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Ranking 10 winless NFL teams: Chiefs, Bears, others at 0-2
Esports

Ranking 10 winless NFL teams: Chiefs, Bears, others at 0-2

by admin September 18, 2025


  • Bill BarnwellSep 18, 2025, 06:30 AM ET

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      Bill Barnwell is a senior NFL writer for ESPN.com. He analyzes football on and off the field like no one else on the planet, writing about in-season X’s and O’s, offseason transactions and so much more.

      He is the host of the Bill Barnwell Show podcast, with episodes released weekly. Barnwell joined ESPN in 2011 as a staff writer at Grantland.

Did you know the NFL playoffs actually start in September? Though they’ll be playing out the rest of the 2025 season regardless of what happens in Week 3, 10 teams are essentially playing to keep their hopes of advancing to the real postseason and winning Super Bowl LX alive this weekend.

History tells us that starting 0-2 is a damper on your chances of making it to the playoffs, but beginning the season 0-3 is closer to a death knell. Since 2002 — if we treat the seventh-best team in each conference as a playoff qualifier before the NFL moved to the 14-team postseason format in 2020 — 13.3% of teams that started 0-2 overcame their slow starts and made the postseason. Three squads — the Broncos, Rams and Ravens — did so a year ago.

Dropping to 0-3? Good luck. Since 2002, just three of the 96 teams that opened the season with three straight losses have (or would have) advanced. Two of them are Mike Tomlin-coached Steelers teams that would have snuck into the playoffs as No. 7 seeds in 2013 and 2019. The other is the 2018 Texans, who rolled off a nine-game winning streak after their ugly stretch in September.

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That’s a 3.1% success rate. And though the addition of a 17th game in 2021 gives these teams extra runway to overcome their starts, the reality is that 0-3 usually tells us what we need to know. If you can’t win one of those first three games, you probably don’t have the talent to win nine or 10 of the ensuing 14, either.

So, with 10 teams sitting at 0-2 and fighting to keep their postseason hopes alive this weekend, let’s break down where they stand and their chances of fixing things in the weeks to come. I’ll begin with the team I think has the best chance of righting the ship and getting back into the playoff picture, which probably shouldn’t be a surprise. (I included chances to make the playoffs via ESPN’s Football Power Index.)

Jump to an 0-2 team:
CAR | CHI | CLE | HOU | KC
MIA | NO | NYG | NYJ | TEN

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 51.8%

Well, you probably figured they would be No. 1. We could obviously talk about the Chiefs and their 0-2 start for an entire column, but there are nine other teams to hit before we finish up, so I’m going to give you the express version.

Though most of the conversation has revolved around a disappointing offense, the Chiefs look even more disjointed on defense right now. Through two games, they rank 23rd in EPA per play allowed and 26th in QBR. Steve Spagnuolo is blitzing at the third-highest rate in the league, but his pressures are getting home at only the 23rd-highest rate. Blitzes that don’t generate pressure are obviously a disaster; they turn the average quarterback into Josh Allen in terms of QBR.

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The Chiefs are down safety Justin Reid from last year’s secondary, and free agent addition Kristian Fulton was limited to 15 snaps against the Chargers before leaving the loss to the Eagles after just two snaps with an ankle injury. The spine of the defense has been tilting at windmills with the Chiefs allowing a whopping 11.5 yards per play-action dropback. Only the Bills have been worse, but they have faced just five play-action attempts in 2025 (Kansas City has seen 15).

Offensively, the most realistic way to describe the Chiefs’ problems is a complete and utter lack of anything to hang their hat on. Good offenses have something to fall back on as their core strength. The Ravens can run the ball, so everything builds off that. The Bills have a superhero at quarterback, and that influences how teams play them in coverage. The early Patrick Mahomes teams had the fastest wideout in the league on one side (Tyreek Hill) and a physical force with a sixth sense for finding space on the other (Travis Kelce), forcing defenses to make a compromising decision between man and zone coverages.

Here are the major issues that need to be fixed:

The designed run game is a mess. The Chiefs are 24th in EPA per attempt on designed runs; Kareem Hunt and Isiah Pacheco have a league-average success rate, but there’s virtually no juice or explosiveness coming from that part of the offense. The Chiefs’ longest carry on 28 attempts has gone for 11 yards. A rushing game that’s either average or subpar isn’t going to move the needle or scare opposing defenses.

There aren’t many explosive plays in the passing game, either. Mahomes is attempting more deep passes than he has in recent years, but he has gone 3-of-8 for 136 yards on those throws. Some of those attempts have been 50-50 balls, but Mahomes badly missed an open Tyquan Thornton on a double move for what should have been a 75-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter against the Eagles.

