Halftime analysis of Texans Week 7 matchup vs. Raiders

Here are our thoughts on the #Texans’ first-half performance against the #Raiders in Week 7

The Houston Texans are in a fierce competition against the Las Vegas Raiders in Week 7 and have held their own against the AFC’s worst team by record so far. A win this week would get Houston a game closer to the .500 mark and could open the door to a more competitive season as their 2022 schedule wears on.

This game hasn’t been the most exciting matchup of the day so far, but for Texans fans, the team’s gritty play is sure to be a breath of fresh air after their disappointing 1-3-1 start to the season.

Here are our takeaways from the first half of this Week 7 matchup:

First half analysis of Browns Week 3 matchup vs. Steelers

Here is what we saw in the first half of Thursday’s matchup between the #Browns and #Steelers

The Cleveland Browns have been able to hang with the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 3. They’d rather have a lead, but the Browns are still within a score of getting ahead of the Steelers and are down just one point heading into halftime. Though they will kick off to Pittsburgh to start the second half, Cleveland should have a chance to take control of the game if they can play some stingy defense in the third quarter.

Here are our three biggest takeaways from the game’s first half:

Quick thoughts and takes as Packers enter 2022 regular season

A few notes, thoughts and takes on Matt LaFleur’s team as the Packers enter the 2022 season.

The Green Bay Packers will head to Minnesota to play the Vikings in Week 1 on Sunday afternoon. Here are a few quick thoughts on the Packers as Matt LaFleur’s team enters the 2022 regular season.

– I may sound like a broken record, but A.J. Dillon isn’t just a backup running back in this offense. He will be a featured player. Over and over again, Aaron Rodgers has said he’s one of the offense’s best 11. The Packers will find ways of getting both Dillon and Jones on the field together. And if Jones is going to be a bigger part of the passing game, naturally Dillon should play a bigger role as a runner. If I was a betting man, I’d have money on Dillon producing over 1,275 total yards (75 per game) and scoring 10 or more touchdowns in 2022. He’s going to break out as an elite player this year.

– Eventually, rookies Christian Watson and Romeo Doubs are going to play a big role in the passing game. It’s a matter of when not if. Watson’s size and speed are truly threatening and need to be on the field, even if it’s just in the MVS field-stretching role. Doubs proved he has legitimate separation ability all summer and may have long-term star power. They will need time to adjust, and Aaron Rodgers trusts the veterans ahead of them, but Watson and Doubs probably hold the keys to unlocking the true potential of the Packers offense.

– One more thing here to nail home the point: Sammy Watkins and Randall Cobb both have extensive injury histories, and Allen Lazard (ankle) is already dealing with an injury issue. The Packers also like playing Lazard and Cobb inside in the slot. An opportunity to play on the perimeter is absolutely going to be available for Watson and Doubs.

– Rashan Gary and Kenny Clark are going to wreck football games. Little doubt about it. I’m just as excited to see veterans Preston Smith and Jarran Reed this year. Smith is coming off arguably his best pro season, and Reed has a 10-sack season in his past. Both are going to be facing a lot of single-team blocks. If they are disruptive, who will be able to block this front?

– Having De’Vondre Campbell and Quay Walker play together should, in theory and in practice, greatly assist the defense’s ability to defend the middle of the field in the passing game. They are both 6-4 and can run like the wind. What a luxury. Windows are going to be tight (and look smaller) for quarterbacks who want to attack those potentially vulnerable areas in two-high shell coverages.

– Once Robert Tonyan is 100 percent, I’d expect him to re-establish himself as a major part of the passing game. Rodgers loves his game (he called him Pro Bowl quality on Wednesday), especially as a route runner, and LaFleur’s scheme has always been tight-end friendly. If the Packers are dominant again in the red zone, Tonyan will have to play a big role.

– Interested to see how the Packers mix and match defensive responsibilities for the three cornerbacks. It should be, and almost certainly will be, matchup-based. Rasul Douglas might be the primary slot defender, but Jaire Alexander should be the top option against quicker slot receivers. Douglas and Eric Stokes are plus defenders on the perimeter, so this should be an easy transition to make during games and between weeks.

