Former Badger tight end signs with the Texans’ practice squad

With the NFL season now through Week 1 teams are looking at their depth charts going forward and preparing their rosters for the event…

With the NFL season now through Week 1 teams are looking at their depth charts going forward and preparing their rosters for the event of injuries at key positions.

Who this affects the most are current practice squad players or those looking for a job, as new rules in the league this year give teams more leniency with their active rosters and calling up players from their reserves.

So, yesterday the long list of transactions involving Wisconsin products got a little longer as the Houston Texans signed former Badger tight end Troy Fumagalli to their practice squad.

Fumagalli played his first NFL season in Denver where he played in 11 games before being cut by the team before the start of this season.

Related: 3rdAndRun Podcast: Nolan Rucci signing, Ryan Connelly was cut and new NFL practice squad rules

The former Badger now joins the Texans’ practice squad and sits behind Darren Fells, Jordan Akins and Kahale Warring in their tight end ranks.

Texans don’t move the needle in USA TODAY Week 1 NFL power rankings

The Houston Texans didn’t move a spot in the latest USA TODAY NFL power rankings after Week 1.

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The Houston Texans’ place in the latest USA TODAY NFL power rankings didn’t change as the defending AFC South champions start the season 0-1.

Though the Texans fell to the Kansas City Chiefs 34-20 on Opening Night at Arrowhead Stadium, the rest of the action from Sunday and Monday night across the league resulted in Nate Davis leaving Houston right where they started.

19. Texans (19): Somebody in league’s scheduling office hates them. After opening at K.C., Houston draws the Ravens, Steelers and Vikings in succession.

Even Davis’ summation of the state of the Texans after one week is pretty drab, but that is because there isn’t really much change from where the Texans started to where they are now after just one week. There wasn’t a horrendous drop-off in production, and the expectations for Houston were 7-9-ish heading into the season. How’s a loss to the defending Super Bowl champions going to affect that?

The Tennessee Titans dropped two spots from No. 5 to No. 7. The Indianapolis Colts dropped all the way from No. 7 to No. 20. Meanwhile the team that was responsible for the Colts’ Week 1 loss and 13-place tumble in the power rankings, the Jacksonville Jaguars, went up from No. 32 to No. 26.

Houston does have an injury with running back Duke Johnson, but the rest of their personnel should be available as they take on the Baltimore Ravens Sunday at 3:25 p.m. at NRG Stadium.

Baker Mayfield was much better when not throwing to Odell Beckham Jr.

The high-profile duo are still struggling to get on the same page

Baker Mayfield had himself a modest afternoon Sunday in Baltimore, albeit with a big asterisk.

A line of 18-for-29, 167 yards and a TD to go with an interception isn’t great, but it’s not a bad day at the office against a strong defense like Mayfield faced in the Ravens game. The QB Rating of 74.9 there is good enough to avoid any histrionic reactions. It needs to be a lot better, but Baltimore will do that to a quarterback in his first game in a new offensive system.

The cold reality is Mayfield wound up with the following stat line, thanks to the asterisk that is Odell Beckham Jr.:

21-of-39, 189 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT, QB Rating 65.0

Mayfield looked Beckham’s way 10 times. The high-profile duo connected just three times for 22 yards.

Beckham dropped two of those throws, one of them a key gaffe early while the outcome was still in question. Pro Football Focus noted of the accuracy and chemistry issues between the two,

The connection between Mayfield and Beckham looked just as it was in 2019 — nonexistent. Beckham saw 10 targets, and just five of those were catchable. And of those five, he caught only three.

That means five of Mayfield’s throws to Beckham were deemed uncatchable, which passes the eye test from the initial broadcast. Beckham struggled to get open against the Ravens, but Mayfield continued to force the ball No. 13’s way.

It should get better with more work together. Then again, everyone thought that heading into the offseason too. Yet here it is still looking like two movie stars with zero chemistry together fumbling through a painfully awkward love scene.

As the director of this movie, Browns coach Kevin Stefanski needs to rewrite the script for Mayfield and Beckham. If it doesn’t happen soon, the buddy comedy will further dissolve into a horror movie that nobody wants to see.

Danny Amendola, Trey Flowers top Lions in PFF grades from Week 1

Breaking down the PFF grades for the Lions from Week 1

The analysts at Pro Football Focus revealed their grades for all the players in the Detroit Lions’ Week 1 loss to the Chicago Bears. Grading every player’s performance on every snap, PFF focuses more on individual performance than team outcome on the plays.

On offense, wide receiver Danny Amendola earned the top grade with an 82.9 score. He made the most of his 43 snaps, earning a high grade on run blocking while also catching five passes on seven targets.

