Studs and duds from Packers’ 37-30 win over Saints in Week 3

Breaking down the studs and duds from the Packers’ 37-30 win over the Saints on Sunday night.

The Green Bay Packers are 3-0 after going on the road and beating the New Orleans Saints at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome on Sunday night. Matt LaFleur’s team scored 37 points, giving the Packers a team-record and NFL-high 122 points through three games.

Here are the studs and duds from the Packers’ 37-30 win over the Saints on Sunday night:

Studs

WR Allen Lazard: The degree of difficulty on his 48-yard catch was high. He was stumbling and had to make an over-the-shoulder catch with Marshon Lattimore trailing in coverage. Later, Lazard’s subtle move at the top of his route allowed him to blow past P.J. Williams and uncover deep for 72 yards to start the second half. Teams are underestimating his build-up speed. He might not be super quick, but he can get moving with a runway in front of him. Matt LaFleur is doing a terrific job of putting him in the slot and in bunch formations to create the runways. Of Lazard’s six catches, five gained first downs or touchdowns. His 146 receiving yards were a career-high. He did have a drop on a catchable ball over the middle, and his missed block on Malcolm Jenkins resulted in a stop of Aaron Jones on fourth down.

QB Aaron Rodgers: His impressive start to 2020 rolled on. Rodgers completed three passes thrown over 20 yards and was nearly perfect throwing underneath. The Saints got him with a few pressures, but Rodgers keeps mixing aggressiveness, accuracy and decisiveness with a little of old improvisational magic. He drew the Saints offsides twice and also created an extended play touchdown to Marcedes Lewis. His deep throw to Lazard while moving to his left in the first half was sublime. Matt LaFleur kept dialing up easy stuff, especially on rollouts and bootlegs, and Rodgers kept hitting them for chunk gains. He now has nine touchdown passes and zero interceptions through three games.

CB Jaire Alexander: The missed tackle on Alvin Kamara’s long touchdown was egregious and unacceptable. We’ll forgive it here because Alexander was so good for the other 57 snaps on Sunday night. He delivered a third-down stop on the first series and later dropped Kamara for a loss in the flat. Emmanuel Sanders didn’t have a catch against his coverage. He was very close to ending the game on a pick-six late in the fourth quarter.

DL Kingsley Keke: Both of his sacks – the first two of his career – were impressive. On the first, Keke executed a wide stunt to his right, bursting around the corner and closing down on Drew Brees with Rashan Gary crashing inside. Even at his weight, Keke can really move. Later, he executed a perfect push-pull move on Andrus Peat, beating the block with strength and collapsing the pocket on Brees before he could get rid of the football. He also helped string out a screen on third down, forcing a field goal. Keke might have the right combination of athleticism and power to be a valuable interior rusher. As an added bonus, Keke almost always gets his hands up and into passing windows when his pass-rush plan doesn’t work.

TE Marcedes Lewis: His block on Cameron Jordan helped open enough room for Aaron Jones to score on fourth down in the third quarter. Later, he was on the same page as Aaron Rodgers in the scramble drill and made an athletic catch over his head with Malcolm Jenkins in coverage for a go-ahead score. His one-on-one block on a linebacker helped create Jones’ longest run of the night in the third quarter. Big Dog still has a little bite.

K Mason Crosby: Kicks from 52 yards and 48 yards were no problem for the veteran. He made the 52-yarder with more than enough leg and confidently drilled the go-ahead kick from 48 yards in the fourth quarter. Crosby has made all seven field goals and all 13 extra points to start the 2020 season.

Duds

S Will Redmond: He missed Alvin Kamara twice in the open field, and both plays ruptured into big gains. Both times, Redmond came flying in out of control and swung and missed at Kamara’s ankles. On the first, Kamara skipped away from No. 25 and picked up the first down on 3rd-and-15. Later, Redmond was the first to miss on Kamara’s incredible touchdown. Redmond’s misses were responsible for roughly 70 yards of Kamara’s 197 total on Sunday night.

CB Kevin King: Emmanuel Sanders did all his best work against King, catching all three passes for 38 yards, a touchdown late in the first half and two easy first downs. King also allowed a catch to Tre’Quan Smith that converted a first down and got dinged for a holding penalty. He can be disruptive at the line in press, but King can also be exploited in off coverage. Drew Brees picked on him a little bit.

