LOOK: Jourdan Lewis makes spectacular INT to stop Bears’ drive

Jourdan Lewis intercepts Mitch Trubisky, collects Cowboys first turnover in four games.

The Dallas Cowboys had not had a turnover in four-straight games, but that  streak mercifully ended Thursday night against the Chicago Bears.

Bear’s quarterback Mitch Trubisky launched a pass towards the endzone and Jourdan Lewis came up with a spectacular, toe-tapping interception.  Initially ruled out of bounds, the replay showed that Lewis was able to drag his feet, securing the turnover.

It is Lewis’s fourth interception of his career, and the second of the season.

The Cowboys were spotted the ball at the one-yard line and were unable to capitalize on the turnover when on third down, Dak Prescott almost was picked off by Bears’ corner Kyle Fuller. Dallas leads Chicago, 7-0.

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Jourdan Lewis steals away a TD with spectacular interception

The former Wolverines star picked off his third pass of the season on Thursday.

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You’d think NFL quarterbacks would learn to stop throwing at former Michigan cornerback Jourdan Lewis.

You would think.

No, he’s not a starter, playing mostly nickel for the Dallas Cowboys, but he entered Thursday night’s game against the Chicago Bears with two interceptions on the year already, so you’d think that Mitchell Trubisky would have gotten the memo.

In an attempt to score a touchdown, he did not. As a matter of fact, due to some fancy footwork, the call went the other way, courtesy of Lewis.

Someday NFL quarterbacks will learn, but it certainly looks like they’re all gonna have to learn the hard way.

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Wolverines in the NFL: Week 13

With Michigan football losing to Ohio State 56-27 on Saturday, were the alumni successful in the NFL the day after?

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With Michigan football getting pushed around on Saturday to Ohio State 56-27, the alumni in the NFL had to get over the loss and focus on their team’s gameplan on Sunday. They did just that as some of them made some big plays and performed well this week as the past few weeks have been quiet from the former Wolverines.

Check out how the former Michigan football players did this week around the NFL.

OFFENSE

Quarterback:
  • Tom Brady (New England Patriots) – Brady rebounded after a few poor performances by going 24/47 for 326 yards with three touchdowns and an interception in his team’s loss to the Houston Texans.
Tight End:
  • Zach Gentry (Pittsburgh Steelers) – Gentry was inactive against the Cleveland Browns this week.
Offensive Line:
  • Graham Glasgow (Detroit Lions) – Glasgow played well again in his team’s 24-20 thanksgiving loss to the Chicago Bears.
  • Taylor Lewan (Tennessee Titans) – Lewan played well again as the Titans beat the Indianapolis Colts 31-17.
  • Patrick Omameh (New Orleans Saints) – Omameh started his first game of the year and while he allowed a sack and a holding penalty he did better than projected at left tackle. The Saints would beat the Atlanta Falcons 26-18.
  • Michael Schofield III (Los Angeles Chargers) – Schofield had another good game this week, but his team lost to the Denver Broncos 23-20.
  • Mason Cole (Arizona Cardinals) – Cole was active but didn’t start in the loss to the Los Angeles Rams.
  • Erik Magnuson (Oakland Raiders) – Magnuson was active this week against the Kansas City Chiefs, but didn’t play.

DEFENSE

Defensive Line:
  • Chase Winovich (New England Patriots) – Winovich was quiet in his team’s 28-22 loss to the Texans, but finished with just one sack as his lone tackle.
  • Taco Charlton (Miami Dolphins) – Charlton returned this week and had two total tackles and a sack in his team’s win over the Philidelphia Eagles.
  • Brandon Graham (Philidelphia Eagles) – Graham didn’t do much in his team’s 37-31 loss to the Dolphins as he finished with just two total tackles and a tackle for loss deflection.
  • Chris Wormley (Baltimore Ravens) – Wormley finished with two total tackles in the Monday Night football win in Week 12 over the Los Angeles Rams. This week though, he upped his game and finished with four total tackles, a half a sack, and a big pass deflection in his team’s 20-17 win over the San Francisco 49ers.

