Sunday Game Recaps – Week 8

Week 8 Sunday is in the books and teams seem less settled than last week.

This was the week of the injured quarterback and a batch of MRI’s on Monday will determine who shows up next Sunday. We’re seeing a shift in the NFL with the 49ers looking like a team that peaked too early. The flu is hitting the NFL and that explains, assumedly, why the Chiefs lost to the Broncos after beating them 16 times in a row. And Patrick Mahomes did not throw a touchdown. And… and… she wasn’t there.

The AFC now has a 6-2 team at the top of every division so the playoffs are still wide open. The Eagles keep winning, but seem challenged at first before finally locking in the win. The NFC South doesn’t have a winning record, again. There’s still a lot of football left to play, but injuries keep changing rosters and there’s not a lot of teams that spawn confidence that they are as good as their record. There are several teams that are easily as bad as their record.

Sunday Game Recaps – Week 7

Week 6 fantasy game recaps

With six teams on bye, fantasy teams had to stretch to make starting lineups but there were numerous players that came through with high fantasy points. Scoring was higher with seven teams breeching 30 points and only the Commanders and Lions failed to break ten points. Each week serves up a few upsets and the Lions, Bills, and Dolphins dropped in the standings.

There are no byes next week, so everyone is back to full strength. And it appears that amazingly no major fantasy players suffered an injury that impacts Week 8.

Sunday Game Recaps – Week 6

Quick rundown of the relevant fantasy stats from each Week 6 Sunday game.

Not a great weekend. Mostly ugly, low-scoring, and filled with far too many injuries. Every season, there is a week – maybe two – where teams just all score much less than usual and in some cases result in an upset. There is usually at least one week where a large number of favored teams lose. Week 7 was filled with upsets, games that were “under”, and far too many disappointments.

There were only two quarterbacks that scored more than twice. There were six quarterbacks with 300 passing yards. Patrick Mahomes was no surprise. The others were Derek Carr, Jared Goff, Gardner Minshew, Geno Smith, and Desmond Ridder. Were any of them started in your leagues?

Only Kyren Williams and Raheem Mostert ran for more than 100 yards. Of the nine 100-yard receivers, only four also scored a touchdown. Only five tight ends scored, and only six managed more than 50 yards.

There were 14 games played so far.  Of 28 teams, only three scored more than 24 points. Half of the teams failed to score more than 17 points. The low scoring week usually happens between Week 7 and Week 13. Not great that we’ve already used up the low-scoring week.

Sunday Game Recaps – Week 5

Sunday game recaps with a fantasy spin for Week 5

Week 5 helped sort out the NFL better. The Eagles and 49ers remain undefeated and seemingly on a collision course deep into the playoffs, though they meet in Week 13 in Philly. There were more injuries that should be better defined by Wednesday at the latest – Justin Jefferson, James Conner, Anthony Richardson, Travis Kelce, and Daniel Jones as the most prominent.

You can be sure the NFL has changed when Bill Belichick loses two games in a row by a combined score of 72-3 and both were at home. And both were the biggest losses in his career. Only the Packers and Steelers are on bye for Week 6, but make advanced plans for Week 7 which has six teams on bye – Carolina, Cincinnati, Dallas, Houston, NY Jets, and Tennessee.

Sunday Game Recaps – Week 4

Week 4 NFL games breakdown for fantasy football analysis

The day started out in London where it was 6:30 AM on the West Coast and untold people rubbed their sleepy eyes and said aloud, “so what channel is this on?”

There were six teams that scored more than 30 points, but also six more that failed to break ten points. We had several more monster performances from Christian McCaffrey, David Montgomery, A.J. Brown, Stefon Diggs, Josh Allen, and even Justin Fields (don’t worry, they still lost).

There continues to be several head-scratching performances – both good and bad. But only five quarterbacks threw for 300 yards and just barely since none had more than 335 yards.

We move into the byes in Week 5. Time to consider advance planning.

Bucs taken down by the Eagles 25-11

The Bucs lost their first game of the season in ugly fashion on Monday night.

Baker Mayfield and the Buccaneers received a kelly green reality check on Monday Night Football, courtesy of the Philadelphia Eagles. In an ugly 25-11 loss, Tampa Bay learned that despite their winning record, they just are not quite ready to play with the big boys.

The Eagles were simply dominant in the trenches on both sides of the ball. With arguably the best offensive line in the NFL, Philadelphia pounded the rock against an ordinarily stout Tampa defensive front. Running back D’Andre Swift put up 130 yards on 16 carries thanks to running lanes wide enough for a Gasparilla parade:

On defense, the Bucs simply had no answer for Philadelphia’s defensive line. The offensive line was so overwhelmed that they allowed a third-quarter safety despite having their jumbo package on the field. The interior linemen in particular were routinely and soundly beaten in every respect by the Eagles’ rotation of former Georgia Bulldogs Jordan Davis and Jalen Carter.

The game might have been closer had the Bucs’ offense gotten out of its own way, especially in the first half. After two games of largely mistake-free football, Tampa Bay turned the ball over twice in the second quarter, first with an interception from Baker Mayfield and a Rachaad White fumble.