OLB Preston Smith: At what point do the Packers start getting concerned about their veteran edge rusher? Smith just isn’t impacting the game as a pass-rusher to start 2020. He’s also dropping into coverage more and looking shaky in space. Terron Armstead had little trouble with him on Sunday night, although Smith was involved in a third-down stop of Taysom Hill. Through three games, Smith has exactly three total pressures.

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MRI confirms Chris Carson’s injury is only a minor knee sprain

An MRI has confirmed that Seattle Seahawks running back Chris Carson only sustained a minor knee sprain Week 3 against the Dallas Cowboys

The Seattle Seahawks received some good news Monday morning, indicating their starting running back, Chris Carson, did not sustain a major injury in Sunday’s matchup after all.

Carson was rolled up on during the game and the fear was that the injury was significant.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported the good news via Twitter.

“Sigh of relief for the Seahawks: An MRI confirmed RB Chris Carson’s ligaments are intact and it’s just a minor knee sprain, source said,” Pelissero tweeted. “In fact, he’s got a chance to be ready for this week’s game at Miami.”

Coach Pete Carroll should have additional updates and confirmation on Carson’s status this afternoon during his 3:00 p.m. press conference.

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PODCAST: After overcoming second-half woes, is Josh Allen an MVP?

Buffalo Bills podcast following Week 3, 2020 NFL season vs. Los Angeles Rams on quarterback Josh Allen.

The Buffalo Bills left us with another nail-biter finish this weekend, as they defeated the Los Angeles Rams 35-32 in Orchard Park. With a 28-3 deficit in hand for the Bills early in the third quarter, the Rams rallied back to challenge the Bills, scoring 29 unanswered points, but could not finish the game on top.

It certainly left many scratching their heads, as the phrase “28-3” is not one that is kindly used on the team with 28 points. The Bills, however, avoided that ugly stigma with another incredible, yet roller coaster ride of a fourth-quarter comeback. The Bills now have three wins in as many weeks, with a road trip to Las Vegas to play the Raiders next week.

There are certainly some questions about this Bills defense, and the scheme being used after they jumped to the massive lead that they did. How could a team that was ranked in the top-five last year allow such a comeback? It was certainly worrisome, as that put Bills quarterback Josh Allen and the offense in unnecessarily challenging predicaments the last several weeks,

Allen continues to earn a solid reputation amongst his fans and even his biggest critics. Allen has thrown for 300-plus yards in every game this year, and it isn’t too far-fetched to start mentioning Allen in the MVP discussion. It’s still early, and there’s lots of great football to be played, but he’s playing as great as any elite quarterback in the NFL right now.

Listen to this week’s Bills Wire reaction podcast with host Matt Johnson above and follow on your choice of:

Subscribe

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McCarthy, Cowboys lament mistakes in loss: ‘We’re not a clean football team right now’

The Cowboys coach and players looked to their own errors as a key factor in their one-score loss to Seattle in Week 3.

The fear coming into Sunday’s game in Seattle was that Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson would continue his early MVP campaign with a lights-out air assault on a shaky Dallas secondary.

Although Wilson did notch five touchdown throws- and missed out on a sixth only because of a boneheaded gaffe by his young wide receiver- Cowboys players and coaches chose instead to pin the 38-31 loss squarely on themselves. There were some big numbers in the Week 3 contest, to be sure, but it was the little things that doomed Dallas at CenturyLink Field.

It was a day that saw one quarterback toss five touchdowns and the other rack up 472 yards. It was a day that featured four 100-yard receivers: one team’s steady-handed star found the end zone three times; the other team had a two-score surprise performance from one of its benchwarmers. A defensive end who was out of football for five years had three sacks. Those kinds of highlight-reel narratives normally tell the story of a game.

But the moments that stick in the collective craw of Cowboys fans this week will be not the big body blows, but the barrage of paper cuts. The missed extra point. The blocked PAT. The muffed kick return (after a Seattle touchdown) that put the offense on its own one-yard line and promptly turned into a safety.

“Those three plays there make it hard to say it was a good day. We were backed up; that was a big play in the game. Obviously gave them momentum,” coach Mike McCarthy told reporters in his postgame remarks. “It was obviously a nine-point swing right there. We’ve got to do a better job. I think, like anything in the game of football, you need a return on investment on what you emphasize. We spend a tremendous amount of time on handling the football, and we need to do a much better job in that area.”

“Everybody’s known for something,” McCarthy said, “and we will always start and stop with the ability to take care of the football and take it away. We haven’t gotten that done the last two weeks. We need to change that quickly.”