  • Ryan Glasgow (Cincinnati Bengals) – Glasgow has been placed on injured reserve for the Bengals as his season is now over.
  • Frank Clark (Kansas City Chiefs) – Clark didn’t do much in the team’s win over the Raiders as he finished with just one total tackle.
  • Maurice Hurst (Oakland Raiders) – Hurst didn’t do much either in the Raiders 40-9 loss to the Chiefs as he finished with just one sack as his lone tackle.
Linebacker
  • Rashan Gary (Green Bay Packers) – Gary didn’t do much in his team’s win over the New York Giants, finishing with just one total tackle.
  • Devin Bush (Pittsburgh Steelers) – Bush rebounded after a few low weeks with a team-high seven total tackles and a tackle for loss. The Steelers would beat the Browns 20-13.
  • Ben Gedeon (Minnesota Vikings) – Gedeon and the Vikings play on Monday Night Football. His performance will be noted in next week’s article.
Defensive back:
  • Jourdan Lewis (Dallas Cowboys) – Lewis had a great game in his team’s 26-15 Thanksgiving day loss to the Buffalo Bills. He finished with six total tackles, two sacks, and a pass deflection.

  • Jabrill Peppers (New York Giants) – Peppers was inactive his team’s 31-13 loss to the Packers.
  • David Long (Los Angeles Rams) – Long finished with just one total tackle in his team’s 45-6 loss to the Ravens in Week 12. For this week, he finished with two total tackles and a pass deflection in the 34-7 win over the Cardinals.
  • Jarrod Wilson (Jacksonville Jaguars) – Wilson got involved in the Jaguars defense with seven total tackles and one tackle for loss, but it wasn’t enough against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
  • Brandon Watson (Jacksonville Jaguars) – Watson was active but didn’t record any stats in the 28-11 loss to the Bucs.
  • Lano Hill (Seattle Seahawks) – Hill and the Seahawks play on Monday Night Football. His performance will be noted in next week’s article.
Contact/Follow @WolverinesWire@BKnappBlogs
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Jerry Jones: ‘Zero chance’ at storybook ending to 2019 if Garrett fired

There’s an old trick that authors use when writing a work of fiction. At any given moment, in almost any situation, the idea is to make things as difficult as possible. Make the challenges bigger. Make the outlook bleaker. Make the circumstances …

There’s an old trick that authors use when writing a work of fiction. At any given moment, in almost any situation, the idea is to make things as difficult as possible. Make the challenges bigger. Make the outlook bleaker. Make the circumstances more dire. Give the hero more to overcome along the way than seems even possible, and it makes the victory that much sweeter and more satisfying in the end.

The Dallas Cowboys are still working on the story of their 2019 season. Their Thanksgiving Day meltdown at the hands of the Bills will certainly go down as one of its darkest chapters. But owner Jerry Jones is optimistic that there could be a plot twist coming on the very next page, and that this team has a surprise ending waiting in the wings.

“Adversity gives you an opportunity to really write a hell of a story about how to come back,” Jones said after the 26-15 loss.

But judging by Jones’s postgame comments, he is not willing to go so far as to kill off one of his major characters. Despite a tenure defined by mediocrity and punctuated by countless head-scratching decisions, coach Jason Garrett, who has led a seemingly-talent-laden team to six losses in their last nine games, will remain in place.

“This is not the time,” Jones said of a possible coaching change with four games left in the regular season. “For me, I’m looking ahead at another ballgame, and I’m looking ahead at winning four or five straight and helping write a story that they’ll talk about, how it looked like you were down and out and got it done. And I mean that. I mean that. That’s the way that I’m operating. Every decision that I make over the next month will be with an eye and mind to get us in the Super Bowl now.”

Cowboys players echoed that optimism, even if a story that ends in this roster and coaching staff ripping off a four-game win streak feels like pure science fiction.

“We know what we need to do,” linebacker Jaylon Smith told reporters after the loss. “Four games left, and winning is the name of the game.”

“We feel real good about our chances,” running back Ezekiel Elliott told the media afterward. “We feel really good about what we have in store for the rest of the season.”

As bad as the Cowboys looked hosting their traditional holiday contest, the team didn’t lose any ground in their chase of a divisional crown. Still clinging to a better record than the Eagles but with a more difficult slate of opponents ahead, Dallas players feel they need to win out in order to claim the NFC East and make the postseason.

