Matthew Stafford soundly rejects any notion he wants out of Detroit

Matthew Stafford soundly rejects any notion he wants out of Detroit

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Matthew Stafford has been through a lot of losing in his 12 seasons in Detroit. The team’s miserable stretch of late, losing two games to teams with lesser records in four days in fairly uncompetitive fashion, is one of the low points.

Yet Stafford continues to insist he’s all-in on being in Detroit and helping the Lions turn it around. In his postgame press conference Zoom, Stafford showed no inclination he is unhappy playing in Detroit or that he wants out from the losing culture around him.

“I love playing this game. I hate losing. I love the guys in the locker room. I love this organization. I love playing for it, so that’s not my style. I’m going to keep fighting, keep doing everything I can do to try and help us win.”

Stafford pointed the finger at himself for the loss.

“Obviously I wasn’t good enough today because we didn’t win the game so I
have to be better. I hate losing, frustrating, disappointing, all of that. But I’m going to continue to work and try and get better.”

The 32-year-old completed 28 of his 42 pass attempts, netting 295 yards. He threw one TD and one INT, an early pick-six to J.J. Watt. Stafford was also sacked four times in a game the Lions played without four offensive starters.

Stafford was asked specifically if he ever wondered what it would be like to play somewhere else. He shot that down emphatically.

“No, I just put my head down and go to work. It’s on us as players, we have to go out there and make plays. It doesn’t matter what uniform you’re wearing, the team that makes more plays is going to win the game. And we didn’t do that and haven’t done it consistently enough this year, we
understand that. We work every day to make sure that it is us who is making the plays to win the game. So we have to go out there and make the plays when they’re available.”

Dazed and confused? ‘probably our best’ week of prep, says McCarthy

In a tense press conference that put the head coach’s frustrations on clear display, it was the quote that will stick in the craw of Cowboys fans over the course of the next short week. Following a thoroughly embarrassing 38-10 home loss to the …

In a tense press conference that put the head coach’s frustrations on clear display, it was the quote that will stick in the craw of Cowboys fans over the course of the next short week.

Following a thoroughly embarrassing 38-10 home loss to the Cardinals in front of a national Monday Night Football audience, a game in which Dallas looked lifeless at best and historically inept for the rest of the time, Mike McCarthy’s perspective on how the team looked in workouts leading up to the Week 6 game will not sit well with a fanbase watching the season go down in flames.

“As I continue to learn this team,” McCarthy said early in his postgame remarks, “I felt like the preparation coming into the game was probably our best so far this year.”

There are numerous ways to assess a football team. The win-loss record is the most obvious; it’s ultimately the only thing that matters. But if the goal is to find the silver lining, the glimmer of hope, the truth behind the standings, there are countless other ways to crunch the numbers and judge a roster.

Gaudy offensive totals can show high-scoring potential in regard to the playmaking positions. Low points or yards allowed can indicate a stifling defense capable of beating anybody on a given day. Even a stat like close-game win percentage can try to factor in lucky bounces and bad breaks, showing a team that finds a way to win more often than not.

But nobody in sports talks about how well a team practices as a measure of anything meaningful.

To be fair, McCarthy followed his line about the squad’s preparation with an admission that it’s all a moot point come kickoff.

It came in McCarthy’s opening comments, the traditional big-picture recap of the game he offers before taking reporters’ questions. And his introductory remarks show a palpable frustration with the team’s turnover problem. The Cowboys gave away the ball four times, resulting in a slew of points for Arizona that Dallas was never able to come close to matching.

“Very disappointing home loss here this evening. Frankly, until we get off this turnover ratio- negative-12 for the year- we’re not playing well enough as a football team to overcome those critical errors. It happened again tonight. I thought the defense came out strong with the three stops there in the first quarter. The turnovers definitely changed the game. Clearly we didn’t handle the adversity of the four turnovers. We’re giving up, I think, 24 points off of turnovers tonight. We’re the worst in the league at taking care of the football. We’re not taking it away. And we’re giving up more points than anybody in the league off of turnovers. It’s frustrating to see the pattern here [in] five of the six games this year. We’ve got to continue to work at it. As I continue to learn this team, I felt like the preparation coming into the game was probably our best so far this year. But obviously, that doesn’t account for anything, particularly after a performance like tonight.”