The Chiefs were tied with the Patriots at the bottom of the deep completion rankings over the past two seasons, hitting on just 29 deep pass attempts. Mahomes’ 53.1 QBR on those throws was 31st in the league. We know Mahomes has the physical ability to make those passes, but he has been one of the league’s least impactful deep throwers since the start of 2023. That wasn’t a problem when the Chiefs were wildly successful underneath, but that also hasn’t been the case in 2025.

They’re not breaking the league on third down. Without the big plays downfield, the Chiefs have survived in recent years by tormenting defenses on third down. Between 2022 and 2024, the Chiefs converted nearly 47% of third downs, trailing only the Bills for the best rate in the NFL. They were the ninth-best offense by EPA per play on first and second down before leading the league there on third down.

This year, Kansas City is 26th in third-down conversion percentage (34.6%). That’s obviously a small sample — we’re talking about only 26 third-down tries — but it’s an indicator of just how dependent the Chiefs have been on those conversions to sustain their offense. If you’re not hitting big plays on the ground or in the air, and you’re not getting short fields from a defense that hasn’t forced any turnovers, you need to matriculate your way down the field and repeatedly pick up third downs to score. The Chiefs need to be among the best third-down offenses in the league for this style to work. They aren’t right now.

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0:35

Why Tyquan Thornton is not worth rostering, even after productive Week 2

Mike Clay explains why Tyquan Thornton is not worth rostering, except in 16-team leagues.

They’re not creating mismatches with their personnel groupings. One of the other ways the Chiefs thrived after trading away Hill was leaning into more 12 and 13 personnel, surrounding Kelce with Noah Gray and other tight ends. Those groupings force some teams to play their base defenses (with four defensive backs on the field) or try to defend bigger, more physical players with cornerbacks and safeties. Both of those have been wins for the Chiefs, who loved seeing Kelce matched up against a slow linebacker or an undersized cornerback for the past decade.

There might not be much juice left to squeeze from that particular solution, especially with Kelce turning 36 in a few weeks. The Chiefs have posted a 35% success rate in 12 or 13 personnel this season, down from 50% a season ago. Again, we’re talking about a small sample of 40 plays, but the Chiefs have been significantly more effective working out of 11 personnel (48% success rate) even without Rashee Rice (suspension) and Xavier Worthy (shoulder injury) for the majority of the season.

When the Chiefs don’t have any of those things going, there’s one element that sustains them on offense: Mahomes’ scrambles. That was apparent in the first half against the Eagles, when it seemed like the entire offense was built on him jumping at the first sign of an open running lane. In Week 2, Mahomes scrambled for 66 yards, his second-highest total as a pro, with 60 of those yards coming before halftime.

Mahomes’ single-game record is 69 yards in that fateful 42-36 playoff win over the Bills; leaning more heavily on his legs has typically been a postseason tactic for the Chiefs. It’s not going to be a sustainable way to run this offense, but it might push defenses into playing more zone and less man against an underwhelming group of receivers. If Mahomes takes a hit while scrambling and has to leave the game or miss time, there will be no way back for this offense.

As it stands? The Chiefs aren’t hopeless, but they have to find something to build the offense around. Do they go under center and lean into more gap runs as opposed to the RPOs and shotgun rushing attack they’ve used with Mahomes? Can they use the threat of his scrambles to lean into their zone beaters? Will Mahomes start hitting enough deep throws to get safeties to sit in a different area code again? Or will we get four more weeks of this before Rice and Worthy are both presumably back and the Chiefs return to their 2024 offensive game plan?

The Chiefs have a tough schedule coming up with games against the Ravens, Lions, Commanders and Bills before their Week 10 bye. They’re not going to win many of those playing the way they have through two weeks. But I would still take them making the playoffs.

As for the Super Bowl? Well, three teams have begun 0-2 and won a Lombardi Trophy, although they changed significantly after their slow starts. The 1991 Cowboys were without Emmitt Smith, who held out for the first two games of the season before returning in Week 3. The 2001 Patriots gave Tom Brady his first career start in Week 3. And the 2007 Giants were an embarrassment on defense, allowing 80 points through the first two weeks and 17 more in the first half of Week 3 before launching a comeback victory over Washington and looking much more capable the rest of the way.

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1:19

Woody: Chiefs ‘have nothing on offense that threatens any team’

Damien Woody calls out the Chiefs’ offensive deficiencies following a loss to the Eagles that saw them start 0-2 for the first time in Patrick Mahomes’ NFL career.

