Joe Burrow is magical for second TD pass against Raiders

Joe Burrow with a big-time pass to Tyler Boyd after a scramble for a Cincinnati TD

The nation is getting a chance to see how Joe Burrow helped turn the Cincinnati Bengals from doormat into playoff team.

The quarterback delivered another remarkable play in the second quarter of the Super Wild Card game against the Las Vegas Raiders on Saturday.

Burrow was forced to scramble and nearly ran out of bounds before delivering a beautiful pass to Tyler Boyd in the back of the end zone.

The play was good for 10 yards but the style points earned far more respect.

The Raiders have not had an answer for Burrow & Co.. who have a 20-6 lead late in the first half.

There was an inadvertent whistle on the play, as it was blown before Boyd made the grab.

And there is this:

Bengals’ Tyler Boyd gifts Heisman snub Kenny Pickett signed jersey

Bengals WR Tyler Boyd showed some love (and a signed jersey) to Heisman finalist, and fellow Pitt Panther, Kenny Pickett.

[mm-video type=video id=01fprfbc6fjdb8ad39fa playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fprfbc6fjdb8ad39fa/01fprfbc6fjdb8ad39fa-d0ea4b9625389e601f867026bc6eac72.jpg]

Once a Panther, always a Panther.

Any college always has a camaraderie and that was evident with Bengals WR and Pittsburgh alum Tyler Boyd. Boyd took to Instagram to share a photo of a signed jersey he is sending to Pittsburgh QB, Heisman finalist and eventual 2022 NFL Draft pick Kenny Pickett.

“Stay healthy and win out.” “Heisman in my eyes.” “Keep being great, bro. I love watching you ball. You’re a very special player and an even better guy off the field. Keep being the leader that you are.” That’s what Boyd wrote to Pickett on the jersey.

Pickett is coming off a tremendous season for the Panthers. He threw for 4,319 yards and 42 touchdowns with just seven interceptions while also adding 241 rushing yards and five rushing touchdowns. He led Pitt to an 11-2 record and the school’s first ACC championship after defeating Wake Forest in the ACC Championship Game. It was Pitt’s first conference title since sharing the Big East title in 2010 with Connecticut and West Virginia.

Pickett finished third in Heisman voting and also won the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award (nation’s top senior/fourth-year junior quarterback). He leaves as the all-time leading passer in Pittsburgh history (12,303) as well as the all-time leader in pass completions (1,045), total offense (13,112), touchdowns responsible for (102) and passing touchdowns (82).

Pickett declared for the NFL Draft and will skip Pitt’s bowl game. The Panthers take on Michigan State in the Peach Bowl. The Spartans also have a top prospect that just declared and will not play in the game, RB Kenneth Walker III.

Pickett is a potential first-round pick in April’s draft. Obviously there is no chance Pickett and Boyd will team up, but they will always have their Panther pride to share.

[listicle id=50061]

Bengals offense oddly ignored Tyler Boyd during blowout loss to Browns

Where was the love for one of the best slot WRs in the game?

[mm-video type=video id=01fk180eypeyq2fw7jbg playlist_id=01eqbw0bft20de1r4d player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fk180eypeyq2fw7jbg/01fk180eypeyq2fw7jbg-42336ce12defd7b7ebc558b112017718.jpg]

The Cincinnati Bengals got laughed out of their own building in Week 9 with the Cleveland Browns in town on a day that the defense looked miserable and the offense was full of confusing mistakes.

One of those? Inexplicably ignoring slot wideout Tyler Boyd.

By the end of the 41-16 beatdown, Boyd had just one catch on two targets. That put him behind six other names on the targets list on a day the Browns hardly blitzed Joe Burrow at all but found endless pressures while the quarterback went just 28-of-40 with two interceptions.