All three of the day’s Cowboys turnovers go on the ledger of quarterback Dak Prescott. An interception just before halftime, his first since last Thanksgiving, resulted in a Seahawks touchdown. And a fumble on the first play after halftime put Seattle on the doorstep for another short-field score.

“The first one,” Prescott recounted to the media, “the ball’s just a little behind Coop right there, and the guy makes a great play, jumps the route and comes up with the ball. I can’t do that. Obviously, that results in them getting a touchdown right before half. And then we come out at halftime, and I’m pretty much strip-sacked trying to throw, the ball comes out. Another turnover that results in a touchdown. Simple as that, that’s how you lose games. Me personally, and everybody, we’ve got to be better protecting the ball.”

Despite a boatload of errors on the shores of the Puget Sound, the Cowboys were still in a position to tie the game or even steal a win with just seconds to play. But Prescott was picked off again, this time in the end zone- after breaking what looked like a sure sack- to cement the loss.

Wide receiver Michael Gallup says it never should have come to that.

“It’s not even really just the last plays of the game,” the third-year wideout lamented. “We had some plays that we would love to have back early on. Obviously got a lot of flags called on us this game… It’s not on anybody. It’s a group.

“We’ve just to to make those little plays early on in the game that we’re not getting to count. You’ve got to make them count.”

His quarterback agreed with that assessment, following a lackadaisical season opener against Los Angeles and the Week 2 win over Atlanta that came only after an utter collapse in the first quarter.

“Look at it the last three weeks,” Prescott said. “We’re only stopping ourselves. We’ve got to get out of our own way, be cleaner with the ball, play smarter football, find a way to start faster, whatever it is.”

The Cowboys didn’t necessarily start the game all that poorly right out of the blocks. The defense took the field first and forced Wilson and the Seahawks into a quick three-and-out. Then Prescott drove the offense 55 yards in a clock-chewing drive that ended in a Greg Zuerlein field goal, the team’s first first-quarter points of 2020.

But then Wilson responded with a scoring bomb to Tyler Lockett, the first of his three touchdowns. The ensuing kickoff was mishandled by Tony Pollard and led to the safety, putting Dallas in a 9-3 hole before 10 minutes had elapsed.

Gallup acknowledged the opening-quarter problems that have plagued the Cowboys thus far.

“For most part, I would say everybody’s excited, ready to go. But not everybody at the same time is always locked in on every single little detail. It happens. Everybody gets rowdy, things happen, everybody’s flying around. We’ve just got to be better coming out of the gate.”

“It’s something that you’ve got to keep working on, communicating,” rookie cornerback Trevon Diggs explained. “Jelling with your guys. But I felt like we got the jitters out. We had those three games. Going forward, the details will get cleaned up.”

Diggs showed exceptional attention to detail with his touchdown-saving effort at the end of the first quarter, punching the ball out of DK Metcalf’s arms as he neared the goal line for what he thought was a guaranteed score.

It was one of the few times all afternoon Dallas defenders got the better of Seattle’s receiving corps. Both Metcalf and Lockett topped 100 yards on the day, and tight end Greg Olsen made several clutch catches to extend drives at key moments for the Seahawks.

“People are not supposed to run wide open,” McCarthy commented on his pass defense, promising it will be a focus in the coming week. “That’s what Mondays are for, and we’ll take a hard look at it.”

There are, in fact, several areas that need a hard look. On the stat sheet, a down-to-the-wire one-score loss to the best team in the conference is nothing for a rising team to be ashamed of. But anyone who watched the game saw that the Cowboys did as much to beat themselves as Seattle did.

For a team whose only win came as the result of a lucky fluke, a team who knows they could very easily be 0-3 right now, the close loss feels far more emblematic of deeper issues that have less to do with the opponent… and point instead to an internal flaw that needs to be fixed.

“We’re not a clean football team right now,” McCarthy said. “We need to execute better. We have a number of injuries; we’re working through that. But our rhythm and timing’s not quite where we want it to be, and we’ll continue to work to get that done.”

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Chiefs vs. Ravens Week 3: Important details, TV schedule and how to stream online

Everything you need to know about the Chiefs matchup vs. the Ravens.

The Kansas City Chiefs are back in prime time, playing against the Baltimore Ravens on “Monday Night Football.”

The Ravens have something to prove after not having the opportunity to face the reigning Super Bowl champions in the 2019-2020 playoffs. Who will emerge victorious in this meeting between explosive offenses and former league MVPs? We’ll find out soon enough.