Do the Chiefs have that in them? I think so, but this isn’t a great team enduring some bad luck. It’s an average, maybe below-average, team that has faced two clearly better opponents. The Chiefs have to be somebody else to become themselves again.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 24.3%

Texans fans will undoubtedly find it frustrating that their team is 0-2. In addition to the understandable preseason expectations after winning the AFC South and wild-card games in back-to-back seasons, the Texans were only a couple of plays away from starting 2-0. Running back Dare Ogunbowale fumbled in the red zone on a potential winning touchdown drive in Week 1, handing the ball to the Rams for a 14-9 victory. On Monday night, they just needed an unblocked Henry To’oTo’o to sack or even slow down Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield on a fourth-and-10. Mayfield escaped, scrambled for a first down and drove the Bucs downfield for a touchdown and a one-point win.

It’s one thing to lose two close games to a pair of last season’s playoff teams. It’s another to play the way the Texans have in doing so. After devoting every resource this offseason to fixing their most obvious weaknesses, they look as if absolutely nothing has changed. Even with a new offensive coordinator and new players, the Texans still can’t sort out pressure and protect quarterback C.J. Stroud.

Nick Caserio rebuilt the line over the offseason, moving out Laremy Tunsil, Kenyon Green and Shaq Mason while importing an entire line’s worth of potential new starters: tackles Cam Robinson, Trent Brown and Aireontae Ersery, guards Laken Tomlinson and Ed Ingram, and center Jake Andrews. With the Texans holding onto several of their own younger linemen, there was suddenly meaningful competition at every spot up front in camp.

But the early returns on those moves aren’t promising. Brown was sent to the practice squad. Andrews injured his ankle in the opener and sat out the Bucs game. Robinson, signed to a one-year deal for $12 million, was benched after the Week 1 loss and didn’t play an offensive snap in Week 2. Tomlinson looked physically overwhelmed and was literally thrown to the ground by Greg Gaines before a sack Monday night. He wasn’t the only one, as Ogunbowale was run over by Bucs safety Tykee Smith on a slot blitz for another sack. It’s hard to play quarterback when your blockers are on the ground.

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Ersery has done his best, but it’s hard to imagine that the best practices for any second-round rookie would be starting at right tackle in Week 1 before suddenly moving to left tackle in Week 2. He has given up one sack and three quick pressures in two games, which is reasonable enough. But Tytus Howard wasn’t able to consistently handle Haason Reddick at right tackle, leaving the Texans with no reliable lineman around whom to build their pass protection.

There also are still structural issues. As Geoff Schwartz noted after Week 1, the Rams were able to overload the Texans and sack Stroud on a play in which he didn’t change the protection after he saw the Rams’ front. That was a problem that also popped up for the Texans on a key fourth down against the Chiefs in last season’s playoffs. Stroud either needs to be able to change that protection or have an answer to get the ball out quickly if he ends up being hot to one side, making the free rusher his responsibility.

The Bucs used some of Todd Bowles’ classic tricks to create structural pressure on Stroud. A late stem from the Buccaneers created an awkward block for Harrison Bryant, and Stroud was forced from the pocket by a slot pressure. Bowles created a sack with what’s colloquially known as a “coffee house” stunt, where a defender feigns as if he’s dropping back into coverage for a step or two, convincing linemen he isn’t part of the protection call, before then jumping back into the rush. It created arguably the easiest sack of Lavonte David’s career.

One of the ways to keep out of those exotic pressures, and prevent teams from pinning their ears back to go after Stroud, is running the football. But after the Texans struggled to do that in 2024, they haven’t been much better in 2025. Nick Chubb did hit a 25-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter to give the Texans a brief lead, but his previous 11 carries had gone for a total of 18 yards.

Through two weeks, only 29% of Houston’s designed runs on first and second down have been successful in terms of keeping the offense on schedule, which ranks 31st in the league, ahead of only the Cardinals. (If you’re a Cardinals fan wondering why the offense hasn’t lived up to expectations through two weeks, here’s your answer.) As a result, the Texans are again forcing Stroud to live in second-and-long and third-and-long. On 16 of the Texans’ 18 drives this season, Stroud has faced either a second or third down with nine or more yards to go. More than 48% of their second- and third-down snaps have come with 9-plus yards to the first, a figure topped only by the Bears.