– Keep an eye on Darnell Savage’s hamstring injury. He’s been sitting out for a month, and he’s still on the injury report to start Week 1. The Packers will hope it’s not a lingering issue because the depth at safety is nothing if not concerning.

– Speaking of depth, the Packers are going to be counting on a few castoffs as the primary depth in the secondary. Keisean Nixon (not re-signed by Raiders), Dallin Leavitt (released by Raiders) and Rudy Ford (released by Jaguars) could all play major minutes if there’s an injury or two. Scary. All three are core special teamers.

– The depth on the offensive line is young but so intriguing. Yosh Nijman is entering Year 4 after playing in a lot of games last season, and rookie Zach Tom looks like the real deal. Can Jake Hanson, who might start Week 1, be the Lucas Patrick-like supersub inside once everyone is healthy? Developing players like Rasheed Walker and Caleb Jones long-term could really pay off.

– We’ll see if Amari Rodgers becomes anything more than a gadget weapon on offense. He’s not higher than WR6 on the depth chart, and the Packers really only got him involved on handoffs and manufactured touches in the preseason. Rodgers will enter the season as the primary returner. Can he have a Tyler Ervin-like impact?

– Losing a player like Davante Adams isn’t fun, but there should be a certain excitement level about how the loss of an important player can push a playcaller and schemer like LaFleur – and a quarterback like Rodgers – to evolve in meaningful and valuable ways. The offense is going to look different. It has to. And Rodgers has to play a different way. New doesn’t always mean better, and it certainly could mean regression, but it’s exciting nonetheless. There should be trust in the relationship between LaFleur and Rodgers in terms of getting it right in the post-Davante era.

– One has to wonder if Watson and Doubs eventually push Rodgers to return for at least one more season in 2023. They are rookies, but the potential long-term is obvious. Just as the evolution on offense is exciting for an outsider, it’s fair to ponder if the new relationships forming between quarterback and wide receivers are invigorating for the four-time MVP.

– Who knows how much of first-round pick Devonte Wyatt we’ll see in 2022. He was disappointing this summer, especially as a 24-year-old rookie from a major conference. The transition is a tough one, but nothing could have prepared Wyatt for the professional game like playing at Georgia. He’s an older prospect. He needs to produce early.

– Is the third-round curse alive and well? Offensive lineman Sean Rhyan didn’t look ready to play in any type of way during the preseason. He’ll be buried on the depth chart to start his rookie season. It’s a little disappointing that his transition to right guard has gone so poorly early.

– Book it: Second-year center Josh Myers is going to be the breakout player of 2022.

– The Packers may take a step back in the win column this season (can anyone really expect them to win 13 games for the fourth straight year?) but this is still a top Super Bowl contender. An elite quarterback and an elite defense can take a team – even one with holes – a long way. We know the first is true, but the defense still has to prove its caliber in games. This team isn’t perfect, and it’s probably not as good overall as recent Packers squads, but it’s talented in the right areas and built to win late in the season.

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Key takeaways from first half of Chiefs vs. Chargers Week 3

An embarrassing first half of the #Chiefs vs. #Chargers Week 3 game is in the books, here is what we’re taking away:

The Kansas City Chiefs couldn’t get out of their own way in the first half of play, turning the football over on three consecutive offensive drives. They’re beating themselves in every possible sense of the phrase right now. They’ll get the ball to start the second half, but they find themselves in a 10-point hole with the Chargers leading 14-3.

Here are our biggest takeaways from the first half of the Chiefs’ first AFC West matchup:

Premier League suspends season, but seems to have done so for worrying reason

It was only when Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta was diagnosed with COVID-19 that the Premier League made the right decision.

On Friday the Premier League and the rest of English soccer — the Championship and lower leagues — suspended their seasons until at least April due to the outbreak of COVID-19, a strain of the coronavirus.

It was a late-made decision — as of Thursday night, the leagues had all plans to move forward with games this weekend as regularly scheduled. It was only after news broke that Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta had tested positive for COVID-19, and Chelsea player Callum Hudson-Odoi had as well, that the team owners held an emergency meeting on Friday morning and made the decision.

I am glad the Premier League got there and did the right thing. I am worried they got there for the wrong reasons.