The full top five on offense:

  • Amendola
  • Frank Ragnow 80.0
  • Jason Cabinda 70.6
  • Taylor Decker 67.2
  • Matthew Stafford 66.9

Defensively the top Lion performer was Trey Flowers. The defensive end’s performance passed the eye test, too,

Flowers earned an overall grade of 82.1 with his four tackles, one sack, forced fumble and four overall QB pressures on 46 snaps.

The top Lions defenders:

  • Flowers
  • Darryl Roberts 78.9
  • Da’Shawn Hand 77.9
  • Justin Coleman 75.0
  • Duron Harmon 70.1

Roberts allowed just one completion on five targets. It just happens to be the one completion everyone will remember.

On the other end of the spectrum, the lowest-graded Lions who played at least 10 snaps:

  • CB Tony McRae
  • LB Jahlani Tavai
  • S Will Harris
  • LB Jamie Collins
  • CB Desmond Trufant

On offense, the two lowest-graded players were RBs D’Andre Swift and Kerryon Johnson. Both their scores were higher than several defenders, however.

 

Lamar Jackson nominated for FedEx Air award for Week 1 performance

After throwing for 275 yards and 3 TDs posting the highest passer rating of Week 1, Ravens QB Lamar Jackson is up for the FedEx Air Award

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson picked up right where he left off last regular season. In the first game of the season (preseason or regular season) for Baltimore, Jackson lit up the scoreboard and the stat sheet in a 38-6 rout of the Cleveland Browns.

For his efforts, Jackson was nominated for the FedEx Air award alongside Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers and Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson. It’s now up to the fans to decide which player wins this week’s award through voting.

Jackson completed 20-of-25 attempts (80%) for 275 yards and three touchdowns to no interceptions. He showed poise in the pocket, more consistent mechanics, perfect touch, and a cannon for an arm on a deep completion to wide receiver Marquise Brown. While this wouldn’t necessarily count toward the award, Jackson also ran the ball seven times for 45 yards. Though Jackson had fewer touchdowns and passing yards, he posted the highest passer rating of Week 1, topping both Rodgers and Wilson.

Jackson was a frequent nominee last season becoming the only NFL player to ever win both the ground and air awards in a single season. He ended up winning the FedEx Air Player of the Year last season alongside his MVP award.

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John Harbaugh’s defense of keeping Lamar Jackson in late doesn’t make sense

Despite being up 32 points in the fourth quarter, Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson stayed on the field to the shock of many.

Up 32 points with just four minutes remaining in the game, Baltimore Ravens backup quarterback Robert Griffin III trotted onto the field. Lamar Jackson’s day was finally done after leading Baltimore to a massive victory and playing a nearly perfect game. But Ravens fans were left scratching their heads about what took the coaches so long to make the decision to pull Jackson in the first place.

The Ravens’ previous drive started when they took over on downs after the Browns failed to convert a fourth-down attempt. With 10 minutes still remaining in the game and up 32 points, Jackson shocked nearly everyone by putting on his helmet and getting into the huddle. Unfortunately, Jackson and Baltimore’s offense was going to have another go of it without starting left tackle Ronnie Stanley and starting center Matt Skura. Sure enough, on 3rd-and-27, Jackson took a needless sack before punter Sam Koch came out.

In a season in which the Ravens look every bit the Super Bowl contenders they’ve been hyped up as, tossing the reigning MVP back on the field in a game that was already over in order to pad the stats is a dumb decision by just about every metric possible. Granted, I’m not an NFL coach, so maybe I’m missing some rationale here that coach John Harbaugh can offer insight into.

“10 minutes left, nah I don’t think so, it’s the National Football League,” Harbaugh said. “If you look around the league, you’ll see not too many people are taking their quarterback out with 10 minutes left in the game in the National Football League. That’s historically true.”

. . . Um, yeah I guess that probably is historically true, John. But it’s also probably historically true that not many teams are up by 32 points in the fourth quarter of a game their opponent has pretty clearly given up in either.

It’s even more perplexing why Harbaugh seemed practically offended by the notion someone would question the decision to keep Jackson in, in that situation.

Cleveland had clearly folded as evidenced by starting their next drive with back-to-back runs and having a total of four runs in a six-play drive. Down more than four touchdowns with just 10 minutes remaining when Jackson took the field for the last time, the Browns didn’t have a realistic chance of mounting a comeback even if Baltimore punted the ball on first down. Yet, Jackson dropped back three times. Not only did they put their quarterback in harm’s way by having him on the field at all, they didn’t even try to grind down the clock.