Mike Evans had a rough start as well, dropping two passes, including a potential third-down conversion on the Bucs’ first drive and touchdown early in the second half. He did his best in the second half to make up for his dismal first, making one of the most spectacular catches of his career in the fourth quarter on the Bucs’ only touchdown drive:

More than any game previous this season, pressure from the defense got to Baker Mayfield, who was unable to keep his sack escape artist act going. He went 15-for-25 for 146 yards, 1 TD and 1 INT while taking two sacks. While his receivers frequently let him down with bad drops, Mayfield was seeing ghosts on the field by the second quarter and was missing open receivers. Tampa Bay possessed the ball just over 21 minutes, pale in comparison to Philadelphia’s nearly 39 minutes with the football.

With little help from the offense, Tampa Bay’s defense went into “bend, don’t break” mode. Despite allowing 472 total yards, they held Jalen Hurts and the Eagles offense to field goals on three red zone trips and picked him off on a fourth.

The Bucs defense was tested in every way possible as injuries clearly affected some performances while additional players were lost. Devin White’s groin injury made him appear to be playing in mud and likely kept him from returning his interception to the opposite end zone. Cornerback Jamel Dean went down early with a shoulder injury and tried to play through it before he was declared out in the second half.

Quite simply, the Bucs were outclassed by the Eagles. They were soundly beaten on both sides of the line, and offensive coordinator Dave Canales looked every bit as green as the Eagles throwback jerseys from a play-calling perspective. The bootlegs, counters and screens to avoid Philadelphia’s stout defensive interior were missing in action, and futile insistence on running the ball straight at Jordan Davis was reminiscent of Byron Leftwich’s inability to adjust to anything opposing defenses did last season.

Tampa Bay faces a slightly less daunting foe next week in New Orleans. While the Saints also have a solid defense, their offensive line lacks the talent and seasoning of Philadelphia’s. The main question will be just how beat up will the Bucs be heading into a short week after this physical loss to Eagles.

Sunday Game Recaps – Week 3

Week 3 Sunday is in the books with high points and bad beats.

Just open the bomb-bay doors and pull that lever. There were several big-time beat downs where the opponent was never remotely in the game and seven games were won by at least 14 points. We had a 200-yard rusher and a 200-yard receiver. And the Dolphins went nuclear on the Broncos, still throwing points on the scoreboard while the first team wore baseball caps and laughed on the sideline.

It ends up that the Cowboys are not that good but the Bears really are that bad. Check out the games from a wild weekend.

Sunday Game Recaps – Week 2

Sunday games – who did what for your fantasy team

Nice bounce back from a low-scoring and sloppy Week 1. Ten teams scored at least 30 points and twice both opponents topped the mark in the same game. There was enough difference in outcomes between Week 1 and 2 that we’ll  need Week 3 to give a better sense of which to expect. Ten quarterbacks threw for 300 yards and four running backs were over 120 rushing yards.

We saw more injuries that will shake up fantasy lineups but at least more fantasy points are rolling in and most games were closely fought matchups that went down to the wire.

Sunday Game Recaps

Week 1 served up surprises and duds, and plenty of opportunity to cash in on.

A brief rundown of each Sunday game from a fantasy football perspective.

Overall, Week 1 used to be one of the highest scoring weeks of the year. For the last two seasons after changing preseason rules and games, it’s become one of the lowest with sloppy play and teams that are not all on the same page. It is also notable that Week 1 tends to be different than the rest in terms of which players excel or flop. It all counts, but never make your mind up about a team or player after just one game.

Bucs’ disappointing season ends with 31-14 wild-card loss to Cowboys

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers were knocked out of the playoffs Monday night by a blowout loss to the Dallas Cowboys

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ 2022 season came to a fitting end Monday night with a 31-14 loss to the Dallas Cowboys in the wild-card round of the NFL playoffs.

Dak Prescott threw for four touchdowns and ran for another, while the Bucs didn’t touch the scoreboard until the final play of the third quarter.

The Cowboys took an 18-0 lead into the locker room at halftime, and kicker Brett Maher missing four straight extra points might have been the only bad thing Dallas fans had to deal with all night long.

In what could be the last game of his legendary 23-year NFL career, Bucs quarterback Tom Brady completed 35 of his whopping 66 pass attempts for 351 yards and two touchdowns. Tampa Bay’s best drive of the first half ended with a Brady interception in the back of the end zone, the first red-zone turnover of Brady’s entire three-year stint with the Bucs so far.

Tight end Dalton Schultz led the Cowboys with 95 yards on seven receptions, including two of Prescott’s touchdown passes. Wide receiver CeeDee Lamb caught four passes for 68 yards, including an 18-yard, fourth-down touchdown in the fourth quarter that put the game away.

Bucs wide receiver Chris Godwin set a new franchise record with 10 receptions, leading the team with 85 receiving yards on the night.

The Bucs finish their season with an overall record of 8-10, the first losing record of Brady’s career.

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