Below are important game details about this regular-season matchup. If you have questions about the game, reach out to us on Twitter @TheChiefsWire.

Game information:

Who: Kansas City Chiefs vs. Baltimore Ravens

When: Monday, September 28 at 7:15 p.m. CT

Where: M&T Bank Stadium – Baltimore, Maryland

Streaming:

Live stream: fuboTV has complete local NFL coverage (CBS, FOX, ESPN), plus NFL Network and NFL Network Redzone. FuboTV includes every network you need to watch every NFL game in your market. *Regional Restrictions Apply*

Television channels:

  • ESPN

Broadcasters:

Louis Riddick, Brian Griese, Steve Levy and Lisa Salters

Referee:

John Hussey

Radio:

WDAF-FM (106.5 The Wolf)

Betting Odds:

Money Line (via BetMGM): +145

Spread (via BetMGM): +3.5

Over/Under (via BetMGM): 54.5

Opponent wire site:

Ravens Wire

Chiefs’ 2020 schedule

Week Opponent Time (CT) | Date Channel
1 vs. Houston Texans 7:20 p.m. Thu, Sept. 10th NBC
2 at Los Angeles Chargers 3:25  p.m. Sun, Sept. 20th CBS
3 at Baltimore Ravens 7:15 p.m. Mon, Sept. 28th ESPN
4 vs. New England Patriots 3:25 p.m. Sun, Oct. 4th CBS
5 vs. Las Vegas Raiders 12:00 p.m. Sun, Oct. 11th CBS
6 at Buffalo Bills 7:20 p.m. Thu, Oct 15th FOX/NFLN/Amazon
7 at Denver Broncos 3:25 p.m. Sun, Oct 25th CBS
8 vs. New York Jets 12:00 p.m. Sun, Nov. 1st CBS
9 vs. Carolina Panthers 12:00 p.m. Sun, Nov. 8th FOX
10 BYE BYE BYE
11 at Las Vegas Raiders 7:20 p.m. Sun, Nov. 22nd NBC
12 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers 3:25 p.m. Sun, Nov. 29th CBS
13 vs. Denver Broncos 7:20 p.m. Sun, Dec. 6th NBC
14 at Miami Dolphins 12:00 p.m. Sun, Dec. 13th CBS
15 at New Orleans Saints 3:25 p.m. Sun, Dec. 20th CBS
16 vs. Atlanta Falcons 12:00 p.m. Sun, Dec. 27th FOX
17 vs. Los Angeles Chargers 12:00 p.m. Sun, Jan. 3rd CBS

Chiefs’ 53-man roster:

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Pete Carroll updates Seahawks injuries after Week-3 win over Cowboys

Coach Pete Carroll provided a number of injury updates after the Seattle Seahawks win over the Dallas Cowboys Week 3.

The Seattle Seahawks injury concerns started days before the team’s Week-3 contest against the Dallas Cowboys, a game that saw numerous players leave the matchup and not return.

“Unfortunately, even before the game happened, Quinton Dunbar’s knee acted up and he wasn’t able to go,” coach Pete Carroll said in his post-game press conference. “Neiko’s hip didn’t make it through the week, and he couldn’t go. Lano Hill, his back situation, it just showed up yesterday. We weren’t sure what was going on with that one, but he couldn’t go either. All those guys fell out before we even started the game. We were scrambling to get our guys up on the roster.”

As far as in-game injuries, Carroll was able to provide updates on those as well.

Guard Damien Lewis suffered an ankle sprain and safety Jamal Adams a groin strain.

Four players suffered knee injuries, which is concerning, although the exact nature of each has yet to be determined.

“Chris [Carson] got his knee twisted at the end of a play. I don’t know about that, but he has a sprained knee to some extent,” Carroll continued. “Jordyn Brooks had a knee sprain, also, earlier in the game. Guys rolled up on him. [Ethan] Pocic had a knee issue that he finished the game with. I don’t know how he did that, but he did. Mike Iupati had a knee situation also that he finished the game with.”

Seattle, like so many teams around the league, is seeing an enormous amount of injuries so early in the season. Carroll said they are just trying to make sense of it all.

“That’s a lot of stuff,” Carroll said. “We’re not used to seeing all those names coming out of one game. It’s hard to say. For everybody talking
about the injuries and all that, you would think it would be muscles and strains and that kind of stuff would be more of what you’d be seeing, but we’re seeing a different variety of things.”

Fortunately for the players, they have a couple of rest days to recover before returning to the practice field on Wednesday.