A win is a win and luckily Jackson didn’t get hurt. But Harbaugh and the coaching staff is going to need to exercise a little more thought in the future if they want to live up to their Super Bowl aspirations.

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Ravens’ rookies handled NFL debut well

Against the Cleveland Browns in Week 1, the Baltimore Ravens got excellent play from their 2020 NFL Draft class, including three starters.

The Baltimore Ravens selected 10 players in the 2020 NFL Draft. With how talented and deep Baltimore’s roster already was, it was expected few of the rookies would actually see the field early for the Ravens, much less make an immediate impact. But with Week 1 in the books, it turns out Baltimore might have something special in its 2020 draft class.

Three rookies — guard Tyre Phillips, and linebackers Patrick Queen and Malik Harrison — started the game. While Queen was expected to start, Phillips and Harrison getting the nod over veterans is a bit of a shock. The Ravens have typically gone with the more experienced player in these situations before, including starting James Hurst at right tackle over the clearly better Orlando Brown Jr. in 2018.

But it wasn’t just those three rookies that saw the field a bunch to open the season. In total, seven of Baltimore’s draft picks got playing time in Week 1. Take a look at their snap counts for a better idea of just how much they all played:

Player Position OFF/DEF Snaps OFF/DEF % ST Snaps ST %
Patrick Queen LB 54 74% 3 12%
J.K. Dobbins RB 23 39%
Devin Duvernay WR 11 19% 8 33%
Malik Harrison LB 21 29% 15 62%
Tyre Phillips G 56 95%
Broderick Washington Jr. DT 28 38%
James Proche WR 5 8% 4 17%

Those are pretty impressive totals for a team that typically likes to start their rookies off slow and let them earn more playing time over the course of the season.

And with the spotlight firmly on them, they performed incredibly well. While no rookie had a perfect outing, which would be ridiculous to expect, there weren’t any massive mistakes either. And for quite a few of the rookies, they announced their presence in the NFL with big plays.

Queen showcased his speed on a blitz, knifing into the backfield and taking down Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield. In total, Queen led the team with eight tackles, had a sack, a quarterback hit, a tackle for a loss, and a forced fumble.

Dobbins was expected to eventually be the heir to starter Mark Ingram but he made his debut one to remember. He showed some speed and power on his seven carries, even if he only gained 22 yards on the day. But Dobbins had a nose for the end zone, finding it twice on the ground, including one run where he showed great patience running behind an offensive lineman.

Harrison had four combined tackles and a pass defensed. Washington had one tackle assist but helped plug up the rushing lanes to keep Cleveland’s running backs contained. Duvernay caught his lone target for 12 yards, picking up a key first down early in the game and had a great kickoff return to set up a scoring drive.

Proche was the only player with a truly noticeable mistake. He was a little too cautious on a punt return, allowing the ball to hit the ground and roll to the goal line. It looked like he had enough time to call for a fair catch and secure the ball, which would have gone a long way to helping the offense on the drive. Even still, Proche had a solid punt return for 17 yards at another point in the game and showed the speed and agility to be a dangerous weapon there.

It might be a bit much to expect this level of performance from the rookies every week but they certainly showed they have a place on the field and in the NFL. When added to a roster that was already considered a favorite to win Super Bowl LV, the future looks really strong in Baltimore.

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LOOK: People slam Jarvis Landry, Odell Beckham Jr. for their terrible Marcus Peters take

Browns WRs Jarvis Landry and Odell Beckham Jr. were waiting to see Baltimore Ravens CB Marcus Peters again since last year and got exposed.

The Baltimore Ravens got a steal of a player when they traded for cornerback Marcus Peters last season. Not only did he cost Baltimore just a fifth-round pick and linebacker Kenny Young, Peters came to town on a relatively cheap deal and immediately made the Ravens’ defense better.

Just a few days after Peters and Baltimore beat the Cleveland Browns in Week 16 of the 2019 season, the Ravens inked their cornerback to a three-year extension. Apparently Peters got under the skin of Browns wide receivers Jarvis Landry and Odell Beckham Jr. because they were clearly looking forward to the rematch this season.

With Baltimore taking on Cleveland to open this season, you better believe people didn’t forget about Landry and Beckham wanting the smoke. And they got all of it in a 38-6 drubbing in Week 1 that saw Beckham drop a fourth-down pass and Landry fail to come anywhere close to 100 receiving yards or the end zone. After the final whistle, all those people made sure to let Landry and Beckham know they remembered what they said.

Some blamed Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield instead.

Others didn’t even need words, just a glorious GIF.

This fan just posted a screenshot of their stats on the day.

