Chargers’ Khalil Mack delivers career performance vs. Raiders: ‘He is still that guy’

Khalil Mack put together a rare performance against his former team.

Joey Bosa and Tuli Tuipulotu had been getting all the praise in weeks prior, as they had three and two sacks, respectively. All the while, Khalil Mack, who hadn’t recorded a sack entering Sunday, was gearing up for a monstrous performance of his own.

Mack posted six sacks in the Chargers’ 24-17 victory over the Raiders, two of which resulted in fumbles. His six sacks are a career-high for a single game and a franchise record. It’s also tied for the second-most sacks in a single game in NFL history.

Mack was one sack shy of tying the single-game sack record, which is held by Pro Football Hall of Famer Derrick Thomas, dating back to 1990.

Last season, Mack had a three-sack performance the first time the Bolts played the Raiders, the team that drafted him back in 2014 and where he spent the first four seasons of his professional career.

“You can say it’s something extra, but it is what it is,” Mack said about delivering big performances against his former team, per the team’s official website.

“I mean obviously you want to play good against your old team,” Mack later added. “But just knowing where you come from and knowing that organization and what it meant to me to get drafted to that organization. It’s a lot of respect, but it’s a lot of wanting to get back too… At the end of the day, it’s just another game.”

The offensive line was a strength of the Raiders coming into the game, as they allowed just four sacks through the first three games. But this was with Jimmy Garoppolo under center. Instead, rookie Aidan O’Connell started in place of the inactive Garoppolo.

With that came growing pains for O’Connell, who frequently held onto the ball for too long, resulting in an easier path for Mack to get to him. Plus, Mack wasn’t double teamed as much as other opposing teams would. He was double teamed on just two pass rushes.

Despite being 32, Mack showed on the field that he can still play at a high level.

“He had been [pass] rushing at a high level for three games,” Brandon Staley said postgame. “We do this thing — he taught me back in Chicago, — close, he had been close the whole year, to having three monster games. He was close.

“Today, he put it all together,” Staley added. “This guy is one of the best edge players of a generation and he is still that guy, he is still that guy — he just showed everybody, ‘I’m still that guy.’ He’s one of our leaders.”

Mack will look to keep the pressure on two Sundays from now when the Chargers take on the Cowboys in Week 6.

Numbers show that former Badger T.J. Watt is the most prolific pass-rusher in NFL history

T.J. Watt is on the greatest pass-rush heater in NFL history:

Former Wisconsin linebacker T.J. Watt set the Pittsburgh Steelers franchise sack record last night with No. 81.5, breaking a tie with NFL great James Harrison.

Watt’s career numbers are ridiculous: 89 games played, 81.5 sacks, six interceptions, 25 forced fumbles, 250 total tackles and three First-Team All-Pro selections. He is without question the best defensive player in the NFL.

Related: Big Ten Power Rankings after Week 3: Wisconsin rises after ugly win

What is as impressive as the counting stats is his torrid pace. He’s been the NFL’s premier outside linebacker since he entered the league in 2017, and hasn’t slowed down once.

For some context: Watt reached his record-setting 81.5 sack total in only 89 games played, averaging out to 0.92 sacks per game. The former record holder Harrison reached 80.5 in 177 games, averaging 0.45 sacks per game. Watt did what Harrison did but nearly exactly half of the time.

How about some larger NFL context: Watt’s 0.92 sacks per game ranks No. 1 in NFL history for players who have played in at least 16 NFL games.

Here’s the leaderboard:

  1. T.J. Watt: 0.92
  2. Myles Garrett: 0.88
  3. Reggie White: 0.85
  4. Micah Parsons: 0.84
  5. Mark Gastineau: 0.83
  6. Nick Bosa: 0.81
  7. Lawrence Taylor: 0.79
  8. DeMarcus Ware: 0.78
  9. Dexter Manley: 0.77
  10. Von Miller: 0.77
  11. J.J. Watt: 0.76

There is an argument that T.J. Watt is the single most prolific pass-rusher in NFL history.

Cowboys’ Micah Parsons looks to top 2021 sack total; NFL single-season record is ultimate goal

Calling 15 “the minimum,” Micah Parsons wants the NFL single-season record for sacks, though what that number is depends on who you ask. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Micah Parsons feasted on quarterbacks as a rookie. But he’s coming back in his second season hungry for even more.

The reigning Defensive Rookie of the Year finished the 2021 season with 13 sacks, far surpassing the old Cowboys franchise record for a first-year player. He even came close to setting a new rookie mark for the entire league, but landing on the COVID-19 list for the team’s regular-season finale prevented him from the attempt.

Now entering his second season, the just-turned-23-year-old linebacker has set his sights even higher.

“Yeah, 15’s like the minimum,” Parsons told Cody Benjamin of CBS Sports recently. “Fifteen’s what I wanna hit. But definitely 23 is that goal, to break the record.”