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Here’s when Matt Nagy knew it was time to bench Mitch Trubisky

It couldn’t have been an easy decision for Bears coach Matt Nagy to pull the plug on Mitch Trubisky in the third quarter of Chicago’s 30-26 win over the Atlanta Falcons in Week 3. Sure, Trubisky was playing like a quarterback who didn’t deserve to …

It couldn’t have been an easy decision for Bears coach Matt Nagy to pull the plug on Mitch Trubisky in the third quarter of Chicago’s 30-26 win over the Atlanta Falcons in Week 3.

Sure, Trubisky was playing like a quarterback who didn’t deserve to be in a starting lineup and it was pretty obvious the Bears didn’t have a chance to win the game as long as he remained behind center. But the awkward yet unspoken conflict between what Nagy might think is in the best interest of the team, and GM Ryan Pace’s desire to see his hand-picked franchise quarterback pan out has always been at play.

For Nagy to all but close the book on Trubisky’s career in Chicago, he had better be certain in his decision.

On Sunday, Nagy trusted his gut when he made the franchise-altering change.

“I think really when I knew it (was time to make the switch) was the interception there on third down,” Nagy said. “We were struggling on third down a lot. We weren’t producing points in the red zone and I just think that sometimes there is a gut feeling as to when to do it. That seemed like the right time.”

It certainly was.

Nick Foles entered the game with the Bears trailing by 16, and in typical Foles fashion, rallied his offense to a win with three fourth-quarter touchdowns.

Nagy knew it was time. And he was right. His decision to bench Trubisky resulted in a Bears win.

Nagy, even more than Foles, won the game for Chicago in Week 3.

Seahawks safety Jamal Adams leaves Cowboys game with groin injury

Seattle Seahawks safety Jamal Adams left the Week- 3 game against the Dallas Cowboys with a groin injury and was not able to return.

The injuries just continued to mount in the Seattle Seahawks Week-3 contest against the Dallas Cowboys at CenturyLink Field. Although Seattle was eventually able to come away with the 38-31 win, the victory proved costly. Safety Jamal Adams was just one of a number of players to leave the game, unable to return.

Adams pulled up with a groin injury in the fourth quarter, throwing his helmet aside in frustration. He continued to coach up his teammates from the sidelines, but all he could do was watch the final few minutes of the ballgame. Linebacker Jordyn Brooks, who was making his first NFL start Week 3, also left the contest with an injury (knee).

Coach Pete Carroll provided an update on Adams during his post-game press conference.

“Jamal Adams got a groin strain,” Carroll told reporters. “Don’t know what is going to happen with that, it was pretty tight.”

More details could be available tomorrow afternoon by the time Carroll addresses the media at 3:00 p.m. PT.

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Game Recap: Seahawks 38, Cowboys 31; Here’s what we know

The Dallas Cowboys traveled to the Pacific Northwest in quest of back-to-back victories for the first time this season. They tried to pull off a 15-point comeback for the second week in a row. In the end though, they were unable to complete the …

The Dallas Cowboys traveled to the Pacific Northwest in quest of back-to-back victories for the first time this season. They tried to pull off a 15-point comeback for the second week in a row. In the end though, they were unable to complete the deal, falling to the Seattle Seahawks 38-31 to drop their record on the season to 1-2.

The game was another full of miscues and errors by the Cowboys, with missed extra points, kickoff return fumbles safeties and turnovers. Dak Prescott rallied the Cowboys once again, but after a late Russell Wilson touchdown pass, his fifth of the game, and subsequent two-point conversion, Dallas’ attempt to tie the game ended with an end zone interception.

Prescott had three turnovers on the game, the last after he escaped what looked like a game-ending sack. Tony Pollard’s muff at the goal line resulted in an Ezekiel Elliott safety, as the running back had a confounding day after not being part of the opening series of plays. The defense, struggling without two of their top three corners, looked confused and horrible for much of the game, negating the strong effort by defensive end Aldon Smith, who brought down Russell Wilson for three sacks.

Leading Passer: Dak Prescott 37 fo 57, 472 yards, 3 TDs, 2 INT
Leading Rusher: Ezekiel Elliott 14 carries for 34 yards, 1 TD
Leading Receiver: Michael Gallup six receptions, 138 yards, 1 TD
Leading Defender: Aldon Smith 3 sacks, 4 QB Hurries, 2 TFLs, 1 pass deflection

 

The Cowboys return home to face off against the Cleveland Browns next Sunday at noon CT.

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