And for the ultimate insult, this fan posted a little clip of Peters breaking up a pass intended for Beckham on Sunday.

The Ravens and Browns will meet up at least once more this season and maybe both Beckham and Landry will have the last laugh. But for two guys who were seemingly so confident nearly nine months ago, it’s nothing but crickets entering Week 2.

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Cowboys defend ‘aggressiveness’ of 4th-down call; rookie Lamb: ‘It’s on me’

Dallas coaches and players spoke about not kicking the easy field goal to tie Sunday’s game, and how that may set a tone for future games.

A ship in harbor is safe, the old saying goes, but that is not what ships are built for. Well, there’s a new captain manning the helm of the Dallas Cowboys. And he knows exactly what his ship was built for.

After nine-plus seasons of wishing the coaching staff were more aggressive and less predictable in turning-point game situations, Cowboys fans got what they said they wanted Sunday night. On 4th-and-3 from the Los Angeles 11-yard-line in the fourth quarter of a three-point game, Dallas head coach Mike McCarthy kept Greg Zuerlein on the sideline.

Even Al Michaels wondered aloud if Dak Prescott would really take the snap. Surely the play-it-safe option in that situation is the field goal. If trying to lure the defense offsides for the cheap first down doesn’t work, you call the timeout and trot out your kicker, tie things up, and let the final ten minutes decide the game.

“[Offensive coordinator] Kellen [Moore], I thought he made a good call. We just didn’t execute it as good as we could,” McCarthy told reporters via conference call after the Week 1 loss.

“There’s obviously things that go into those types of situations you’re always looking at, particularly coming off a second down, going into a third down. Based on your field position; obviously, we were clearly in field goal range. It was a three-point game. All those things you factor in, The conservative play there is to kick the field goal. But I just felt really good about how we were moving the football. It was a mesh-pattern-type concept with criss-crossers. You’ve got to give them credit- the safety made a hell of a play on the throw-and-catch, and we were short.”

Prescott’s pass to a crossing CeeDee Lamb wasn’t out in front of the rookie wide receiver; the pocket had collapsed- again- around the quarterback, and Prescott was forced to hurry the throw. Lamb made the grab, but was short of the first-down marker when he did. Rams safety Jordan Fuller navigated traffic to reach Lamb and brought him down short of the line to make.

It was a disappointing end to a promising drive that had covered 56 yards in nine plays, the Cowboys’ most productive possession since the first half. And while coming away with no points was deflating, Prescott believes going for it on fourth down was the right decision.

“I love the aggressiveness,” Prescott told the media in postgame remarks. “I think that was a point in the game when, if we get that first down and are able to punch it in the end zone, we’re looking at a whole different ball game. I think it was a momentum chance. I love the play call; we just weren’t able to get it. The guy played over the top; made a good tackle.”

Running back Ezekiel Elliott agreed with the strategy, but knows how costly the failure was.

“Coach has a plan,” Elliott stated, “and it’s our job to go out there and follow it. I think it was a good play call. I think we had a chance of getting a first down, and I think we were rolling on offense. He felt and just wanted to keep us on the field and score a touchdown instead of getting three right there. We ended up coming up short, and that’s just one of those plays of the game where you’ve got to convert. You’ve got to convert on that. That cost us the game.”

It was the rookie Lamb who got his number called in the critical moment, a significant show of trust by the team in the 21-year-old Oklahoma product. Lamb took the loss personally as he recounted how the play unfolded.

“At first, I was at at the sticks,” Lamb explained. “And then I came back for the ball. And then I got tackled, and obviously, I didn’t get the first down and make the conversion. That’s one of the plays that I wish I had back. But now, you live and you learn. Not really ‘a rookie mistake,’ but it’s definitely a mistake from a rookie. I feel like that’s mindful play that I could have expanded on and did a lot better. Going into practice this week and on, you’re definitely going to get a better CeeDee.

“At the end of the day, it’s on me. It’s my responsibility to make that conversion, to make that play. And I didn’t. So that’s not going to sit with me well at all. It’s going to be in my head for a minute. Obviously, that was the differential in the game. We lost 17-20. If we get that first down, who knows what would have happened after that? It’s definitely a tough pill to swallow.”

The loss will also be tough pill for Cowboys fans to swallow. It’s hard to imagine Jason Garrett going for it in that situation, and it’s impossible to imagine him not getting roasted afterward for playing it too safe.

But the USS Conservative no longer docks in Dallas.

A big part of what made McCarthy such an intriguing replacement for Garrett was his reliance on math and data, the hope being that analytics would provide a nudge toward playing for the win instead of playing not to lose.

