Brady vs Prescott: A one-sided battle is on tap in Cowboys-Pats

A look at the premium position in Sundays matchup between the Dallas Cowboys and New England Patriots.

People love sports for different reasons. Sometimes, it’s the passion or the emotion associated with it. Families bond around Sunday afternoon victories (or wallow in the losses), and memories forge loyalty unlike anything else we experience. For me, I always liked football for its passion, but it was the mental aspect that made me fall in love.

The NFL is a 32-team chess match. This metaphor doesn’t just apply to the in-game strategy on Sundays, but the overarching philosophy a team chooses to deploy in roster construction and team-building as well. It means that the league is non-static, as each organization searches for the key that unlocks the next wave of success. That’s what makes this current season so interesting. Players like Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Deshaun Watson, Dak Prescott and Russell Wilson are completely changing the landscape of what quarterbacks are capable of achieving. From a historical perspective, the current level of quarterback play is unprecedented.

At this point in time, there are several advanced metrics we can use to quantify the production of a team’s passing attack. I took seven of these metrics and made the effort to condense their information into two metrics. The rationale here is that we can combine information from the different stats to get an overall glimpse at player production (and two metrics fit into a graph more easily than seven). If you’re versed in statistics, this was done using principal component analysis, and the seven metrics used were:

  • EPA per Dropback
  • Success Rate (percentage of positive EPA plays)
  • Average Depth of Target (ADOT)
  • Sack Percentage
  • Interception Rate
  • Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt (from Pro-Football Reference)
  • Completion Percentage Over Expectation (CPOE)

In doing this, a significant portion of the signal was condensed into the first two components. Here’s a graph of single-season QB performance dating back to 2009, filtered to show passers with at least 100 pass attempts on the season.

A little bit of information on how to interpret these composite scores.

The first component (X-Axis) is an overall indicator for passing performance. In essence, it rewards a player for the good stuff (EPA, CPOE) and docks them for the bad (sacks, interceptions).

The second component (Y-Axis) isn’t quite that simple.

Here, this isn’t so much an indicator of quality as it is style. In a way, this composite score is capturing the aggressiveness of a passer, as it scores higher for players with a higher ADOT and interception rate, but penalizes them for a high CPOE.

I’ve highlighted the quarterbacks for this week’s matchup.

In the upper-right corner we see Dak Prescott’s 2019 season. In terms of his first composite score, Prescott ranks third overall  just behind Aaron Rodgers’ 2011 MVP campaign and Drew Brees’s 2018 MVP runner-up year (neither highlighted).

There are several other 2019 quarterbacks in the upper echelon of the first composite which would seem to suggest that teams are now better at leveraging a player’s skills for passing efficiency than they were in years past.

But encouragingly, Prescott is performing at this level while maintaining an aggressive approach, a positive indication for the explosive capabilities of the Dallas offense.

On the flip side, we find Tom Brady’s 2019 campaign just slightly above the overall average. As the face of the NFL and backbone of an epic dynasty, we’ve grown accustomed to Brady orchestrating the New England offense to fantastic efficiency, but the 2019 campaign has not reached those levels of expectation.

However, if we look at how this first composite score correlates from one year to the next, Brady is actually performing right about where we would expect, based on last year’s results.

Conversely, there’s been a common theme from many that they didn’t expect to see this caliber of progression from Prescott, and his first composite score would echo this sentiment as he’s performing well above what we’d predict given historical trends.

But if we revisit that first graph, we also see Brady scores relatively low on the second composite score.

If we take a look at his air yards distribution this season, it’s not hard to see why.

Brady is attempting passes of short length at a rate higher than the rest of the NFL, and as a result he’s attacking the deeper part of the field less frequently.

To be specific, 56% of Brady’s pass attempts have come within 5 yards of the line-of-scrimmage. The retirement of Rob Gronkowski and a revolving door of receivers have certainly played a factor here. Another way to see this is to compare the completion percentage density charts of Prescott and Brady.

We can see here the vast majority of Brady’s targets are around the line-of-scrimmage, and naturally he completes them at a high percentage. However, we also see that he hasn’t found great success targeting the perimeter, especially beyond 10 yards. When Brady has found success down the field, it’s most commonly been down the seam.

Prescott’s 2019 season seems all the more impressive in this chart, as there doesn’t appear to be an area of the field he can’t own. However, the chess game continues on Sunday, as Prescott faces his toughest challenge in grand-master Bill Belichick.

