Saints lose ground on reeling 49ers in the latest NFL power rankings

The New Orleans Saints fell in the latest NFL power rankings, trailing the New England Patriots, San Francisco 49ers, and Baltimore Ravens.

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The New Orleans Saints took a fall in the latest NFL power rankings from Doug Farrar over at Touchdown Wire, slipping from the No. 3 spot to No. 4 after an ugly home upset to the Atlanta Falcons last Sunday. And it couldn’t have come at a worse time, with the top-seeded San Francisco 49ers suffering their first loss of the year. If the Saints had handled their business, they could have seized the top spot in the NFC. Now, they’re behind both the 49ers and Green Bay Packers, with seven games left to play.

Here’s some of what Farrar wrote about the Saints’ underwhelming day against Atlanta, and what he’s looking for out of them in the coming weeks:

Does this game portend larger issues, or was it an anomaly? The Saints have struggled with slow starts this season, and their offensive line is struggling with ineffectiveness, perhaps exacerbated by injuries. The most disconcerting injury right now, though, is the hamstring strain suffered by top cornerback Marshon Lattimore. Lattimore is week to week at this point, and the Saints next face a Buccaneers offense that knows how to exploit weakened secondaries

The 49ers are still ranked above the Saints in Farrar’s power rankings, but barely. The New England Patriots are sandwiched in between both of them, and the only team to have beaten New England this year — Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens — owns the No. 1 spot. It’s easy to see a path for the Saints to make a late bid for the highest spot in these power rankings, but they need to rebound in a big way after the speedbump they hit on Sunday.

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Tom Brady offers support for Celtics guard Marcus Smart’s charity work

Tom Brady made donations for Marcus Smart’s silent auction.

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady appears to be supporting Marcus Smart’s charity work on social media and at a silent auction. The Boston Celtics guard hosted a digital silent auction for his Bowling Bash, which is an effort to raise money for the YounGameChanger Foundation.

According to the event information, Smart’s foundation “helps provide families with seriously and chronically ill children with encouragement and life-changing experiences. It is also a voice of motivation, empowerment, and encouragement to inner-city young athletes to be game-changers off the court or field.”

Brady donated an autographed jersey and football for the silent auction, but he wasn’t the only Patriots to contribute. Cornerback Jason McCourty also contributed a pair of autographed and game-worn cleats.

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Julian Edelman explains why he almost forgets about crazy year at WR

Demaryius Thomas, Antonio Brown, Josh Gordon and Mohamed Sanu.

Julian Edelman seems to have a different No. 2 wideout every week. The New England Patriots have made no shortage of major transactions at receiver during the course of the 2019 season, whether it was drafting first-rounder N’Keal Harry, trading away Demaryius Thomas, signing and cutting Antonio Brown, trading for Mohamed Sanu and waiving Josh Gordon. Bill Belichick has been busy shaping his receiver depth chart.

Edelman met with reporter Ian Rapoport on a podcast for “Westwood One” and discussed the turnover, which Edelman admitted was at a higher volume than normal.

“We have coaches that do a good job of getting — that have been helping with this crazy year of rotation of what we’ve been going through. They do a good job of helping,” Edelman told Rapoport in a recent interview. “We all kind of just chip away at kind of getting whoever’s in caught up. And that’s everyone, not just the new guys. We’re such a game plan team. Every week, you install (the game plan) and everyone’s got to go out there in practice and learn it together. I think you get so caught up in that, you almost forget the outside things that are happening.”

The Patriots have a foundation on offense, but they install a weekly game plan to ensure they’ve designed plays and schemes to exploit the weaknesses of their opponent in any given week. With the Patriots putting laser focus into each installation, players like Edelman don’t have much time to reflect upon the comings and goings of teammates, he said.

“Playing in this league for a while, you’re never surprised with anything, just because there’s so many bizarre things that happen — this, that, the other,” Edelman said on the podcast. “You try to kind of keep your focus on what you can control, and that’s trying to make your game better.”

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USA Today Week 11 power rankings puts Patriots behind the top-ranked Ravens

The Ravens’ big win has them sitting above the Patriots.

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The New England Patriots are still sitting behind the Baltimore Ravens in USA TODAY’s power rankings after Week 11, with the Patriots enjoying a bye week and the Ravens blowing out the Cincinnati Bengals. Baltimore (7-2) doesn’t have the best record in the AFC, but it’s win over New England (8-1) appears to have thrust the Ravens into the top spot.

Here’s a look at what USA TODAY had to say about New England:

2. Patriots (4): Super Bowl LII rematch in Philadelphia looms all the more important with Baltimore now one game from moving into top slot of AFC’s projected playoff field.