McCarthy was asked what the numbers say about the decision to go for the first down. He answered with a knowing smirk, well aware the question would be coming.

“I think analytics give you good structure to help evaluate decisions,” the 56-year-old coach explained. “Analytics would tell you to go for it there. But there’s other factors into that. I think some of those are things I’m not particularly going to talk on when you get into decision-making. I mean, you have to look at your variables and you’ve got to trust your players. I think, especially the first time going out into a game, I want our offensive guys to play wide-open. We have that capability. I’ll pull back when I feel like it’s in the best interest of the team. I clearly recognize that it was a three-point game, but we still had a lot of time left. I just felt that would have been a huge momentum play for us at that particular time. They had six big plays in the first half, and we only had one, so that mindset was trying to create some more of those opportunities for our players.”

In McCarthy’s answers, there was a discernible undertone. Something just under the surface and in between the lines.

Sure, he wanted to beat the Rams on Sunday night. He would have preferred to win the season opener, start his Dallas tenure with a victory, get an early leg up on Philadelphia in the division. But one gets the very real sense that McCarthy and Moore’s decision to go for it on that crucial fourth down was about more than Week 1. He’s setting a tone for his players and staff and setting expectations for fans about how this Cowboys team is going to approach every game, all season long. Not all of the punches will land, but they’ll keep getting thrown.

Prescott, for one, loves it.

“I think that’s one of the good things that you can take out of this game: our coach is going to put it our hands,” he told reporters. “He expects us to go make those plays, he trusts us to do that, he’s going to call the game aggressive, and you’ve got to appreciate that. I know I do as a quarterback, and I’m pretty sure the rest of the guys do as an offense. So as I said, it’s up to us to execute better right there and to make sure that play is a first down and we get the momentum going and we try to capitalize and do exactly what Coach had in mind there.”

What McCarthy had in mind is something this Cowboys team can build on, and something Cowboys fans should start getting used to. The fourth-down decision may have felt like a preseason kind of move; McCarthy took a similar sort of longview approach as he put it in perspective.

“I think it’s all part of the growth of an NFL season,” the coach said. “You have to improve throughout the season. Number one, you have to win. We needed to find a way to win that game tonight, and we didn’t get that done. And we’ve got to make sure that we walk away from this opportunity and learn from it and be better for our home opener in seven days. And that’s really the reality for where we are. The only thing that we won’t accomplish this season will be a 16-0 season; that’s the only thing that’s guaranteed. But everything else is in front of us.”

No one expected smooth sailing for the Cowboys’ ship as they pursue a sixth Super Bowl championship. But the California waves proved to be a bit rougher than most anticipated to start the journey. And Mike McCarthy has made it clear: he won’t be keeping his ship docked safely in harbor this season.

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Snap counts: Shared RB duties in the Browns’ Week 1 loss to the Ravens

Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt had almost an even split of reps

Everyone has wondered about how new head coach Kevin Stefanski will divide up the workload between talented RBs Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt. It was a driving topic for fantasy football analysts all summer. Based on Week 1, it’s going to be close to an even split.

Hunt was on the field for 36 of the Browns’ 73 total offensive snaps. Chubb played one less, charting for 35 reps. Hunt did wind up getting more touches: 13 carries, 4 targets to Chubb’s 10 carries and one passing target.

Fullback Andy Janovich played just nine snaps, less than was generally expected. Third-string RB D’Ernest Johnson was on the field for four offensive snaps.

Five offensive players took every rep: four of the five starting offensive linemen and QB Baker Mayfield. That includes center JC Tretter, who was questionable for the game with a knee.

Left tackle Jedrick Wills left with a leg injury after 57 snaps, which was still more than any other Browns offensive player played. Tight end Austin Hooper was next up with 56, followed by WRs Odell Beckham Jr. (55), Jarvis Landry (52) and KhaDarel Hodge (40). No. 4 wideout Rashard Higgins saw 16 reps.

Four defensive players were on the field for all 59 snaps. All play in the secondary: safeties Andrew Sendejo and Karl Joseph and CBs Denzel Ward and Terrance Mitchell.

No. 3 CB Tavierre Thomas played 28, just under half the snaps. No other corners played on defense, a situation that bears watching. The third safety, Ronnie Harrison, played just two reps after joining the team during the week.

Rookie DT Jordan Elliott was on the field for nearly half the game, 26 total snaps on defense. Five defensive linemen played more than 50 percent of the 59 snaps, including reserve DE Adrian Clayborn (32). It shows the heavy emphasis on the D-line rotation under new coordinator Joe Woods.