“We can still win our division and go to the playoffs,” cornerback Jourdan Lewis said after the game. “That’s what it is. Of course, we wanted to win this one, but at the same time, we’ve got to look forward and do our best to get to the playoffs.”

“We know we can do that because we control our destiny,” quarterback Dak Prescott said from the podium in his postgame press conference. “We control the work that we put in, we control how we approach each and every day, we control the way that we prepare to get ready for these games. I have so much confidence in the men in that locker room, the character that they have, and I wouldn’t want to be, honestly, in this position with anybody else except those men. so confident in what we’re going to do.”

Prescott has spent months praising the character of the men in the locker room and expressing confidence in what they’re going to do. Problem is, they’ve only done it against bad teams. Thursday’s beatdown by Buffalo was just the latest dismal showing against the exact kind of quality opponent that Dallas would see should they qualify for postseason play.

The result was an embarrassing loss that left recently-added defensive end Michael Bennett screaming at his new teammates in the locker room.

“It was very disappointing,” wideout Amari Cooper told the press, “just with everything that’s at stake, where we are in the season. A loss in general is just very disappointing, but to lose in this fashion with where we are is just devastating.”

“We’re definitely in the low of this season,” receiver Randall Cobb said in postgame interviews, “but the bright side is we’ve got four games to go. And anything can happen in those four weeks, and we kind of control our own destiny at this point.”

“We’re just pissed,” Elliott summed up. “We’re pissed at how we’ve let this season go. But the good thing about it is we control our own future. We’ve just got to find a way to go out there and win the rest of these games.”

“All it takes is winning one game and getting the thing rolling,” Cobb offered hopefully.

What it won’t take to get things rolling, according to the man who writes the checks? A Week 14 firing of his head coach.

“I wouldn’t make a change and give us a chance to do what I want to dream about doing,” Jones said. “I wouldn’t do that for love nor money. I’d give us zero chance if we did that.”

“He understands it,” Prescott said of the club’s impassioned owner. “He understands that we need everybody in that locker room- players, coaches, everybody that’s a part of it- to get to where we want to be.”

Fans may have soured long ago on Garrett’s maddeningly-even-keeled style and are understandably frustrated by the the lackluster results he’s getting from his players. But Jones isn’t ready to give up on Garrett, with whom he’s had a relationship since even before he joined the Cowboys as a practice squad player in 1992.

“I know Jason very well,” Jones said. “I’ve had a wonderful opportunity to spend a football life with him, so I know him very well.”

But sometimes an author can get too attached to his longstanding hero. And no conflict is too great that there isn’t hope that the hero can rise to the challenge and overcome the odds, no matter how improbable.

After a thoroughly gutting Thanksgiving Day plot twist, Jones is still thinking about how the 2019 disaster epic currently being penned in Dallas can get its storybook ending:

“The way that I’m going to handle this is encourage everybody to basically look to the possibility of winning out and end up doing something that people will write about 30 years from now and being a part of that. I like that story tonight as I eat my turkey.”

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Anthony Brown’s season is over, Cowboys CB to have surgery

An injury update on Dallas Cowboys cornerback Anthony Brown and offensive tackle La’el Collins.

In the fourth quarter of the Dallas Cowboys victory over the Detroit Lions, things started to head south on the injury front. Multiple injuries cascaded down on the club in the matter of a few plays and while DeMarcus Lawrence and Xavier Woods were able to continue, not everyone was so fortunate.

Among the players who didn’t return to the game were CB Anthony Brown and RT La’el Collins. Jason Garrett gave an update on the health of two of his key contributors, and while there’s a little bit of good, there’s also plenty of bad.

Brown will have season ending surgery on his triceps while Collins will be monitored throughout the week and is hopeful to be available for Sunday’s big matchup.

Although it seems the team averted disaster with Collins, this could very well be the end of the road in Dallas for Brown.

In recent weeks, he’s watched his playing time dwindle at the hands of fellow CB Jourdan Lewis. Regardless, the timing of the injury is unfortunate in multiple ways. For the player, it can devalue the best shot at landing a life-changing contract in the offseason. For the team, it loses depth at a position that can never have enough of it.

A 2016 sixth-round pick out of Purdue, Brown worked his way onto the field as the team’s slot corner in Week 3 of his rookie season. He held it down admirably, working his way into the hearts of coaching staff and fans alike. Throughout his career Brown tallied four interceptions and three forced fumbles.