In the full context of McCarthy’s recap, the preparation line speaks to his surprise that his players aren’t able to do something on Sundays (or Monday night) that they apparently do the other days of the week.

Many of the questions directed at the players after the game were about mindset, about the mental aspect of the game, about a here-we-go-again feeling of hopelessness that can wash over a team as mistakes start to pile up, as past errors repeat themselves, as additional players go down with injuries.

Ezekiel Elliott was asked about his fumbles. Andy Dalton spoke about the turnovers that he contributed to with a pair of interceptions.

The defense got the questions, too, after giving up over 37 points for the fifth week in a row.

“I feel like we’re good, mentally,” linebacker Leighton Vander Esch said in the wake of his first game back since Week 1. “We’ve just got to clean stuff up and play one snap at a time, one week at a time.”

“It’s mental. We have the physical. There’s no question about the physical,” Jaylon Smith added. “Collectively, as a whole, we have to lock in and do it right. Enough talking about it, we’ve got to do it right.”

And whether it’s the defense giving up yet another explosive play, the star running back putting the ball on the turf two plays in a row, or the last stud in the offensive line wall hobbling out of the tunnel before halftime, the 2020 Cowboys haven’t found the switch that lets them come together as a unit and work past those issues when they happen during a game.

“The mental and emotional game and growth of your football team, in my opinion, is always the last component to come and develop to the level that you need to be successful,” McCarthy said. “Obviously, ours isn’t quite where we want to be right now. But I can only go off of [the fact that] I work with these men every day, they give it up for us as coaches every single day. They’re doing the extra work that’s been asked of them. But we haven’t handled the adversity in games. It’s an unfortunate part of the game when players do get injured, but we had a chance to prepare for this team. You have to overcome adverse situations in the game.”

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Browns players quick to put one bad loss behind them

The Browns are trying to compartmentalize the bad loss in Pittsburgh

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Several somber Cleveland Browns players faced the media following Sunday’s humiliating 38-7 loss in Pittsburgh. To a man, they all reiterated the same basic theme:

The loss in Pittsburgh was bad, but it’s just one game.

It was a theme touched upon in one form or another by every Browns player who took to Zoom press conferences after the game.

From left guard Joel Bitonio,

“We have a long season. This counts as one. It is not the way we wanted to play.”

Wide receiver Jarvis Landry elaborated a little deeper,

“We will need to continue to adjust. In a season like this, you have to find ways to adjust. A lot of times, what is working you continue with it until it is not working. Then you find ways to make it better or adjust. That is just the phase we are in right now. We all have to go back, look at the film, be critical of ourselves and take this on the chin and move onto the next one. It is still a long season. There are still a lot of games left.”

Linebacker B.J. Goodson offered this, pinpointing the chance to play the Steelers again later this year,

“It is not just a game, but it is a game, and it was a hard-fought game. We did not come out with the victory today, but it is a long season. Like I said, we get a chance to play these guys again, and I am looking forward to it.”

Defensive end Myles Garrett had a similar take to Goodson,

“It is one game. We will see them again and then you will be able to measure how we stack up against either of them. Until then, just leave it as it is. They had our number. We have a gameplan, we adjust, come back and we will be at full strength by then.”

Finally, quarterback Baker Mayfield had this to say when asked about the Browns 4-2 record, but with the two defeats blowout losses to division rivals Pittsburgh and Baltimore,

“Not discouraging. No matter the score, it only counts for one. The good thing is we play both those teams again and we can learn and get better. It is onto the Bengals now and we have to continue to get better.”

The Browns play at Cincinnati in Week 7.

Baker Mayfield: ‘This does not feel like last year one bit’ after huge Week 4 win

The Browns also scored a huge win in Week 4 in 2019, but this year is very different

The Cleveland Browns ran past, around and through the Dallas Cowboys in the Week 4 win. The Browns rolled up over 300 yards on the ground and posted 33 first downs in smoking the Cowboys, 49-38.

The last time the Browns came close to a performance like that was exactly a year ago. In Week 4 of the 2019 season, the Browns ran for 193 yards and four touchdowns in a 40-25 road win over the mighty Baltimore Ravens. That was the unquestioned high point of the Freddie Kitchens era.