Too often we are seeing professional sports leagues only act when one of their own contracts the disease. It is only then that the point is driven home. While the NBA acted more quickly than other leagues in the United States, and was the first domino to fall in a sense, it was only when Rudy Gobert tested positive that the league made the decision.

Twenty thousand plus people in stadiums across the country, packed in during a pandemic, with no way of knowing who is sick or not? Not an issue. One center for the Utah Jazz? League suspended.

The same has happened in the Premier League now, which seemed more than content to hold games … until the Arsenal manager and a Chelsea player got sick. Now every league in English soccer is off.

This is how too many of us think, I fear. A pandemic is an abstraction until it hits someone you know, at which point it becomes very, very real. By waiting until one of their own tested positive, these leagues are making clear they don’t really care about general public health, or if they do care, they are willing to risk it. But when a member of their tribe comes down with it, then it becomes something to react to.

I can understand the hesitance, but Premier League officials needed to understand what a cavalier attitude about this disease can bring. While coronavirus has not rocked the UK yet, it is currently doing so in northern Italy, where the pandemic has led to a nightmarish, post-apocalyptic scenario which medical professionals are describing using war-time metaphors. There is a shortage of hospital beds. People are getting sick, and dying.

Interview after interview with Italians has them saying: We just thought it was the flu. We didn’t take it seriously.

Thankfully, these leagues are now taking this seriously. With the Premier League, it took a positive test for Arteta, who we all pray recovers quickly from this disease. And in a perverse way, Arteta’s positive test could end up doing a lot of good, in that it woke the Premier League up to the real threat here.

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Lakers-Clippers was everything we wanted, but it showcased a major NBA problem

Lakers-Clippers was a phenomenal NBA game that felt like it mattered, but that’s all too rare in the NBA now.

The Los Angeles Lakers took on the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday afternoon in a nationally televised game that featured LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Kawhi Leonard, and Paul George. The Lakers and Clippers are currently in first and second place in the Western Conference, and seem destined for a showdown in the conference finals. Jay-Z was in attendance. This game had HYPE.

The game delivered too, staying close until late when LeBron led a Lakers charge to take the game, 112-103, and showed LeBron off as a potential MVP winner, even at the age of 35.

The game felt important, and it delivered. We need more of it. We need more of these two teams.

Now, of course, I would never suggest that NBA commissioner Adam Silver, with the help of the refs, should orchestrate all the playoff series so that the Lakers and Clippers would meet up. That would be abhorrent. Mr. Silver, don’t you dare do this.

[Wink]

I kid! I kid!

But Sunday’s greatness also showcased a major problem for the NBA: It shouldn’t take that much to get people really fired up for a regular-season NBA game.

(AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Sunday was the first regular season game this year that felt special, that wasn’t part of the NBA Christmas package, a wonderful gimmick that delivers every year. For just a regular game, this was one of the first that seemed important, before, during, and after the game.

We’ve had amazing games so far this year, games with playoff atmospheres, game with real rivalries. But this was the first game this season where everything came together: Marquee stars, marquee teams, national TV, local rivalry, playoff-like atmosphere.

It was appointment television … which feels rare now. For too many sports and leagues now, it’s really hard to convince an audience that anything outside the postseason is appointment television.

This isn’t just an NBA problem. This is an “every American pro sports league minus the NFL” problem. For years, both the NHL and the MLB have had to deal with the casual fan saying “eh, I’ll tune in for the playoffs.” Same deal with MLS, where over half the league makes the postseason. Now it appears to be coming for the NBA.

(This right here is why the league is exploring mid-season tournaments and other ideas that seem outrageous — they’re trying to get non-diehards involved early.)

Sunday felt special, but that’s the thing: It shouldn’t take an intra-city rivalry game between probably the two best teams in the league, multiple MVPs on the floor, and arguably the greatest player of all time recapturing his MVP-form, Jay-Z there … it shouldn’t take ALL THAT to get people excited about the regular season. That’s too high a bar to clear.

I’m not sure there’s an easy solution, either. The NBA has to simultaneously market its lesser stars better, and sell fans on the idea of the importance of the regular season better, and possibly try out things like a mid-season tournament, or else it will go the way of other sports: Something casual sports fans will keep an eye on until the postseason, and then get caught up. That’s fine for most sports fans, but not good at all for the NBA.

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