After the game, Bengals coach Zac Taylor said he’s surprised things went that way for Boyd:

“No, I wouldn’t have thought that going in. They’ve played pretty soft on the corners, so you had a chance to attack there. I thought we were pretty efficient at that. At halftime, it felt like the only incompletions were in the red zone — I could be wrong on that. I felt like we completed every other ball we threw. When you go in with that mindset at halftime, we feel pretty good about our rhythm there. And then that sack on the first drive (of the second half) set us back, and they went back and scored, which was tough. I could be mistaken there. But Tyler is a big part of what we do, and it may have been a mistake on my part to not have him more involved. He could have gotten a lot of targets; sometimes the other guys were open and got the ball and got the targets. That’s just the way it went, but we’ve got a ton of confidence in him, and it was unintentional.”

The Bengals and Burrow feeling they have good matchups elsewhere is one thing. But Boyd’s one of the best slot guys in the league who functioned as a No. 1 for the offense during the doldrums of the rebuild. His ability in the middle of the field can help mitigate the pass-rush and make for easy completions, so it’s shocking coaches didn’t at least identify the trend at halftime and make an adjustment.

Of the major red flags the Bengals showed on the field during Sunday’s loss, this doesn’t chart as the biggest. But it’s a good example of the head-scratching approach the team takes sometimes and the inability to see it mid-game and correct it.

[pickup_prop id=”6905″]

[listicle id=48721]

Bengals work double pass to perfection

Joe Mixon turned a trick play for the Bengals into a 46-yard gain

The Cincinnati Bengals must have taken a cue from Bill Belichick and the New England Patriots.

Up 14-7 late in the second quarter, Cincy dug into its bag of trickeration.

Joe Burrow took the snap and threw a backward pass to Tyler Boyd.

The wideout then looked across the field where he found running back Joe Mixon.

Mixon took the pass and took off. He wasn’t stopped until the play worked for 46 yards and left Cincy at the New York 7.

The Bengals had to settle for a field goal and had a 17-7 lead over Gang Green.

Targets, Touches and TDs: Week 8

Examining several players’ target and touch trends entering Week 8.

A week ago, this space was all about touchdowns — who’s scoring how many and who’s not.

So it’s only fair that we devote this week’s column to the first two T’s — the targets and the touches.

Specifically, we’re spotlighting eight of the more eye-opening player usage rates so far through seven weeks, how they’ve shaped the fantasy football season to date, and what they mean going forward.

So, without further ado, we dive right in, kicking things off with the …

San Francisco 49ers backfield

It’s of little surprise that there is a Niners’ back ranked among the top 25 — No. 25 in fact — in terms of fantasy points per game.

It is a surprise, though, as to whom is that San Francisco rookie RB.

Elijah Mitchell, a sixth-round draft pick (194th overall) out of Louisiana, is that 25th-ranked back, averaging 12.2 fantasy points (point-per-reception scoring) per game with a total of 48.6 points in four games played.

That means it is not Trey Sermon of Ohio State, the team’s first third-round pick (88th overall), and a running back selected in the middle rounds of myriad fantasy drafts this summer. Mitchell, meanwhile, went undrafted in all but the deepest of non-keeper drafts.

Like Mitchell, Sermon also has been active for four games this season, but he’s totaled only 21.8 PPR points — an average of 5.5 per contest.

Mitchell has started only one more game than Sermon — who actually filled in for the former when he was sidelined with a shoulder injury in Weeks 3 and 4 — but has played 76 more snaps (159-83) and has more than doubled Sermon’s touches (67-33), including a 63-31 advantage in rushing attempts.

Any questions about the pecking order were effectively answered Sunday night as the Niners returned to action with both backs healthy following their Week 6 bye.

Mitchell started and played 37 of 56 offensive snaps (66.1), rushing for a season-high 107 yards and a TD on 18 attempts.

Sermon, meanwhile, played 11 snaps Sunday — all on special teams — as it was second-year RB JaMycal Hasty, who spelled Mitchell and served as the passing-game back with three carries for a yard and three catches on six targets for 15 yards on the cool, rain-soaked night.