Here’s hoping the evolution of Prescott and the NFL continues.

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Tom Brady’s negativity about Patriots offense may be rooted in insecurity about his future

Tom Brady has had trouble staying positive during a 9-1 season. What’s wrong?

Tom Brady hasn’t been himself.

The New England Patriots quarterback hasn’t played well on the field in 2019, with the exception of beating up on bad teams like the Washington Redskins. He hasn’t been happy off the field either. Even after a 17-10 win over the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, Brady, who often calls himself “a positive person,” was short with the media. He didn’t seem to want to talk, not even in jest about the fact that Julian Edelman threw the Patriots’ only passing touchdown.

“We needed it,” Brady said, looking exhausted on Sunday after a game when he got hit six times.

It felt like a depressing realization: New England needed a trick play just to score a passing touchdown. Brady couldn’t do it himself. And the Patriots quarterback has done it himself for many years. At the outset of his career, he was heavily reliant upon Bill Belichick’s defenses. (Remember the “BRADY IS A GAME MANAGER” takes?) But then the Patriots quarterback began to establish himself as one of the NFL’s finest and, eventually, the greatest signal-caller in league history. As Brady shaped his career, he and Belichick beat teams as a one-two punch, even while Brady occasionally put the passing offense on his back — generally with help from tight end Rob Gronkowski. This year feels different. Brady is collapsing under the weight off his shoddy offense. Gronk isn’t around to help.

“The strength of our team is our defense and our special teams,” Brady said during an interview with WEEI on “The Greg Hill Show” on Monday. “On offense we just have to take advantage when we get opportunities and understand where our strengths lie and try and play to them — not giving any short fields, not turning the ball over and try and take advantage when we get into the red area to score touchdowns.”

A brief interlude: Let’s not totally count out New England’s offense. It always seems to figure things out, and with Gronk not around to be a difference-maker, it may simply be finding that it takes more creativity and in-house development to get the act together this year. The Patriots’ offense has some upside, with the late additions of receivers Mohamed Sanu (trade) and 2019 first-round pick N’Keal Harry (coming off IR), tight end Matt LaCosse (injury) and left tackle Isaiah Wynn (IR). But Brady knows how far the offense needs to go to win a Super Bowl, and he’s obviously afraid it’s a marathon that this cast can’t finish with him. If the offense looks like a mess deeper into the season, Brady will be held responsible, even though he couldn’t control the departures of Demaryius Thomas, Antonio Brown and Josh Gordon.

All of it adds a layer of intrigue to the NFL’s weirdest mystery: Where will Tom Brady play next season? It’s hard for anyone to envision him in anything besides a Patriots uniform, but the evidence of a potential breakup is mounting:

  • On Aug. 5, Brady signed a deal that included two void years past 2019. In other words, he and the Patriots agreed to a deal that makes Brady a free agent after this season.
  • Then, a few days later, he put his home up for sale. Yes, Brady can purchase another, smaller (or bigger) home in the area. “It’s a good time to sell,” he said on WEEI sports radio last month. But considering his contract situation, it was a timely coincidence, at least.
  • Brady has tried to downplay talk of a move — without outright coming out and saying he plans to play for the Patriots next year. He has said “this is where I want to be,” though he seemed to be referring to the present while avoiding conversations of the future. And because Brady keeps leaving the door open for an exit in 2020, the speculation about his future has raged.
  • Given all that, it’s natural for fans — and media — to be trying to read into his unusually downtrodden recent interviews.

Brady is an accessory to Belichick’s defense for the first time since the early 2000s. And the timing couldn’t be worse for the quarterback, who is slated to enter free agency during the 2020 offseason. During training camp, Brady admitted he was entering uncharted territory with his contract. His future is uncertain. This offseason, he may experience his first round of free agency.

It’s likely he returns to the Patriots. Considering Brady and Patriots owner Robert Kraft have a strong bond, they both probably want to ensure the quarterback finishes his storied career with the Patriots. But Belichick is a wildcard — he always has been. If the coach thinks he needs to move on from a player, Belichick will do it — even if it irks the owner and the fanbase. Can he do the same with Brady, the one Patriot who has been off limits from Belichick’s ruthlessness?

