The NFL has announced its top 20 players for 2022. Here’s how it should look.

The NFL has announced its list of the top 20 players in the league — in alphabetical order. Here’s how it should go numerically.

Every year, the NFL polls players to rank other players, and from that, there’s the league’s list of the top 100 players. It’s always a controversial list, and there are a lot of questions regarding how much the players actually are involved, but any subjective ranking in any endeavor is going to annoy more people than not. That’s just the way things go.

This year, the NFL has already announced its top players from 100-21, and we’ve already expressed our own issues with the bottom of that list.

The final list of players 20-1 will be shown on the NFL Network on Sunday, August 28, in a three-hour show starting at 8:00 p.m. EST. And just to whet your appetite for that, the NFL has announced the 20 best players in alphabetical order.

Based on our own list of the NFL’s 101 best players (which Mark Schofield and myself split into two parts here and here), here’s how we think the NFL’s top 20 players should look in numerical order.

The NFL’s top 11 edge defenders

Mark Schofield continues our position lists with the NFL’s 11 best edge-rushers.

One of the beautiful things about an exercise such as this one, that has myself and Doug Farrar ranking the top players at every position, is it serves as a reminder just how talented — and deep — the NFL is at just about every roster spot.

Trying to keep this list of the top edge defenders in the league to just 11 proved beyond trying. Were there some sleepless nights? At the very least there was some tossing and turning along the way. By the time you get to the players listed as honorable mentions, you’ll realize just how talented the edge defenders in today’s NFL truly are.

Without further ado, here are the top 11 edge defenders in the NFL today. As previously intimated, our position lists present the lead-up to our list of the Top 101 players in the NFL today.

The NFL’s top 13 safeties

The NFL’s top 12 slot defenders

The NFL’s top 12 outside cornerbacks

The NFL’s top 11 linebackers

The NFL’s top 11 edge defenders

Touchdown Wire’s Mark Schofield continues our position lists with the 11 best edge-rushers heading into the 2022 NFL season.

One of the beautiful things about an exercise such as this one, that has myself and Doug Farrar ranking the top players at every position, is it serves as a reminder just how talented — and deep — the NFL is at just about every roster spot.

Trying to keep this list of the top edge defenders in the league to just 11 proved beyond trying. Were there some sleepless nights? At the very least there was some tossing and turning along the way. By the time you get to the players listed as honorable mentions, you’ll realize just how talented the edge defenders in today’s NFL truly are.

Without further ado, here are the top 11 edge defenders in the NFL today. As previously intimated, our position lists present the lead-up to our list of the Top 101 players in the NFL today.

The NFL’s top 13 safeties

The NFL’s top 12 slot defenders

The NFL’s top 12 outside cornerbacks

The NFL’s top 11 linebackers

Steelers T.J. Watt wins AP Defensive Player of the Year

T.J. Watt earns the honor as the AP Defensive Player of the Year

It was a family affair as the NFL named its AP Defensive Player of the Year on Thursday.

J.J. Watt was a presenter with pop star Katy Perry when it was revealed the Pittsburgh Steelers’ T.J. Watt earned the honor.

 

The Steelers linebacker had 22.5 sacks in 15 regular-season games played. His 1.5 sacks per game are the second-most in NFL history behind Reggie White’s 1.75 in 1987 (White also won DPOY).

J.J., won the Defensive Player of the Year title three times (2012, ’14, ’15), making the Watts the first brothers to win the MVP, OPOY or DPOY award.

Watt becomes the seventh Steelers player to win the DPOY award, joining HOFer Joe Greene (twice), HOFer Mel Blount, HOFer Jack Lambert, HOFer Rod Woodson, James Harrison, and HOFer Troy Polamalu.

 

Chiefs big man Nick Allegretti discards T.J. Watt, catches TD pass

The Kansas City Chiefs with a big man touchdown in AFC Super Wild Card action

The Kansas City Chiefs’ Nick Allegretti did double-duty on one play in the third quarter of Sunday’s AFC Super Wild Card game with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Allegretti, 6-foot-4, 315 pounds, reported as eligible. He begins the play by blocking and dismissing the great T.J. Watt.

That mission accomplished, Allegretti turned around at the goal line and was the recipient of a touchdown pass from Patrick Mahomes.

After the big-man score, Mahomes went the usual route, hitting Tyreek Hill for his fifth TD pass of the game, all in 11 minutes.

T.J. Watt scores touchdown for Pittsburgh Steelers

T.J. Watt took a fumble recover 26 yards for a Steelers touchdown

The Pittsburgh Steelers are on the scoreboard first in their AFC Super Wild Card game against the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead on Sunday.

Pittsburgh’s attack has gone absolutely nowhere so it was up to the defense and the great T.J. Watt to provide instant, um, offense.

The Chiefs tried to get fancy with a Wildcat play and Mecole Hardman had trouble executing the handoff to Darrel Williams.

The running back bobbled it once, was crunched by Cameron Heyward, and coughed up the ball again.