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News: Final Week 11 injury report, Cooper gets top grade from CB Slay

Also, why Jason Garrett is more Marvin Lewis than Tom Landry, the latest on Dallas and Kaepernick, and is Jason Witten part of the problem?

The final injury report for Sunday’s Week 11 game is encouraging for Cowboys fans- both in who Dallas will have suiting up, and also in who they won’t have to face across the line in Detroit. But the Cowboys aren’t the only ones assessing their opponent; a Lions star grades his Dallas assignment tops in the league.

Also, a wily veteran offers his take on the team’s slow starts… but is he part of the problem that’s holding the offense back? A native Michigander comes home this week to play in front of friends and family, Dak Prescott has the numbers to disprove the doubters, the latest on the Cowboys’ interest (or lack thereof) in Colin Kaepernick, and a look at where Jason Garrett really ranks among long-tenured coaches. That’s on tap in this edition of News and Notes.

2 Cowboys questionable versus Lions :: The Mothership

The Cowboys are expected to be close to full strength heading into Sunday’s game in Detroit. Offensive tackle La’el Collins is listed as questionable with a knee and back issue. Safety Jeff Heath has the same designation with a shoulder ailment. Only guard Connor Williams is a confirmed scratch for Week 11; he missed the whole week or practice with a bad knee. All other names who appeared on the injury report over the past few days are cleared and expected to suit up, including Amari Cooper, Zack Martin, Tyron Smith, Sean Lee, and Michael Gallup.

The Lions are not so fortunate when it comes to team health. They will be without quarterback Matthew Stafford for the second week in a row as the veteran continues to nurse a back problem. Also listed as out are defensive end Da’Shawn Hand and tackle Rick Wagner. Safety Tracy Walker, defensive end Romeo Okwara, running back Ty Johnson, defensive tackle Damon Harrison Sr., and punter Sam Martin are all considered questionable for kickoff.


Detroit Lions’ Darius Slay readies for Cowboys’ Amari Cooper :: Detroit Free Press

Of all the wideouts in the NFL, Lions cornerback Darius Slay calls Cowboys wideout Amari Cooper tops at winning at the line of scrimmage.

“‘I might give nods to (Cooper as the best) just cause he’s a lot more explosive than all of them, just cause of the fact that he can run,’ Slay said Wednesday” as per Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press. “‘He came out as a 4.3 guy (in the 40).'”

Slay, a two-time Pro Bowler, typically travels with the opponent’s No. 1 receiver, so expect to see him shadowing Cooper for much of the afternoon. As for other pass-catchers with a great get-off, Slay also mentioned Keenan Allen of the Chargers and the Packers’ Davante Adams.

“‘Keenan’s got quick instincts, but he’s a guy that can be quick off the line of scrimmage and quicker downfield, and he’s a little bit bigger than some of them,’ Slay said of Cooper. ‘Overall, they’re all kind of like the same, but he’s very, very, very great off the line of scrimmage, so got to have great patience with him.'”


Pivoting from earlier report, Cowboys not attending Kaepernick workout :: Cowboys Wire

Despite reports earlier in the week that suggested the Cowboys front office would be sending a team representative to Atlanta for quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s league-wide audition, owner Jerry Jones refuted the story on 105.3 The Fan on Friday.

“That’s not correct,” Jones said on-air. “We’re not going to have anybody there. We’ll basically… You know, those are taped, and we’ll look at the tape if we need information there. We really like where we are with our quarterback. We’ve got some very young quarterbacks, and that’s the way we think, to bring anything up behind Dak is to do it with young ones like we’re doing. So we won’t be there.”


Jason Witten thinks he might know reason behind Dallas Cowboys’ slow starts :: USA Today

If the Cowboys’ notoriously slow starts in games this season are maddening for fans to watch, it’s even worse for the players on the field. It’s well-covered territory in coaches’ interviews and press conferences, with everyone on staff trying to find a reason and zero in on a fix.

But tight end Jason Witten has a theory.

“‘Sometimes when you go through opener (drives), you’re using that to see how they’re going to play certain other things,’ Witten said,” according to USA Today’s Jori Epstein. “‘It may be, in the midst of that, sometimes if you have a three-and-out, yeah, it may have opened our eyes to what we can do in the next series down the road, what we want to get to. But it may have had a negative impact on that possession not scoring early in the game.'”