[lawrence-related id=461557]

Mitchell hasn’t just out-touched Sermon, he’s been more efficient as well, totaling 326 yards and two TDs on his 67 touches (an average of 4.87 yards per touch), while Sermon has turned his 33 touches into 138 yards (4.18 yards per touch) and one TD.

And paired with the glaring disparity in playing time Sunday night after the 49ers’ coaches had the bye week to sort things out, Mitchell is the San Francisco rookie running back you want to use and roster for the foreseeable future.

49ers wideouts

There’s also been a clear and unexpected disparity of wide receiver targets by the Bay.

A year ago, first-round pick Brandon Aiyuk was San Fran’s unquestioned main man, finishing with 96 targets — 22 more than any other Niners’ pass-catcher — 60 receptions and 66 total touches, good for 825 total yards and seven touchdowns in 12 games. Those numbers equated 184.5 PPR points — an average of 15.4 per game, which tied for 17th among wideouts who played at least 10 contests.

Meanwhile in 2020, wide receiver Deebo Samuel — a second-round pick in 2019 — battled through an injury-filled season, garnering 44 targets, 30 receptions and 41 touches, good for 417 yards, one TD and 80.7 total fantasy points — an average of 11.5 per game.

Now six Niners games into 2021, Samuel has not only taken over as the team’s favored target, he’s dominated the pass-catching looks to a truly shocking degree. Samuel has 63 targets — 35 more than any other 49er — and has turned them into 38 receptions for 648 yards.

Add in six rushes for 22 yards and another TD, and Samuel has accounted for five of the team’s 13 offensive TDs and an amazing 44.4 percent of the team’s total receiving yards.

In terms of fantasy points, Samuel has totaled 135.0 — an average of 22.5, which trails only the Rams’ Cooper Kupp (27.2) among league wideouts.

Aiyuk, meanwhile, also has played in every game but has totaled only 16 targets and 18 touches, good for 96 receiving yards, 107 total yards, one TD and 25.7 fantasy points.

And, yes, that’s 25.7 fantasy points total — only 3.2 more than Samuel’s per-game average.

Again, truly shocking — and beyond disappointing for those fantasy general managers who took Aiyuk three or four rounds and 25 or so picks higher, on average, than where Samuel was drafted this summer.

Blame it on Aiyuk’s placement in coach Kyle Shanahan’s doghouse, reportedly with the wide receiver’s work and practice ethic — or relative lack of it — drawing Shanny’s ire. For that reason, Aiyuk didn’t draw a target while playing 26 offensive snaps in Week 1 and has only exceeded four targets once (six in Week 3) in the ensuing five games.

The team’s post-bye week usage rates were especially telling in Sunday night’s 30-18 loss to the Indianapolis Colts — and they were telling us not much has changed in the Niners’ wide receiver pecking order.

Samuel was targeted a team-most 11 (out of 27) times from QB Jimmy Garoppolo and accounted for 100 of the Niners’ 181 receiving yards and only receiving TD. Aiyuk, meanwhile, caught his only target for six yards.

Going forward, Samuel has to be treated as a WR1, while the doghoused Aiyuk — stunningly — is completely droppable as this point.

Atlanta Falcons backfield

The Falcons were another team Sunday coming off a Week 6 bye, and those who were hoping to see more clarity in the team’s backfield got their wish.

It’s a clarity, though, that keeps trending further away from preseason expectations.

In Sunday’s 30-28 win in Miami, Cordarrelle Patterson carried the ball a team-high 14 times for 60 yards and a TD while catching 2-of-5 targets for a yard. He played on 73 percent of the team’s offensive snaps.

Mike Davis, meanwhile, played 60 percent of the snaps but only received four carries for 10 yards and wasn’t targeted in the passing game for the first time all season.

