Four Verts: Markus Golden and Unsung Heroes we’re thankful for in the 2021 NFL Season

Watch out, Ja’Whaun Bentley and Markus Golden are coming for you in your dreams.

The NFL season is rapidly approaching the end and this feels like a good time to bring some names to the forefront that might not be household names.

Every team needs those second-tier players that aren’t quite superstars, but are still effective players and have a huge role when it comes to winning games each week.

Here are a few “unsung” heroes that I’ve really enjoyed watching this season. Fans of the teams listed likely know how impactful these players have been, but the point of this is to bring attention to everyone just how much these guys have meant to their teams — with a little help from Sports Info Solutions.

These are a few non-household guys I’ve really loved watching this year.

How the Patriots’ defense has (once again) become the NFL’s unstoppable force

The Patriots’ defensive plan has come together in vintage Bill Belichick fashion, and it might make them (suddenly) the NFL’s most dangerous team.

It it a surprise that the New England Patriots have come out of nowhere to wrest control of the AFC East away from the Buffalo Bills? It shouldn’t be, if we know our history. Is it a surprise that Bill Belichick’s team started Week 11 as the AFC’s six-seed and rose all the way to third after blowing the Cleveland Browns and Atlanta Falcons apart by combined scores of 70-7?

Same answer. These Patriots, who stood at 2-4 following their Week 6 overtime loss to the Cowboys, have rattled off five straight wins since, and those wins have been less and less competitive for the opponents. Last Thursday against the Falcons, quarterback Matt Ryan had the 10th-worst single-game passer rating of a career that dates back to 2008. Ryan completed 19 of 28 passes for 153 yards, no touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 51.6. Ryan was pressured on 19 of his 32 dropbacks, and when pressured, he completed 10 of 15 passes for 77 yards, and the first of his two interceptions.

That first pick came with 12:08 left in the fourth quarter, and it was the first of four straight Atlanta drives that ended in interceptions — two by Ryan, one by backup Josh Rosen, and one by backup/backup Feleipe Franks. Against the Falcons, the Patriots did what they’ve done all season. They are not a team beholden to one philosophy. They are not playing an abnormally elevated rate of man coverage — they ranked fifth in man coverage dropbacks through Week 10 with 120, and they were tied with the Falcons and Washington for 16th in zone coverage dropbacks (177).

No matter the coverage, opposing quarterbacks are not enjoying the experience — including the Falcons game, New England has allowed four touchdowns to six interceptions in man, and they’ve allowed three passing touchdowns to 10 interceptions in zone. They’re just as happy to engage eight as they are to drop eight, and either way, the opposing quarterback will not appreciate how they tie pressure to coverage.

“That’s the frustrating part,” Falcons head coach Arthur Smith said after his team’s 25-0 loss. “It’s hard enough to beat good teams, but when you’re sitting there handing them things, and I am talking about the pre-snap stuff, those self-inflicting wounds… That’s what the Patriots have feasted on for 20-plus years. That’s what’s frustrating.”

Frustrating for the other guys, and once again, inevitable for the Pats. So, back to Ryan’s first interception, what Belichick had to say about it in great detail on Monday, and what it means for this resurgent defense.

Winners and losers from Patriots’ devastating overtime loss to Cowboys

The Patriots looked really good, but they just couldn’t close against the Cowboys.

Devastating doesn’t fully describe the New England Patriots’ 35-29 overtime loss to the Dallas Cowboys in Week 6.

The Patriots played incredible defense in the first half, holding the Cowboys to 10 points, but they didn’t do enough at the end when it mattered. CeeDee Lamb walked into the end zone in overtime to push the Cowboys to a 5-1 record and drop the Patriots to 2-4.

Mac Jones wasn’t as explosive as he needs to be to win games, but he had an efficient night that put the Patriots in winning position. Jones finished the day throwing 15 of 21 for 229 yards two touchdowns and an interception — a very costly one at that.

There were a lot of great takeaways from the game, but none of it was enough to edge past the Cowboys. Here are the winners and losers from the devastating loss.

 

 

 

Watch Patriots’ defense force fumble on Dak Prescott’s QB sneak in red zone

Ja’Whaun Bentley made the play of the half for the New England Patriots.

The New England Patriots’ defense had an incredible first half against Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys in Week 6.

The Cowboys’ final three drives of the half resulted in an interception, field goal and a lost fumble into the end zone. Linebacker Ja’Whaun Bentley had a whopping ten tackles in the first half and he was the one who forced the fumble on Prescott that would’ve led to a 17-14 score.

Ezekiel Elliot failed to convert twice on the one-yard line and Prescott failed to do so in the next two consecutive drives. Here’s a look at the play where Bentley changed the course of the game.

Mac Jones began the first half throwing 7 of 7 for 100 yards and a touchdown.

[listicle id=113307]

Rodney Harrison hesitant to buy into ‘slow’ Patriots linebackers, Jamie Collins

“It doesn’t seem like they’re slow, and I love those guys and have so much respect for those guys, but yeah, they are slow.”

The ‘Boogeymen’ are back for the New England Patriots, right?

With the re-signing of Jamie Collins and the current roster of Dont’a Hightower, Kyle Van Noy, Ja’Whaun Bentley and Chase Winovich — it seems like it.

Former Patriots safety and NBC analyst Rodney Harrison is still unsure of this defense and doesn’t think the linebacker group will be the same as they were in 2019.

“You’re spot on. It doesn’t seem like they’re slow, and I love those guys and have so much respect for those guys, but yeah, they are slow,” Harrison said on WEEI’s “Merloni & Fauria” on Thursday. “When you start watching LaVonte David, you start watching Devin White move and blitz and move from sideline to sideline, it’s night and day difference.

“And that was the thing that really stood out to me. I’m like, ‘Look how fast and athletic Tampa Bay linebackers look.’ And the Patriots linebackers, the defense just looks slow. It’s always kind of looked like that, and it starts with those backers, man. Those guys have experience and things like that, but that’s something the Patriots definitely need to upgrade a little bit moving forward. That’s speed.”

Collins has been known for his speed throughout his time in the league, but Harrison even believes the newest addition won’t be the same as before.

“I don’t think it’s anything that — it didn’t move me any when they said they were signing Jamie Collins,” he said. “Maybe [Bill] Belichick can get that fire back in him and he’s probably the only coach that knows how to really utilize him. I don’t know, man. This might be it for Jamie. He needs to show that he can still play, that he still wants to play.”

The biggest downfall of this defense going forward will be the absence of Stephon Gilmore — which will put real pressure on J.C. Jackson to hold his group together.

[listicle id=113060]