The chronology might be similar, but that ends the comparison between what happened in 2019 and what’s building under Kevin Stefanski and the 3-1 Browns in 2020. Just ask Baker Mayfield.

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The Browns QB, who did not turn the ball over for the third game in a row, was asked about Sunday’s win in Dallas and if it reminded him of the rollicking roll over the Ravens a year earlier.

“This does not feel like last year one bit,” Mayfield sternly answered. “We are going to continue to improve, and we are onto the second quarter of the year.”

The resiliency of coming back from the Ravens’ revenge in Week 1 is something Mayfield also focused on. He likes what he sees developing but acknowledges the need to keep getting better and more efficient.

“We are learning that we are efficient when we need to be, Mayfield stated. “We just have to be more consistent. I think that is the biggest takeaway from today. We scored a lot of points, but we left a lot out there, and I truly believe that … I am proud of these guys for this first quarter of the season being 3-1. That speaks volumes to us after bouncing back after Week 1.”

WATCH: All eyes in New England on Tom Brady’s hurting elbow

All eyes in New England are staying locked on Tom Brady’s throwing arm and Thursday showed a closer look at the quarterback’s throwing motion.

All eyes in New England are staying locked on Tom Brady’s throwing arm and Thursday showed a closer look at the quarterback’s throwing motion.

Video shot by a photographer for WBZ-TV in Boston documented Brady throwing and shaking out his right arm and elbow during practice three days before the team hosts the Bills with AFC East Division ramifications on the line. An NFL QB shaking out his arm isn’t really noteworthy on its own. Given the season (and the last couple of weeks, really) that Brady has had, it could be worth paying attention to.

The 42-year-old showed up to his postgame press conference two Sundays ago with his right elbow wrapped after losing to the Chiefs. Brady then practiced full go last week before facing the Bengals. But Tuesday, Bill Belichick acknowledged Brady’s limitations in a way the head coach doesn’t usually.

“There have been a couple examples where Tom hasn’t been able to do a lot this year, so that’s given [Jarrett] Stidham an opportunity to go with our first-team group and run our plays and run our offense,” Belichick said according to PatriotsWire. “That’s given Cody [Kessler] a chance to run scout-team plays because Jarrett’s not running those. And again, quarterbacks are always looking for more work, so they’ve taken advantage of it, and it’s helped them.

“You don’t always want to do it that way, but sometimes it’s best to do it that way.”

Brady has missed a few practices this season and been less accurate in games than is his career norm. With two regular-season games left, the veteran quarterback is completing 60.1% of his passes, which is his lowest mark since the 2013 season.

Is Tom Brady seriously hurt?

All eyes in New England are staying locked on Tom Brady’s throwing arm and Thursday showed a closer look at the quarterback’s throwing motion.

All eyes in New England are staying locked on Tom Brady’s throwing arm and Thursday showed a closer look at the quarterback’s throwing motion.

Is Tom Brady seriously hurt? (Patriotswire)

All eyes in New England are staying locked on Tom Brady’s throwing arm and Thursday showed a closer look at the quarterback’s throwing motion.

All eyes in New England are staying locked on Tom Brady’s throwing arm and Thursday showed a closer look at the quarterback’s throwing motion.

Baker Mayfield: win over Bills ‘can get us going here’

Browns QB Baker Mayfield believes the Week 10 win over the Buffalo Bills ‘can get us going here’

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A composed, measured Baker Mayfield addressed the media after the Cleveland Browns’ 19-16 win over the Buffalo Bills. Wearing a knit cap and an approachable demeanor, the Browns QB described how he believes the win can launch something big for the team.

“We didn’t play perfect by any means,” Mayfield said. “We can still learn from the film and move forward and improve. But having a tight victory against a great team is something that we needed — especially at home.”

Mayfield played well in the win. He completed 26 of his 38 pass attempts, netting 238 yards and two TDs. It was the first game of the season where Mayfield threw for multiple touchdowns. He did not turn the ball over, either.

The second-year QB seemed relieved at the win as he continued,

“We kind of got the monkey off our back with that one. First one, at home, in game nine is not something usually that happens but it can get us going from here.”

The Browns don’t get long to savor the victory. They host the rival Pittsburgh Steelers, winners of four in a row, on Thursday Night Football this week.