It was a continuation of a diminishing playing time trend for Davis who has seen his share of the Falcons’ backfield touches decrease each week since debuting with a 66.6 percent share in Week 1. Sunday, it was 19 percent — falling below 40 percent for the first time this season — although it should be noted that Davis did hobble off the field late in the fourth quarter with an unknown issue and didn’t return.

Patterson, meanwhile, has taken the increased workload and run with it.

With 82 touches in six games on the season, Patterson is three away from his career season high of 85 set last season in 16 games with the Bears. He’s totaled 529 scrimmage yards and six TDs on those 85 touches, good for 115.9 total PPR points — an average of 19.3 per game, which currently ranks seventh among all running backs.

In short, it’s in the lead for the unlikeliest fantasy success story of the season.

On the other hand, it’s been a tale of woe for the fantasy GMs who spent a midround pick on Davis.

He has 60.2 total fantasy points on the season, averaging 10 per outing. Davis’ high-water mark, though, was only 14.1 points in Week 5 and was followed up by his season-worst one-point showing Sunday against the Dolphins.

At 30, Patterson is two years older than Davis, but six weeks in, we have to accept reality that not only is Patterson the best fantasy back on the Falcons, but he’s a legit fantasy RB1 as well.

Among running backs, only D’Andre Swift (42), Najee Harris (34) and Myles Gaskin (28) have logged more receptions than Patterson’s 27, and only Swift (391) has had more receiving yards than Patterson’s 296. And that’s with Patterson already having had his bye week.

[lawrence-related id=461558]

Patterson is tied for sixth in the league with six total TDs, and in terms of yards per touch, only Washington’s J.D. McKissic (6.87) is averaging more yards per touch than Patterson’s 6.45.

Davis, as most time-share RBs are, is still worth a bench spot in 12-team and larger leagues, but Patterson — believe it or not — has become a locked-in starter, regardless of league size or format.

Los Angeles Chargers wide receivers

Keenan Allen has led the Chargers in receiving yards in four straight seasons and in five of nine campaigns overall since his rookie year of 2013.

Allen also has dominated the team target share in each of the last four seasons, pacing the Bolts by an average of 60.3 targets per year more than the next-closest man.

But coming out of the team’s Week 7 bye, it’s fellow WR Mike Williams who leads the Chargers with 498 receiving yards — 79 ahead of Allen’s total of 419 — and has done so on six fewer receptions (39-33) and two fewer targets (58-56).

And thanks to his 6-to-1 TD advantage, Williams also is averaging 5.3 more fantasy points per game (19.8-14.5) than his more experienced teammate, ranking as a midlevel WR1, while Allen is currently a high-end WR3.

Allen is still averaging a very healthy 9.7 targets per game — a slight increase, actually, from his 9.5 average over the previous four seasons.

Williams, though, has seen his target share increase dramatically.

Since his rookie season of 2017 through 2020, Williams averaged 4.7 targets and 2.7 receptions per game.  So far this season, those averages are 9.3 targets and 5.5 receptions as second-year QB Justin Herbert spreads the ball around more (RB Austin Ekeler and TE Jared Cook have combined for 65 targets and 48 catches as well).

The increased usage consistency — Williams has only one game out of six this season with fewer than five targets — makes him a weekly WR starter.

Allen, meanwhile, certainly remains a viable weekly WR2 fantasy starter with ample upside, but he’s no longer the Bolts’ unquestioned target dominator of recent seasons and now has a lower weekly fantasy floor.