If Brady wants to stay, he’ll need to negotiate a new deal. While the offense is still third in points per game (28.7), Brady seems to know what’s coming next. They’ve got tough matchups in the coming weeks, and he’s likely to have more ugly games, like he did in Buffalo in Week 4 (46 completion %, 150 passing yards, one interception) and like he did in Week 11 (55 completion %, 216 yards). His completion percentage (63.7) is the lowest it has been since 2013. Oakland Raiders quarterback Derek Carr, meanwhile, is completing an absurd 72.3% of his passes. Belichick will probably bring up these talking points when he and Brady address a new deal. Brady has never asked for a huge deal, but he has always asked for something respectable. After this season, Belichick and Brady may not see eye to eye on a what qualifies as a respectable deal.

If Brady ends up leaving, he will want to find the best possible landing spot. And a 43-year-old Brady would love a situation similar to what Peyton Manning had with the 2012 Broncos — while avoiding a landing spot like Brett Favre’s 2008 Jets.

So while it’s odd to see Brady sulking after a win, it’s understandable that he’s got a lot on his mind. Maybe he’s afraid Belichick is going to give him the same old-yeller treatment that the coach applied to Lawyer Milloy, Richard Seymour, Wes Welker, Randy Moss, Mike Vrabel, Logan Mankins and so many others. After Belichick traded Jamie Collins to the Browns in 2016, Brady admitted he could be the next to go.

“You can’t be around this long and not realize that the world will keep spinning and the sun will come up tomorrow without you,” he told reporters in 2016, via NESN’s Doug Kyed. “That’s just the way it goes. I think you enjoy the experiences that you have and also understand it just keeps going on. It could happen to anybody.”

Now it feels more real. Brady wants to ensure the much-talked-about battle, “Tom vs. Time,” doesn’t end with Time delivering a final-round knockout. The question at this point is whether a frustrated Brady feels like Belichick, by failing to provide his offense the necessary weapons, has aided Time in the fight.

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Tom Brady strikes a more optimistic tone for offense: ‘Whole season is ahead of us’

Tom Brady takes a more chipper approach in Week 12.

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New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady changed the time of his weekly press conference from Friday to Wednesday in Week 12. And perhaps that’s because the week got off to a negative start on Sunday and Monday when the quarterback discussed his team’s offensive struggles.

He struck a more positive tone on Wednesday when discussing how the unit was approaching the week.

“We’re working hard to try to be as effective as we can and as – you know every team has different matchups and it’s different challenges over the course of the season with guys being in and out at practice and so forth,” Brady said during a press conference at Gillette Stadium. “But, our whole season is ahead of us.”

New England has six more games left in the regular season. If they weren’t 9-1, Brady probably wouldn’t feel like they’re got a long runway. But as they sit in the top seed in the AFC, the Patriots have wiggle room to experiment and establish an offensive identity that goes beyond their current one: defer to the defense and special teams to make a play. That’s the identity that seems to bother Brady.

To make things a bit more complicated, the Patriots were without receivers Phillip Dorsett (concussion) and Mohamed Sanu (ankle) during practice on Wednesday. It’s unclear what will come of their availability, but as they try to gain momentum as an offensive unit, Brady surely wishes those two were on the practice field. But he brushed off a question about their absence. Instead, he stayed open to adaptation and flexibility with the game plan.

“It’s great to be 9-1 but we just have high expectations for what we’re doing as an offense. We’re just trying to figure out how we can do things consistently, with dependability, and guys are working hard at it,” Brady said. “Sometimes it comes together early, middle of the season, late in the season and, you know, the only thing that matters really is this week and trying to beat a really good football team. So, I don’t know what shape it’s going to take this particular week as the game unfolds and you kind of see what the challenge is they’re presenting. Sometimes you have a great plan and then they change everything and then it’s – you’ve got to change everything and, it’s just the way it goes.

“You have a plan and you try to adjust over the course of the game but, you know, the goal is the same – it’s to, as an offense, go out there and score points and not go out there and run a bunch of plays and be ineffective.”

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Bills playoff picture: Patriots’ Isaiah Wynn activated from IR

Buffalo Bills 2019 opponent, the New England Patriots, are getting Isaiah Wynn back for Tom Brady.

This year hasn’t been a season to remember for Patriots quarterback Tom Brady.