It’s easy to imagine the Patriots and Ravens staying in the same position, if both teams win this week. New England has a fairly formidable opponent in the Philadelphia Eagles, but Baltimore will see a tough AFC rival in the Houston Texans. But perhaps the Patriots could pull ahead of the Ravens in the coming weeks with wins over the Dallas Cowboys, Texans and Kansas City Chiefs.

Even after a loss on Monday night, the San Francisco 49ers, led by former Patriots quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo, are the top team in the NFC at No. 3 in the rankings behind the Patriots and Ravens. San Francisco is ranked just about the fourth-ranked New Orleans Saints.

In the AFC East, the Buffalo Bills are ranked at No. 15, the Miami Dolphins are sitting at No. 30 and the New York Jets have fallen to 31st.

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Ravens extend lead for No. 2 seed in AFC playoff race

The Baltimore Ravens inched closer to the top seed in the 2019 AFC playoff picture and are even closer to locking up a first-round bye.

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The Baltimore Ravens took care of what could have been a trap game, beating the Cincinnati Bengals 49-13 to improve to 7-2. They moved a little closer to the top seed in the 2019 AFC playoff picture, while improving their lead on a first-round bye, thanks to help from other teams in Week 10.

Let’s take a closer look at the seeding in the AFC playoff picture and how things changed this week.

2019 AFC playoff picture:

Seed Team Overall record Conference record
1 New England Patriots 8-1 6-1
2 Baltimore Ravens 7-2 5-2
3 Houston Texans 6-3 5-1
4 Kansas City Chiefs 6-4 4-3
5 Buffalo Bills 6-3 4-2
6 Pittsburgh Steelers 5-4 4-2

The Bills, Colts and Chiefs all lost on Sunday. Buffalo fell to the Cleveland Browns and dropped to 6-3 on the season, a full game below Baltimore. Kansas City lost to the Tennessee Titans and is now 6-4, which is important considering they hold the head-to-head tiebreaker with Baltimore after beating the Ravens in Week 3. Indianapolis fell to the Miami Dolphins and to 5-4, which knocks them out of the AFC playoff picture for the time being because they lost to Pittsburgh.

With the Patriots having a Week 10 bye, they sit tight in the top spot but remain vulnerable to being supplanted. If New England were to lose in Week 11 to the Philadelphia Eagles and the Ravens beat the Houston Texans, Baltimore would jump to the No. 1 seed. Even without a Patriots loss, if Baltimore were to beat Houston next week, they would effectively have a three-game lead on one the top-two seeds in the 2019 AFC playoff picture.

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Week 11 EPA Power Rankings: Cowboys knocked from top-offense perch

Cowboys force-feed Zeke in Week 10 despite data showing he isn’t near the most effective backs in the NFL this year.

The NFL was full of upsets this week.  Heading into Monday Night Football, seven underdogs had come away with a victory, including the Cowboys loss to the Vikings, the Titans over the Chiefs, and the Falcons taking down the Saints.  It was only fitting that it should end with another one as the Seahawks took down the previously unbeaten 49ers in an overtime thriller.

That being said, this single week’s games weren’t enough to change much in each team’s Expected Points Differential.

Expected Points, the foundation of many analytical arguments, uses data from previous NFL seasons to determine how many points a team is likely to come away with on a given play based on down, distance, time remaining, and field position. The difference in expected points at the start of a play and expected points at the end is referred to as expected points added, or EPA.

A play with a positive EPA means it put the offense in a better position to score, while negative EPA implies the offense is in a worse position.

Note: There was a bug within the program that scrapes all the NFL play-by-play data that affected the EPA on plays with challenges, which has since been fixed.  There was some slight movement in team EPA totals because of this, but nothing too major.

The top two teams stayed put this week despite San Francisco going home with a loss.

Cowboys QB Dak Prescott performed better than either QB from these teams, netting a total of 24 EPA across 47 plays, but it wasn’t enough to overcome a rough day on the ground for Ezekiel Elliott.  The underlying numbers for Dallas, however, still make them look far better than their 5-4 record suggests.

Pittsburgh and Oakland were the biggest climbers this week, moving up five and four spots, respectively.  The Steelers’ offense isn’t very inspiring with Mason Rudolph at the helm, but their defense ranks third in the NFL in total EPA allowed, trailing only New England and San Francisco.  Rookie linebacker Devin Bush has proven he was worth the trade-up, while in-season acquisition Minkah Fitzpatrick has picked off more passes than anyone in the NFL since moving up north from Miami.

We’ve got a new leader in total offensive EPA this week, as Lamar Jackson’s huge day put him in the top spot this week among offensive players.  Jackson’s 1.14 EPA/play more than doubled the amount of second-place Prescott (0.51 EPA/play).  Yes, the Bengals are bad, but nobody else has done that to them this season.  The next best performance against Cincinnati was Jimmy Garoppolo’s 0.66 EPA/play way back in Week 2.