Briefly, four more intriguing player usage situations of note …

  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ backfield: In the Bucs’ four games since a Week 3 loss to the Rams, Leonard Fournette has accounted for 68.9 percent of the team’s running back touches (an average of 21 per game) and has averaged 21.4 PPR points per outing. Over that same span, fellow backs Ronald Jones and Giovani Bernard are averaging 9.5 touches and 9.2 fantasy points — combined — per contest.
  • Cincinnati Bengals pass catchers: With 51 targets in seven games, rookie wideout Ja’Marr Chase has only six more than fellow WR Tyler Boyd and eight more than WR Tee Higgins. Similarly, Chase only has a slight lead in receptions with 35 to Boyd’s 32 and Higgins’ 25, but he has more receiving yards (754-585), TD catches (6-3) and total PPR points (146.2-133.5) than Boyd and Higgins combined.
  • Chicago Bears wide receivers: From 2019-20, WR Allen Robinson totaled 305 targets, 200 receptions and 517.8 PPR points — per-game averages of 9.5 targets, 6.3 catches and 16.2 fantasy points — which was 144 targets, 99 receptions and 281.6 fantasy points more than any other Chicago wide receiver or tight end during that span. Seven games into the 2021 season, though, Robinson trails fellow wideout Darnell Mooney in targets (44-40), receptions (27-23) and fantasy points (68.5-54) while seeing his per-game averages slip to 5.7 targets, 3.3 receptions and 7.7 fantasy points (71st among WRs who have played at least three games) in the Bears’ low-volume passing attack under rookie QB Justin Fields. Yikes. Hopefully you traded Robinson while he still had some value.
  • Baltimore Ravens backfield: In seven games this season, the Ravens are averaging 30.6 rushing attempts and 149.4 rushing yards per game — well off their league-leading 2019-20 averages of 36 attempts and 199 ground yards per outing. And with QB Lamar Jackson’s 2021 per-game attempts (11.2-10.9) and rushing yards (73.7-68.6) averages only down slightly from that previous span, it means the rest of the team is averaging 5.1 fewer attempts and 44.7 fewer rushing yards per outing. Of the six backs who have logged a carry for the Ravens this season, only Latavius Murray (9.8, 10.5) is averaging more than 6.6 rushing attempts and 8.4 touches per game, and he currently ranks 43rd at the position with 51.7 total fantasy points and 47th with an average of 8.6 points per game (minimum three games).

Tyler Boyd clarifies comments about Steelers quitting, Mike Tomlin responds

Tyler Boyd isn’t shying away from his comments on the Steelers “giving up” on Sunday.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbw0bft20de1r4d player_id=none image=https://bengalswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tyler Boyd has certainly been stirring the pot with the Pittsburgh Steelers — and Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin has seen the comments and has thoughts on them, too.

After Sunday’s win over the Steelers, Boyd said the Steelers “gave up” at the end of the game. “The last plays of the game for them, they gave up,” Boyd said during a Monday press conference. “You could see it. They had three drops in a row.”

A day later, Boyd had clarified his comments and doubled down on believing the Steelers gave up, as he shared on social media:

Mike Tomlin had this to say on the matter:

Talk about adding fuel to the fire. But in a small sense, the Bengals definitely have a little bit of room to talk. They have won two straight against the Steelers and currently sit in first place in the AFC North with a chance to start 3-1, while the Steelers could be staring at 1-3 after this week when they visit Lambeau Field and the back-to-normal Green Bay Packers, Cincinnati’s opponent in Week 5.

[listicle id=46810]

Tyler Boyd says Steelers gave up late during Bengals win

TB with some big-time trash talk for the Steelers.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbw0bft20de1r4d player_id=none image=https://bengalswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tyler Boyd has some thoughts on the Pittsburgh Steelers after his team went there in Week 3 and got a big victory.

Speaking about the win on Monday, Boyd said the Steelers gave up in front of everyone late in the contest.

Mike Petraglia of CLNS Media caught Boyd’s comments: “The last plays of the game, they gave up. You could see that. For a team to lay down like that… we’re not giving up. They portrayed it to the whole nation… To go in there and bully them..”

To be fair to Boyd, he’s not entirely wrong. Cincinnati was the better team in the trenches all day, whether it was the offensive line shutting down the Steelers’ pass-rush completely or the defensive line flustering Ben Roethlisberger into one of the worst games of his career.