The 42-year-old has recently admitted he’s frustrated with the way his team’s offense is performing. A lot of the Pats’ successes are because of their defense, not Brady.

That’s different than much of his career but truthfully, it’s not all on the QB. He’s without several playmakers he could’ve been with, such as Antonio Brown, Josh Gordon and Rob Gronkowski. His offensive line is a wreck, too.

But that second group is getting a jolt of life.

Former first-round pick Isaiah Wynn was activated off the team’s injured reserve list this week, according to Patriots Wire.

Wynn was placed on the injured reserve list with a toe injury after New England’s Week 2 victory over the Miami Dolphins. Wynn also missed his entire rookie season due to an Achilles injury.

Wynn will slide in at Brady’s blindspot, left tackle. In his brief playing time this year, Wynn has graded at an “above average” mark via Pro Football Focus’ grading system with an overall grade of 72.8.

Former Bill and current Patriots, Marshall Newhouse, was filling in for Wynn. He currently grades at a much lower 61.0 overall.

At 7-3 overall, the Bills can still catch the Patriots for the AFC East crown. New England sits at 9-1.

While that could seem unlikely, there’s still to factor in that those two teams will faceoff in what could be a pivotal Week 16 meeting in New England. That game was already flexed into a primetime kickoff slot, a 4:30 p.m. kick on Saturday.

Earlier this year, the Bills fell 16-10 to their divisional rival.

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NFL Best Bets: Three underdog locks for Week 12

Our weekly NFL underdog betting staple continues into Week 12 where Ken Pomponio features three teams likely to upset their underdog odds

Thanksgiving is only a week away and we’re quickly cutting to the chase in the 2019 NFL season.

Believe it or not, every team will have only five games remaining after this weekend, and each one takes on added significance with postseason berths and draft positioning on the line. We will see if that means more favorites come through in the win column – and, for our purposes, against the point spread – as the stakes grow higher.

Last week, favorites posted a season-best-matching 9-5 mark against the mid-week lines, and we were able to forecast only one (the Arizona Cardinals) of the five covering underdogs, moving our season record to 19-14.

The Week 12 pickings look slim at the outset, but come up with three dogs we must, utilizing Wednesday’s point spreads from BetMGM.

Indianapolis Colts (+3.5) at Houston Texans

(Photo Credit: Thomas J. Russo – USA TODAY Sports)

Quarterback Jacoby Brissett was back Sunday, and so was the Colts’ mojo as they snapped out of a two-game skid with a 33-13 rout of the visiting Jacksonville Jaguars. This week, Brissett looks like he may get back his top weapon in wideout T.Y. Hilton.

The Texans, meanwhile, came off their Week 10 bye and were summarily smashed by Lamar Jackson and the red-hot Baltimore Ravens 41-7 on the road. The rout highlighted the Texans’ growing defensive deficiencies as they’ve surrendered 24 or more points in five of their last six outings.

That includes a 30-23 road loss to Brissett and the Colts in Week 7 – Indy’s fifth win in the last six series meetings, including a 21-7 road playoff triumph last January in the Wild Card Round.

Also factor in the success of Thursday night underdogs and their 8-3 record against the spread this season, and there is ample reason to back the visiting Colts Thursday night.

Dallas Cowboys (+6.5) at New England Patriots

(Photo Credit: Raj Mehta – USA TODAY Sports)

Yep, we’re playing with fire again, siding against the Patriots who are 11-3 ATS in their last 14 games dating back to Week 17 of last season.

The New England defense is allowing a league-low 10.8 points per game but has famously feasted largely on a group of bottom-feeder teams and injury-addled offenses.

Dak Prescott and the Cowboys are anything but, ranking fourth in the league with an average of 28.6 points per game and have the requisite run-pass balance to pose a serious challenge.

Overshadowed by a dominant defense, Tom Brady and his offense simply haven’t been their usual potent selves and have managed only five offensive TDs over the last three games.

The Cowboys may not pull off the outright upset in Foxborough, but they have more than enough to make this Sunday afternoon national showcase game a close one.

Green Bay Packers (+3.5) at San Francisco 49ers

(Photo Credit: Cary Edmondson – USA TODAY Sports)

After bouncing back from their first loss of the season, the Niners are tied with the Pats for the league’s best record at 9-1.

But whether it’s been a rash of key injuries or the up-and-down play of QB Jimmy Garoppolo, the 49ers have covered only once in their last five outings and are 5-4-1 overall ATS on the season.