Lamar Jackson has been an above average passer, ranking seventh in raw EPA/pass, but it’s his rushing success that has catapulted him to stardom.  Jackson now has started 16 games in his career, and if they were all in one season, he’d break Michael Vick’s single-season rushing yards record for quarterbacks.  He’s playing like 2013 Colin Kaepernick, if Kaepernick doubled his rushing yards and completed about 10% more of his passes.

Moving away from quarterbacks, let’s take a look at how running backs are doing in 2019 with their carries.  A few weeks ago, I found that teams are seeing more rushing success to the outside than they have been in the past decade, with the exception of short yardage situations.  With the help of NFL’s Next Gen Stats and Pro Football Focus, we can zoom in a bit more on specific running back performance.

What jumps out to me here is the 49ers stable of running backs.  Raheem Mostert, Matt Breida, and Tevin Coleman are all seeing above average loaded box counts, and yet Mostert and Breida are first and fourth in yards per carry.  Coleman, who sees more loaded boxes than anyone but Frank Gore, is still league average in YPC.

We can glean a better measure of effectiveness of the run game by using EPA/carry in this same fashion.

Coleman surpasses his teammates here even with the lower yards per carry mark because he’s seeing more work in short yardage situations.  Coleman has seen the 10th highest percentage of his carries in short yardage situations (3 or fewer yards to go) as well as the fourth highest touchdown percentage in the league.  Touchdowns and first downs are generally the biggest positive EPA plays, so it’s no wonder he looks better here.

Christian McCaffrey and Dalvin Cook both appear near the top here, as expected, but the surprise might be that they are joined by Aaron Jones and the duo of Mark Ingram and Gus Edwards.  Ingram is the leader in EPA/carry this year despite seeing more 8+ man box counts than either McCaffrey or Cook.  The threat of Lamar Jackson keeping the football on any given play coupled with a scheme that might even see Robert Griffin III receive a pitch is proving to be enough to run over anyone, even when they are prepared to stop the run.

On the other side of things, last year’s top performers (Ezekiel Elliott, Saquon Barkley, Alvin Kamara, and Todd Gurley) are all seeing below average loaded box counts and still only producing at a near average rate.  Elliott has been the best of this bunch so far, even with his tough day last weekend.

If we really want to break down running back performance, we need to look for places a running back can separate himself from his team’s coaching decisions and run blocking performance.  For that, let’s take a look at Pro Football Focus’ yards after contact.

It appears that the 49ers backs are helped more by scheme than by running backs breaking tackles.  The best back by this measure is Seattle’s Chris Carson, who is gaining more yards after contact than anyone in the league, and yet is still below average by EPA.  This is a good reminder that EPA evaluations are often indicative more of team performance rather than individual performance, especially when we’re looking at rushing.

The Ravens and the 49ers are great reminders that rushing can be effective in the modern NFL, and the situations in which teams choose to run the ball tend to have a larger impact on rushing success than the specific ball carrier.

Elliott can be an effective piece for the Cowboys offense, but it’s crucial they continue to focus his efforts on the ground against lighter boxes, which he’s seeing more than the average back in 2019.  His yards after contact is only just above league average, while his quarterback happens to be one of the most efficient in the league.  Let’s hope Dallas only feeds Elliott in optimum situations going forward, because when the light boxes are there, he can eat.

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ASU coach Herm Edwards on N’Keal Harry: ‘The game’s not too big for him’

“The game’s not too big for him. The lights won’t be too big for him when he’s on the field.”

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For those getting spooked about the development of New England Patriots receiver N’Keal Harry, allow his college coach, ASU’s Herm Edwards, to provide some reassuring words.

Edwards appeared on WEEI on Tuesday morning to discuss Harry, who visited ASU this weekend and caught up with his former coach.

“He’s got great football instincts,” Edwards said. “And then the thing I think Tom (Brady) and the guys know about him is, if you get him in the 1-on-1 situations, you can throw the ball to him and trust that he’ll come down with it. (He’s) very competitive for the football. The game’s not too big for him. The lights won’t be too big for him when he’s on the field.”

Edwards said Harry, who was the 32nd overall pick in the 2019 NFL Draft, could play inside in the slot, but Edwards also compared the receivers game to that of Josh Gordon, who the Patriots cut roughly two weeks ago.

It’s likely the Patriots will ask Harry to play multiple receiver positions, much like they’ve done with all of their pass-catchers this season. But Harry’s most likely landing spot in the offense seems to be on the outside, where Gordon lined up at the X-receiver spot. That job tends to go to a bigger receiver who can work the deeper and intermediate areas on the field. That’s where Harry lined up for most of training camp. But that’s not an easy role to learn, and Edwards said Harry is doing his best to get up to speed, even if he hasn’t made his NFL debut. Harry started the season on IR, and though he was activated to the 53-man roster, he didn’t appear on game day in Week 9.

