: in Browns’ history. Let that sink in.

These days, moribund franchises like the Jets and Browns couldn’t look any more stupid or shortsighted when it comes to these respective quarterbacks. And they singlehandedly gave us a referendum on the conversation of young quarterback success.

Smith is a glorified football surgeon, the definition of poise and accuracy. He’s now qualified for two consecutive Pro Bowls as the Seattle Seahawks’ starter and, at age 33, is aging like a fine wine at the helm of one of the NFL’s sleeper championship contenders. It is a pleasure to watch him spray around deep completions to Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf all over the field without blinking. Smith has Seattle’s full vote of confidence, and it shows.

Good thing he never wrote his haters back:

After bouncing around himself, Darnold got the keys to drive the Minnesota Vikings’ car this year following J.J. McCarthy’s meniscus tear. Through four games, Darnold leads all qualified passers in passer rating and passing touchdowns as one of the league’s leading MVP candidates. That’s what life is like with great coaches like Kevin O’Connell, who give you an opportunity to stand on your own two feet and thrive.

As for Mayfield, well, he’s driving the Buccaneers’ bus as a veritable fiery sparkplug. One year after taking Tampa Bay to another NFC South division title, Mayfield has the Buccaneers humming along as an NFC superpower. I’d even venture to say that Mayfield has just … kind of picked up where he left off during his most successful Browns seasons. Except this time, the Buccaneers have no interest in tearing him down and replacing him because they have tangible logic and reason.

So, what does come first in the NFL’s chicken or egg debate?

Is it really that struggling young quarterbacks don’t belong at the highest level of football? Or is it more about brazen organizations that are ill-equipped to put their players in an optimal position to succeed?

After watching Darnold, Smith, and Mayfield light up the league with quality infrastructure around them in place, I think it’s safe to say that a quarterback bust is much more on franchises who have no earthly idea what they’re doing with the most important position in American sports.

Which is a good lesson for all of us on another front.

The next time we want to write off a seemingly young, inept quarterback, let’s let things play out. Let’s give them a chance to rewrite their story somewhere else. Chances are, their first few uneven chapters were defined by impatient football nitwits who never gave them a life raft in the first place.

Nikola Jokic candidly explained why losing to Team USA at Paris Olympics was the ‘biggest defeat’ of his career so far

Nikola Jokic is a proud Serbian first and NBA superstar second.

As much as Nikola Jokic unquestionably loves playing for the Denver Nuggets and his teammates, let no one ever doubt that he cares a lot more about Team Serbia. For as dominant as the three-time NBA MVP is, when it comes to professional basketball, he’s definitely a proud Serbian first and an NBA superstar second.

With Jokic’s Nuggets visiting Abu Dhabi for a preseason doubleheader with the reigning NBA champion Boston Celtics this weekend, the big man was asked a question about his Serbian Paris Olympics experience.

According to Serbian news outlet B92 Sport, Jokic characterized Serbia’s gut-wrenching, close defeat to Team USA in the Olympic semifinals as the “biggest defeat” of his career.

Below is a rough translation of Jokic’s explanation in Serbian via B92 Sport:

“It was a good game. Probably the biggest defeat in my [Jokic’s] career so far. A big chance, but there… In the end, they beat us. Some people will see it as a normal defeat, but for those of us who played, it must have been the hardest defeat in our career.”

Again, none of this is surprising.

Jokic has already seen his fair share of painful NBA defeats — last year’s Game 7 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round of the playoffs comes to mind as the most recent example. But compared to Serbia, the place where he was raised and all of his loved ones are from, the Nuggets are just another American professional sports franchise.

Ask someone like Kevin Durant what he thinks about playing for Team USA compared to any of his NBA stops. I’d imagine his likely inevitable patriotic answer would be much of the same.

This does not mean Jokic doesn’t have love for Nuggets partners like Jamal Murray, who he has basically played with his entire career. It would be silly to assert he doesn’t care about the Nuggets at all. They are, after all, his conduit to global fame and an athletic dream realized.

This just means playing for his country probably means a lot more. And I think we can all relate to that.

Tyreek Hill’s random trade tweet sparked wild speculation about a Dolphins deal

Is Tyreek Hill on the move? Did the Dolphins just get a QB? Or is he just trolling?

As rumors swirl about a Davante Adams trade from the Las Vegas Raiders after his request, Miami Dolphins superstar Tyreek Hill might have just dropped another bombshell on the hectic NFL news cycle.

On Wednesday, the fellow perennial All-Pro receiver fired off a random tweet about how he “woke up” to “exciting” trade news without (understandably) elaborating upon anything else.

Of course, Hill’s tweet could mean anything.

It might mean that the Dolphins — who are struggling offensively in Tua Tagovailoa’s absence — acquired a new starting quarterback for the time being. This wouldn’t be surprising at all after seeing how frustrated Mike McDaniel was during Monday night’s loss.

It could also be the drastic, opposite end of the spectrum. It could mean Hill, who is 30, got dealt away himself to a receiver-needy team. That would be much more shocking, especially if it were his former squad in the ailing Kansas City Chiefs.

And in the funniest twist, Hill could also be trolling and just making a reference to his fantasy team. That would admittedly be very anti-climatic but also still quite amusing:

Naturally, NFL fans came to all sorts of conclusions about what Hill’s trade reference meant.

Davante Adams’ trade request is somehow the final straw for Damian Lillard’s Raiders fandom

It’s shocking it took this long for Damian Lillard to consider giving up on the Raiders.

As a Bay Area native, Milwaukee Bucks superstar Damian Lillard has been a long-time Las Vegas Raiders fan. And, to put it lightly, he’s endured so much. A blowout loss in Super Bowl 37. From JaMarcus Russell to Derek Carr, so many quarterbacks who either failed or just petered out. Trading Khalil Mack in his prime. A move from classic Oakland to Nevada. Oh, and you know, all the last-place seasons over the years.

Yet, somehow, the Raiders potentially trading Davante Adams would be the last straw in Lillard’s fandom. Talk about a patient fan.

In what I imagine is a common feeling right now among any remaining Raiders fans, Lillard claimed that the franchise trading an All-Pro caliber receiver would have him finally give up on his favorite football team:

Listen, man, I don’t begrudge any Raiders fan who feels like this. They have put their fans through the wringer for decades. Trading Adams might be the right long-term move for Las Vegas, but that wouldn’t necessarily take away the immediate sting of losing someone who made fans’ experience with the team worth watching. Because, you know, the prospect of being better in the future with more draft capital isn’t necessarily guaranteed.

Lillard and probably all Raiders fans have simply had enough.