T.J. Watt, who equaled the NFL record with 22.5 sacks this season, was on the spot, picked up the ball, and returned it 26 yards for a touchdown.

The PAT made it 7-0 for the road team.

It was the first touchdown of T.J. Watt’s career. It tied him with Steeler teammate and brother Derek Watt, who has one TD in his career as a fullback.

Older brother J.J. of the Arizona Cardinals has 6 touchdowns, all during his time in Houston. Half were on offense.

Wild-card playoff preview: What the Steelers must do to beat the Chiefs

The Pittsburgh Steelers face a huge task this weekend when they square off with the Kansas City Chiefs. How do they pull off the upset?

Like the other AFC wild-card games, the Sunday night affair between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Kansas City Chiefs is a rematch of a game from earlier in the season. Back in Week 16, the Chiefs throttled the Steelers by a final score of 36-10. The loss continued extended a seven-game winning streak for Kansas City to eight, while putting a dent in Pittsburgh’s playoff hopes.

But, thanks to an overtime win on the final weekend of the season — and an overtime win by the Las Vegas Raiders in the final game of the season — the Steelers are in and the rematch is set.

In the buildup to this game, the bouquets are flowing back and forth. This week, Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger commented that the Steelers were “probably 20 point underdogs,” while Chiefs head coach Andy Reid declared that Pittsburgh “was like a one seed.”

So who wins the final AFC game of the weekend? How can the Steelers pull off the upset? Here is what the Steelers must do to beat the Chiefs.

6 NFL records that could be broken in Week 18

T.J. Watt, Cooper Kupp and Tom Brady are on the cusp of setting new single-season records in Week 18.

We’re heading into Week 18 for the first time in NFL history, as the league celebrates what it has been marketing as its “biggest” season ever.

Not only does the addition of a 17th regular-season game push the date of Super Bowl XVI back to Feb. 13, the latest date ever for the big game, it also puts a number of single-season NFL records in jeopardy.

A few weeks ago, Touchdown Wire took stock of nine single-season records that could fall by season’s end.

Now, with just one regular-season game remaining for each team, we’re circling back to assess which of those marks are still within reach.

Why the Browns’ offensive line was Baker Mayfield’s biggest problem against the Steelers

The Browns had a horrible outing against the Steelers. Blame an abysmal offensive line performance before you point fingers at Baker Mayfield.

When a quarterback has a disastrous game, the fault formula for that disaster is generally part quarterback, part receivers, and part offensive line. Football is the ultimate team sport, and no horrible outing is usually one person’s fault.

In the case of Baker Mayfield and the Cleveland Browns against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night, it was everybody’s problem. In a 26-14 loss, Mayfield completed 16 passes on 38 attempts for 185 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions, nine sacks, and a passer rating of 53.1. We’ve discussed at length all the issues with Cleveland’s offense this season, and generally speaking, we’ve let the offensive line off the hook. But we can’t do so in this case.

Yes, Mayfield had some errant throws. Yes, his receivers dropped passes. But the primary instigators of this particular offensive malady were the five guys up front. Steelers edge-monster T.J. Watt racked up four sacks, mostly against overwhelmed right tackle James Hudson, but Hudson wasn’t the only problem, and Mayfield brought that up after the game.

“I’m not going to get into too many details about that as a full season evaluation,” the quarterback said when asked about the round-robin at the right tackle position due to injury. “We’ve, obviously, been pretty banged up. I believe in James — I pray to God you guys don’t spin this into something where I’m criticizing James Hudson. That’s not what I’m doing. We’re talking about an All-Pro that he’s going up against and he hasn’t had very many starts. So I’m proud of James. He kept swinging, he kept fighting.

“Now, when it comes to, what we’ve had to deal with all season, there’s been a lot of ups and downs. You know, do I believe I can play better? Absolutely. Do I believe there’s better that we as an offense could have been put in that are better? Absolutely. There’s so many critiques throughout the year, if there wasn’t, we wouldn’t be sitting here at 7-9. So, it is what it is.”

Was Hudson a problem? Absolutely. Was he the only problem along the front five in this game? Absolutely not. Everybody on that line, including and especially guards Joel Bitonio and Wyatt Teller, who in most weeks could be called the NFL’s best guard duo, had games they’d like to forget.

We’re going to spend all kinds of time this offseason discussing Mayfield’s future, and whether he’s the best quarterback option for the Browns, but this whomping wasn’t nearly as much Mayfield’s fault as some might prefer to believe.

T.J. Watt wrecks Baker Mayfield, Browns for 4 sacks.

T.J. Watt and the Steelers devoured Baker Mayfield

T.J. Watt spent more time in the Cleveland Browns’ backfield Monday night than Nick Chubb and D’Ernest Johnson.

The Steelers’ elite pass rusher picked up four sacks as Pittsburgh disrupted its AFC North rivals to the tune of nine sacks.

Watt was unstoppable. In addition to the sacks, he was credited with 5 solo tackles, 3 tackles for loss, and 2 passes defensed. Just another night’s work.