Dallas will look to come out of the blocks faster in Detroit and score a first-quarter touchdown for the first time since Week 3 versus Miami.


Lewis ‘playing for free’ this week in Detroit :: The Mothership

Dallas cornerback Jourdan Lewis gained a lot of new family and friends this week, it seems. The Motor City native has been bombarded with ticket requests for Sunday’s game when the Cowboys visit Ford Field in Detroit. So far, he’s bought 40.

“Yeah, 40… I’m playing for free this week,” Lewis joked. “And I had to scratch a few off the list. There’s definitely some people hitting me that I haven’t heard from in a while. After 40, you have to get your own.”

The Michigan alum says that despite playing at the Lions’ home stadium with various youth teams and high school squads while growing up, paying a visit to Ford Field as a pro is still “definitely a dream.”


Why does Cowboys’ Jerry Jones treat Garrett like Landry 2.0? :: 105.3 The Fan

Owner Jerry Jones has always been coach Jason Garrett’s biggest fan. The prevailing philosophy he espouses in interviews and sells to the fanbase is that Garrett’s smarts, his pedigree, and his patience and consistency will eventually bring home a Lombardi Trophy.

But as Ari Temkin points out, Garrett is one of just six coaches in league history to coach at least 145 games with the same team and not play for a conference title. The only one with a worse winning percentage than Garrett’s 56% is Marvin Lewis, who won 52% of his games leading the Bengals.

Interestingly, Tom Landry coached 152 games (the same number Garrett will reach with the season finale) before he finally took Dallas to a conference title game. But expecting Garrett to magically go on a Landry-like run at this point is the equivalent of hoping for Garrett to evolve overnight into something he’s never been. As Temkin writes, “Garrett is more Marvin Lewis than Tom Landry.”


Here’s an idea… the Dallas Cowboys should use Blake Jarwin more :: Blogging the Boys

Jason Witten’s return to the field as the Cowboys’ starting tight end was a feel-good story when it was announced, but some wondered if the team would trot out the future Hall of Famer at the expense of the younger tight ends already on the roster trying to gain valuable experience.

RJ Ochoa cites a stat from Inside Edge that says backup tight end Blake Jarwin has averaged 9.8 yards per target this season, the best mark of 42 qualified players at the position. Better than Kelce, better than Ertz, better than Hockenson, better than Kittle. And yes, better than Witten.

“Essentially, on average, when Dak is targeting Blake Jarwin, there’s a move of the chains on the line… Jarwin could be the future at tight end for the Cowboys; maybe that future is now.”


Prescott’s advancement echoed by top spot in several advanced stats :: Cowboys Wire

The Dak Doubters don’t want to talk about it, but the Cowboys quarterback is having a monster season, by almost any measure. He’s leading a passing attack that ranks highest in the league in: EPA per pass attempt, success rate per pass attempt, offensive DVOA, yards per pass attempt, and yards per play.

But the chart that should by all rights turn the non-believers around is Eli Cuellar’s highlighting of Prescott’s week-by-week effectiveness (using Expected Points Added per play) and how he’s compared to the league average quarterback play.

It’s an eye-popping visual and can be found at the link, but the punch line is this: on Prescott’s worst statistical week of the season, he basically matched the league’s average performance.


NFL coaches are finally getting more aggressive on fourth down :: FiveThirtyEight

The two-minute-drive playcalling that got the Cowboys coaching staff raked over the coals all week has also sparked a larger discussion about how NFL teams are approaching fourth downs in general.

While teams generally do not attempt to convert fourth downs as often as the stats say they should, 2019 has seen the highest go-for-it rate in at least 25 years. So far, though, offenses are converting those fourth-down tries at a below-average pace.

“As coaches like Garrett continue to learn which players to trust and when to trust them,” Ty Schalter writes, “they should continue to look at the numbers and realize how far they have to go before they’re actually making the best fourth-down calls they can.”


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Wolverines in the NFL: Week 10

Michigan football alumni were making plays once again in the NFL last week, check out how they all did during the Week 10 action.