As for Boyd, he got the fun started for the Bengals with a fun 17-yard touchdown in which he bounced off a trio of defenders before getting in the endzone.

Coming out of the win, there’s nothing quite like a little fun trash talk between these two bitter rivals, right?

[listicle id=46810]

Watch: Bengals Tyler Boyd scores epic TD in Pittsburgh homecoming

TB has arrived in the endzone in Pittsburgh.

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tyler Boyd has finally scored a touchdown at Heinz Field.

The Pittsburgh native scored for the first time in his hometown as a member of the Bengals on Sunday during the first quarter. He bounced off three would-be tacklers to score from 17 yards out to put his team up 7-0.

Boyd had spent the week leading up to the AFC North showdown talking about how important the game and locale was to him. It’s a big deal for the team that he showed up big early in the first quarter, too.

The touchdown connection with Joe Burrow came a drive after Boyd was the target on a bad-looking interception. This drive, Boyd caught a big pass to nearly pick up a first down, then found the endzone on third down:

[listicle id=46781]

Bengals’ WR Tyler Boyd makes an All-Underrated team

Tyler Boyd gets more love as one of the league’s most underrated weapons.

[mm-video type=video id=01fdqmrqpmfr9p4ney6t playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fdqmrqpmfr9p4ney6t/01fdqmrqpmfr9p4ney6t-8a8adf58d143b3aaa149462d532f8411.jpg]

Cincinnati Bengals fans know good and well that wide receiver Tyler Boyd doesn’t nearly get the credit he deserves.

And that’s getting some acknowledgment elsewhere before the season.

Over at Pro Football Focus, Anthony Treash named Boyd to his All-Underrated Team for 2021:

“Slot receiver is one of the most valuable positions on the field, and Boyd has grown into one of the NFL’s top players at that position over the past three years. Since 2018, he has run the third-most routes from the slot and is one of the league’s 10 highest-graded players on those reps. Boyd’s 51 explosive receptions of 15-plus yards from the slot lead the league in that span.”

Not only that, it’s a little easy to forget Boyd put up consecutive 1,000-plus-yard seasons in 2018 and 2019 while mostly being asked to serve as the No. 1 wideout on a sputtering offense missing A.J. Green.

While Tee Higgins surpassed him a bit in the pecking order last year, he still had 841 yards, four scores and averaged 10.6 yards per catch.

Looking ahead to 2021, Boyd probably isn’t going to enter the national mindshare as a superb weapon with both Higgins and Ja’Marr Chase eating into his chances in the passing attack.

But the Bengals — and Joe Burrow — will hardly complain so long as he keeps doing what he does at an elite level.

[vertical-gallery id=46315]

Watch: Joe Burrow, Tyler Boyd connect on top highlight of Bengals training camp

A proven connection is putting on a show at Bengals training camp.

[mm-video type=video id=01f60v7f5de31h3n41fq playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f60v7f5de31h3n41fq/01f60v7f5de31h3n41fq-165c918732918ecdd2b07545b4385657.jpg]

It’s a little easy to forget about Tyler Boyd with Tee Higgins and Ja’Marr Chase making so much noise for the Cincinnati Bengals at training camp.

But over the weekend, Boyd apparently set out to offer a reminder to all onlookers that he’s the guy with consecutive 1,000-yard seasons (2018-19) while acting as the team’s No. 1 wideout and generally one of the more underrated slot weapons in the league.

With Joe Burrow under center, Boyd grabbed a touchdown in tight coverage on a play that displayed some wicked accuracy from No. 9, too.

A look at the play courtesy of Fox 19’s Joe Danneman:

During a recent outburst and return to form, Burrow hit Higgins and Chase for big plays too.

But this one to Boyd has a little bit of everything, with Boyd making the big play in a brutal spot and Burrow showcasing some accuracy that has to be great for fans to see after a week or so of exaggerated headlines about his struggles.

[listicle id=44141]