Fifteen sacks last year would have broken the recognized rookie mark, 14.5, set by the Titans’ Jevon Kearse (coincidentally, the uncle of current Cowboys safety Jayron Kearse) in 1999.

Twenty-three sacks would top what Pittsburgh’s T.J. Watt was able to do last year when he racked up 22.5. That feat- at least in the official record books- tied Michael Strahan’s 2001 effort (although most observers would say Strahan’s total comes with a big fat asterisk, as Brett Favre seemed to take a dive in their season finale to gift his friend the title).

Parsons will have a harder time in his sophomore season. He’s not a surprise any longer, for one. Teams know he could line up at either linebacker or defensive end and be equally effective. Opposing offenses have a full year’s worth of tape to use in creating blocking schemes to combat him.

The former first-round draft pick himself knows that much will be new in 2022, including the quarterbacks he’ll be seeing most often right in the NFC East.

“None of them’s too easy. It’s really hard,” Parsons said when asked to compare the Cowboys’ rival passers. “Never touched Daniel Jones; I think he got hurt our game, and he didn’t even play at all after that. And then [Carson] Wentz, I never played him. We touched [Jalen] Hurts a little bit, but I had COVID the last game. These guys are really new to me, to be honest.”

Still, the uber-confident Parsons isn’t worried about matching anyone else’s expectations of him based off what he put on the field last year.

“I just take the blessings that God gave me. I don’t feel like I need to reach anyone’s expectations but my own. If I can live with it, I can deal with it. I’m gonna just go out there and play my game. I don’t wanna go out there and chase no one’s story. I just gotta do my thing, and that’s what got me here, and that’s what I’m gonna keep doing.”

He says he doesn’t want to chase anyone’s story, but he wouldn’t mind grabbing some of that interception spotlight from teammate Trevon Diggs.

“I told Tre I might lead the team in picks this year,” Parsons joked. “We don’t got no money on it, but I’ve been really practicing my hands this year to get my hands on a couple picks this year.”

All that, of course, while he’s working to get his hands on a record number of quarterbacks.

Technically speaking, though, 23 sacks would only give Parsons a share of the true all-time single-season mark. Sacks didn’t become an official NFL stat until 1982. Anything that happened before that is up for debate and a certain amount of interpretation of archival film and old box scores.

According to some sources, like the Pro Football Reference Library, Al Baker of the Detroit Lions tallied 23 sacks in 1978. And he did it as a rookie, giving him two all-time records in one fell swoop.

The Cowboys, unsurprisingly, keep track of their own team records. In-house data maintains that Harvey Martin recorded 23 sacks a year prior, in 1977. (Pro Football Reference disagrees and credits the big defensive end with just 20, which is still absurdly impressive for a 14-game season.)

Those marks are unofficial, but a noted football history buff like Parsons may want to aim for 23.5 sacks this season just to be on the safe side and eliminate all confusion.

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Safety Jamal Adams plans to shatter the defensive back sack record

Seattle Seahawks safety Jamal Adams plans to shatter the defensive back sack record he set Week 14 against the New York Jets at Lumen Field.

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Seattle Seahawks safety Jamal Adams had the Week 14 game against his former team, the New York Jets, circled on his calendar. On Sunday, Adams not only shined, but set himself a new NFL record.

Adams finished the day logging five tackles, one tackle for loss, one pass defensed and a sack. More importantly, Adams set the new league record for the most single-season sacks by a defensive back at 8.5 on the year.

Adams has played in just nine games this year . . . and he’s just getting started.

“It really hasn’t hit me yet that I broke the record but, really I’m trying to shatter it to be real with you,” Adams said after the win. “This is just a start, it’s not the finish. The marathon continues.”

For his impressive play against the Jets, Adams is the Seahawks Wire’s Peak Performer.

He’ll get another shot to add to his sack total next Sunday when the Seahawks head east to square off against the Washington Football Team.

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Shaq Barrett breaks Warren Sapp’s franchise sack record

It took a few weeks longer than he would have liked, but Shaq Barrett has finally broken the Tampa Bay Buccaneers franchise record for sacks in a single season formerly held by Warren Sapp. Currently standing a 17.5 sacks on the season, Barrett is …

It took a few weeks longer than he would have liked, but Shaq Barrett has finally broken the Tampa Bay Buccaneers franchise record for sacks in a single season formerly held by Warren Sapp. Currently standing a 17.5 sacks on the season, Barrett is arguably one of the best free agent pick ups in the Buccaneers history.

In the second quarter, not only did quarterback Jameis Winston become the eighth quarterback to surpass 5,000 yards, Barrett was able to cement his name in Buccaneers history.

Barrett was brought in on a one-year deal this offseason and as most notably stated by coach Bruce Arians, [he] ain’t going nowhere, in reference on the team bringing Barrett back long term.