“I think all guys want to play, but it’s a different challenge now,” Edwards said. “It’s professional football. This is not college football. … It’s much more complicated than college football.”

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Bill Belichick shares progress report on N’Keal Harry

“All I can do is answer the questions. I can’t tell you how to think.”

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick has provided nothing more than bite-sized morsels about 2019 first-round pick N’Keal Harry.

Belichick has long gone out of his way to slow the hype surrounding his high-profile acquisitions, and Harry is among them. Belichick has never drafted a receiver as high as he selected the ASU product at 32nd overall — and the Patriots seemed to feel fortunate Harry slipped that far. And yet Harry hasn’t debuted in the NFL. He started the season on injured reserve, and was a scratch from Week 9 despite being on the active roster.

Belchick was asked Monday how the 21-year-old wideout is progressing.

“Good,” Belichick told WEEI’s “Ordway, Merloni and Fauria” on Monday. “We’ll see how it goes, relative to the [Philadelphia] game. N’Keal’s practicing well, so those are good things.”

There have been comparisons between Harry and retired receiver Anquan Boldin. Would Belichick say those comparisons are fair?

“I’ve never coached Anquan Boldin, so I’m not sure,” Belichick said.

While the Patriots coach has been relatively quiet about Harry’s progress — and Belichick has kept practices closed, as usual, so reporters haven’t been able to see how he’s playing — quarterback Tom Brady has suggested “it’s gonna be up to (Harry) to put the effort in.” That raised eyebrows in Boston, considering the outpouring of positive praise Brady has had for veteran wideout Mohamed Sanu. Brady’s tone was quite different when discussing Harry. That has created an air of uncertainty surrounding Harry. But Belichick won’t be bothered by speculation.

“All I can do is answer the questions,” Belichick told WEEI. “I can’t tell you how to think.”

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Tom Brady says the Patriots’ 8-1 record doesn’t matter

Records are deceiving at this time of year.

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If the New England Patriots’ most recent loss reminded us anything, it’s that records can be deceiving. New England (8-1) fell to the Baltimore Ravens (7-2), 37-20. An even more dramatic upset took place in Week 10, with the Atlanta Falcons (2-7) beating the New Orleans Saints (7-2).

So while New England is in sole ownership of the AFC’s top seed, Brady isn’t putting to much stock into the Patriots’ 8-1 record after 10 weeks.

“What I think is at this point, it doesn’t matter,” Brady told Jim Gray during an appearance on Westwood One Radio on Monday. “Because 8-1 means nothing. In 2001, we won the Super Bowl and we were 5-5. In 2015, we were 10-0 and we lost four of our last six. You don’t have to look far. You look at the NHL — how were the St. Louis Blues halfway into (last) season? How were the Houston Astros two months into the season? Not very good. The point is any team at this point, their season is going to be determined by what happens the next seven weeks of football. Not the last nine or 10 — the next seven are going to determine what happens to these teams, their seedings, the playoffs and all that.

“And from our standpoint, I’m happy we’re 8-1, but I really want us to play our best football as we move forward. Everything that’s happened to this point, we’ve got to learn from, we’ve got to use it, and we’ve got to use those things and execute under pressure against the competition that’s going to be at it’s toughest. I’m looking forward to a great opportunity for our team.”

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Mohamed Sanu on Rob Gronkowski’s potential return: ‘Come, man, come’

Gronk may be unlikely to return, but Mohamed Sanu would love to have the tight end.

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New England Patriots receiver Mohamed Sanu wouldn’t mind giving up a few touches to tight end Rob Gronkowski.

Gronkowski reentered the news cycle during the Patriots’ bye weekend. Though he has playfully teased a possible return from suspension, he has made zero meaningful indication that he intends to play for New England this season. To some, that’s surprising, because there was speculation he might return for a Patriots’ playoff run, a scenario that Patriots owner Robert Kraft reportedly suggested to Gronk at the end of last season. As unlikely as it may be, Sanu discussed the idea on Monday.

“If he does, I would love it. Just gotta go about it day by day and just do my part. Come, man, come,” Sanu told reporters, via NESN’s Doug Kyed.

The Patriots’ tight end situation has been extremely unsettled since the team  saw Gronk retire. They have looked to tight ends Ben Watson, Matt LaCosse and Ryan Izzo, but haven’t gotten much production. Even with the position struggling, the Patriots receivers and running backs have carried the passing offense, and New England entered Week 10 with the second-most points per game (30).

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