Aaron Rodgers and the Packers, meanwhile, are only one game behind the Niners at 8-2 and have been at their best in their biggest games, beating the division-rival Chicago Bears and Minnesota Vikings, and winning on the road in Dallas and against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Now comes their biggest test yet – a prime-time NFC playoff-seeding showdown in San Francisco – and we give Rodgers and Co. more than a puncher’s chance to not only cover but come away with the outright road upset.

Want action on this game? Sign up and bet at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Bill Belichick drops a casual Dwight Eisenhower quote during press conference

Only Bill Belichick.

Only Bill Belichick could casually drop a Dwight Eisenhower quote during a longwinded answer about in-game adjustments.

The New England Patriots coach was asked how often he has to tweak his plans on the fly during a game and how much he trusts quarterback Tom Brady and offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels to react to unexpected situations from opposing defenses.

“I would say in this league, you never really know what they other team’s going to do. I know there’s a lot of experts that have it all figured out. Unfortunately, I’m not in that group,” Belichick said Wednesday during a press conference. “It’s like Eisenhower said, preparation is important for the war. Once the war starts, you just throw it all out the window.”

The actual Eisenhower quote was, “In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.” But we’ll give Belichick a pass for paragraphing.

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Future QB Rankings: Rating all 32 NFL teams’ situations from worst to best

Touchdown Wire ranks the 32 NFL teams in terms of stability and potential at the game’s most important position over the next 3-4 seasons.

 

Future QB Rankings: Rating all 32 NFL teams’ situations from worst to best

Touchdown Wire ranks the 32 NFL teams in terms of stability and potential at the game’s most important position over the next 3-4 seasons.

Tom Brady might be the best quarterback ever, but he’s not the best in the NFL right now. He certainly won’t be the best in 2022.

He’s human, after all, and at age 42, regression is inevitable even for someone with six Super Bowl rings. That puts the New England Patriots in an uncertain situation at quarterback two or three years down the road. The New Orleans Saints, with 40-year-old Drew Brees under center, find themselves in a similar scenario.

Other teams, such as the Chicago Bears and Carolina Panthers, likely will face difficult personnel decisions at the quarterback position much sooner than that. Only a handful of teams, notably the Kansas City Chiefs and Seattle Seahawks, appear secure in their quarterback situation for years to come.

All this got us thinking about the quarterback situations of the future — and where each of the NFL’s 32 teams ranks in terms of preparedness at the game’s most crucial position.

By quarterback situations, we mean the full overview of each team’s quarterbacks group, including backups and a potential succession plan, if necessary. For this exercise, we will define the future as three to four years down the road.

To help form these opinions, we consulted with a blue-ribbon panel of one former head coach, two former general managers and one current general manager. They were asked for their thoughts on each team’s quarterback situation. They provided insight to inform our rankings.

With that in mind, we present Touchdown Wire’s future quarterback rankings for every NFL team, from worst to first:

32. Miami Dolphins

Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports

Earlier this season, many observers accused the Dolphins of tanking to earn the No. 1 pick in the 2020 NFL Draft and presumably select a quarterback. Since then, Miami (2-8) has been eclipsed by the ineptitude of Cincinnati (0-10) and Washington (1-9), so the Dolphins might not get the first QB off the board. Currently, the Dolphins have Ryan Fitzpatrick and Josh Rosen on their roster. Rosen has failed in his playing time. There’s no way he’ll be back next year. The Dolphins have the option to hang onto Fitzpatrick, 36, who’s currently under contract next season at $5.5 million. It makes sense to keep Fitzpatrick around for one more year to help groom a young quarterback. That could be LSU’s Joe Burrow, Alabama’s Tua Tagavailoa (although his recent hip injury now complicates his draft status), Oregon’s Justin Herbert or Oklahoma’s Jalen Hurts. Two members of my panel said they like Burrow better than Tagovailoa. Either way, it’s going to take some time to develop a young quarterback.