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The Michigan football team was on a bye week this week, so that left your Saturday open to watching other college football teams. Luckily there are former Michigan football players in the NFL, so you were still able to get a small taste of the program this week in the NFL.

Check out how the Michigan alumni did this week at the next level.

OFFENSE

Quarterback:
  • Tom Brady (New England Patriots) – Brady and the Patriots were on a bye week this week.
Tight End:
  • Zach Gentry (Pittsburgh Steelers) – Gentry was inactive once again this week against the Los Angeles Rams.
Offensive Line:
  • Graham Glasgow (Detroit Lions) – Glasgow returned to action this week in his teams 20-13 loss to the Chicago Bears, and he had two false start penalties called on himself, not the best return for the former Wolverine.
  • Taylor Lewan (Tennessee Titans) – Lewan drew more penalties this week in his team’s win over the Kansas City Chiefs and he was upset with himself after the game about it. Lewan has nine penalties in just six games this season.

  • Patrick Omameh (New Orleans Saints) – Omameh was active, but didn’t play in his teams 26-9 loss to the Atlanta Falcons.
  • Michael Schofield III (Los Angeles Chargers) – Schofield had his worst week of the season so far, allowing half a sack in his team’s loss to the Oakland Raiders.
  • Mason Cole (Arizona Cardinals) – Cole got another start this week and while he didn’t allow a sack this week, he did draw one holding penalty. The Cardinals would lose to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 30-27.
  • Erik Magnuson (Oakland Raiders) – Magnuson was inactive in his team’s win over the Los Angeles Chargers.

DEFENSE

Defensive Line:
  • Chase Winovich (New England Patriots) – Winovich and the Patriots were on a bye week this week.
  • Taco Charlton (Miami Dolphins) – Charlton was quiet in his team’s 16-12 win over the Indianapolis Colts, finishing with one total tackle.
  • Brandon Graham (Philidelphia Eagles) – Graham and the Eagles were on a bye week this week.
  • Chris Wormley (Baltimore Ravens) – Wormley had his best game of the season against the Cincinnati Bengals this week, finishing with four total tackles, two tackles for loss, and a sack.
  • Ryan Glasgow (Cincinnati Bengals) – Glasgow was active but didn’t show up on the stat sheet in his team’s 49-13 loss to the Baltimore Ravens.
  • Frank Clark (Kansas City Chiefs) – Clark was active against the Tennessee Titans and had four total tackles, one sack, a pass deflection and a tackle for loss in his team’s 35-32 loss.
  • Maurice Hurst (Oakland Raiders) – Hurst had two total tackles, a half a tackle for loss and a half a sack in his team’s 26-24 win over the Chargers.
Linebacker
  • Rashan Gary (Green Bay Packers) – Gary was active against the Carolina Panthers this week, but didn’t end up on the stat sheet as his team won 24-16.
  • Devin Bush (Pittsburgh Steelers) – Bush was not much of a threat to the Rams this week, finishing with three total tackles and half a sack in the team’s win.
  • Ben Gedeon (Minnesota Vikings) – Gedeon was quiet in his teams win over the Dallas Cowboys, finishing with only one total tackle.
Defensive back:
  • Jourdan Lewis (Dallas Cowboys) – Lewis against the New York Giants last week had a nice game, finishing with six total tackles and a fumble recovery for a touchdown in his team’s win. This week in their 28-24 loss to the Minnesota Vikings, Lewis had only one total tackle and one pass deflection.

  • Jabrill Peppers (New York Giants) – Peppers against the Cowboys last week finished with a team-high 12 total tackles, along with a pass deflection in the team’s 37-18 defeat. Against the New York Jets this week, Peppers had six total tackles, one and a half for loss, and a pass deflection in his teams 34-27 defeat.
  • David Long (Los Angeles Rams) – Long was quiet in his team’s 17-12 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers, finishing with only one total tackle.
  • Jarrod Wilson (Jacksonville Jaguars) – Wilson and the Jaguars were on a bye week this week.
  • Brandon Watson (Jacksonville Jaguars) – Watson and the Jaguars were on a bye week this week.
  • Lano Hill (Seattle Seahawks) – Hill and the Seattle Seahawks play on Monday Night Football this week, his stats will appear in next week’s edition.
Contact/Follow @WolverinesWire@BKnappBlogs