31. Chicago Bears

Matt Marton-USA TODAY Sports

For the moment, Mitchell Trubisky is Chicago’s starting quarterback. But it doesn’t appear that he will be in that role next year — although he remains under contract and the team holds a fifth-year option on the No. 2 overall pick from 2017. Given his level of play this season, it’s highly unlikely he will receive the option year, and he might not even see 2020 with the Bears — although the cap hit for cutting him would be slightly more than $9 million. The Bears are 4-6 after going 12-4 last year. There’s one main reason for the decline. That’s Trubisky. My panelists say he’s holding the offense back and could end up keeping a good team out of the playoffs. All four panelists agree Trubisky should be nothing more than a backup. Current backup Chase Daniel’s contract expires after this season. So there’s no telling who will be Chicago’s quarterback next year. Maybe the Bears will draft a quarterback. But with a talented roster already in place, the Bears should be first in line to sign New Orleans backup Teddy Bridgewater as a free agent.

30. Cincinnati Bengals

David Kohl-USA TODAY Sports

Veteran Andy Dalton has been benched, and the Bengals are giving rookie fourth-rounder Ryan Finley a shot. There should be no turning back to Dalton, even though he remains under contract for 2020 with a $17.5 million scheduled salary. The Bengals can cut Dalton after the season without any salary cap ramifications. It’s too early to judge Finley. Cincinnati is going to end up with an early draft pick and could have a shot at Joe Burrow, Tua Tagovailoa, Justin Herbert or Jalen Hurts. The Bengals will be starting over. But, given their current state, that’s not a bad thing. “Dalton had more than enough time and couldn’t win consistently,” one panelist said. “I have no idea what they have in Finley. But they have to draft a quarterback if they’re sitting there at No. 1 or 2.”

29. Washington Redskins

Rich Barnes-USA TODAY Sports

The current situation is a mess. Veterans Colt McCoy and Case Keenum, who clearly aren’t the answer, each is in the last year of their contract. The Redskins have little choice but to play rookie Dwayne Haskins, who has five interceptions and two touchdown passes, the rest of this season. Call it an audition for Haskins. But this situation is complicated because the Redskins currently have interim coach Bill Callahan, who took over when Jay Gruden was fired. There will be a new coach next year, and he might not like Haskins. With an early draft pick likely, the new coach might want his own guy. Give up on Haskins after only one season? Arizona did it with 2018 first-round pick Josh Rosen after drafting Kyler Murray. All four of our panelists said Haskins was overrated when he was drafted.

28-25 / 24-21 / 20-17 / 16-13 / 12-9 / 8-5 / 4-1

Eagles vs. Patriots was the highest rated NFL game of season

The Philadelphia Eagles matchup with the New England Patriots was the highest-rated NFL game of the season

The Eagles and Patriots don’t meet that often, but a rematch of Super Bowl 52 seemed to be the recipe for delivering the NFL’s highest ratings of the season.

The Eagles Sunday afternoon matchup with the Patriots was the highest rated NFL game of the season and the highest-rated Week 11 game since 2015.

Here are some more numbers courtesy of Sports Media Watch:

— Just the fifth NFL regular season window to crack a 14.0 rating in the past three seasons (49 did in the previous three)

— NFL on CBS NFL national window (Patriots-Eagles in 93% of markets) averaged a 14.0 rating and 24.89 million viewers on CBS, marking the highest-rated of the NFL season. The previous high was a 13.8 for Packers-Cowboys on FOX in Week 5.

The ball game was just the fifth regular-season NFL telecast in the past three seasons to average at least a 14.0 rating, compared to 49 in the previous three.

Patriots activate UGA’s Isaiah Wynn from IR

The New England Patriots have activated former Georgia Bulldog Isaiah Wynn from Injured Reserve.

The New England Patriots have activated former Georgia Bulldog Isaiah Wynn from Injured Reserve. Wynn, New England’s starting left tackle, was placed on IR earlier this season with a toe injury. ESPN’s Field Yates announced the move today via Twitter:

The Patriots placed Wynn on Injured Reserve after they defeated Miami in week two. Wynn was eligible to return in last week’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles. NFL players must spend at least eight weeks on IR before becoming eligible to return. Teams are now granted two slots for players eligible to return from IR.

New England rookie wide receiver N’Keal Harry returned from IR this week against Philadelphia. The Arizona State product caught three passes for eighteen yards in his debut. New England’s offense hasn’t been playing up to their usual high standards. For now, the Pats’ stout defense is carrying the load.

Wynn and Harry will give Tom Brady and the Patriot offense a much needed boost heading into the last stretch of the regular season. The Patriots can’t activate anybody else from IR moving forward.

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