The other concern for the Texans has to be that the AFC South suddenly looks more menacing than last year, when Houston went 5-1 in its division. The Colts are 2-0. The Jags were a fourth-down stop away from joining them. I’m certainly not counting out the Texans — they still have star defenders and Stroud. Maybe the offensive line gels in the weeks to come and the Texans find some sort of a running game.

Last season, though, the Texans were a league-average team that won 10 games because they faced a below-average schedule and went 6-3 in one-score games. That formula wasn’t going to be sustainable in 2025. And right now, while they’re probably unlucky to start 0-2, the Texans sure look a lot like the frustrating team we saw last season.

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1:11

J.J. Watt breaks down Texans’ 0-2 start

J.J. Watt joins “The Pat McAfee Show” and weighs in on the Texans’ back-to-back losses to start the season.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 6.3%

Well, it was fun for a quarter or two. The Ben Johnson era came in with a bang Monday night in Week 1, as the Bears marched down the field for an opening-drive touchdown. Despite holding a win expectancy north of 91% as they entered the fourth quarter, though, the Bears blew their lead to the Vikings before they were unmercifully stomped by the Lions in Week 2. What felt like the dawning of a new era quickly faded into the same old Bears.

Of course, the Johnson hire was simultaneously about improving the team and fixing frustrating 2024 No. 1 pick Caleb Williams, who had burned through one coach and two coordinators in his first year with the organization. The goal for every team is to win as often as possible, but from a fan perspective, a successful debut season for Johnson was going to be more about getting Williams right than Chicago’s win-loss record at the end of the season.

So how is Williams doing? Two things can be true. On one hand, Williams isn’t “fixed” or a finished product like the one the Bears saw on the opening drive of the season. He has a 26.6% off-target rate this season, nearly double the league average (14.2%). Williams has the third-highest expected completion percentage (70.1%, per NFL Next Gen Stats) yet is completing only 61.5% of his throws; the only quarterback underproducing his expected completion percentage by a higher margin this season is Patrick Mahomes.

Williams has still been prone to the occasional bout of hero ball, particularly when the Bears have trailed and he has been under pressure. Some of the throws he produces in those moments are not compatible with surviving as an NFL quarterback, even if they don’t always lead to interceptions. Williams’ second-and-32 interception against the Lions was probably the right time to throw up a prayer, but it would be nice if that pass was at least within catchable range of a Bears wideout.

Simultaneously, this is a much better quarterback than the one we saw raging against the light last year. Williams has a 57.5 QBR, up more than 14 points from where he finished the 2024 season. Some of that is a product of his solid work as a scrambler, but even if we leave that out of the equation, Williams’ QBR on passes and sacks is still up 10 points.

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1:04

Would perceptions of Caleb Williams be different if he was a rookie?

Louis Riddick likes the improvement he sees from Caleb Williams under Ben Johnson.

Johnson said after the Lions game that he saw week-to-week growth from Williams as a passer, and I’m inclined to agree. Williams is very clearly growing more comfortable working through his progressions within the pocket and getting to the right place with the football on a more consistent basis. He played with more anticipation and made accurate throws to help create several explosive plays, most notably on a well-thrown double-move to Rome Odunze for 37 yards. Ted Nguyen of The Athletic noted that Williams broke out of play structure only four times during the game, a step in the right direction for a QB who lived out of structure to his detriment in 2024.

Though Williams isn’t good enough right now to singlehandedly drag this team into games on a weekly basis, he’s not the problem with the Bears’ offense. What’s worrying is that the issues are more pervasive. All Johnson had to do Sunday was look across the field at a Lions team that gashed the Bears on the ground. One week earlier, the same offense had been completely inept running the football against the Packers, which shut down Jared Goff and the passing attack as a result.

Chicago’s run game has been virtually nonexistent through two weeks. D’Andre Swift & Co. are last in the league in EPA per designed run and 30th in success rate, ahead of only the Texans and Cardinals. It shouldn’t be a surprise that Swift isn’t a great fit for Johnson’s run game; remember that the Lions traded away Swift during Johnson’s time with the team and had much more success running the football with Jamaal Williams, David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs. Swift has also been overwhelmed in pass protection. He’s a change-of-pace back being forced to serve as the lead back because the Bears paid him as such before the 2024 season, when he signed before Derrick Henry yet received the same average salary.

The Bears didn’t make any meaningful additions to their backfield this offseason, so seventh-round pick Kyle Monangai has been the primary backup to Swift. Don’t be shocked if the Bears go get someone who’s a more effective runner between the tackles and a sturdier pass blocker before the trade deadline. This offense isn’t going to thrive unless the run game is working.

The offense as a whole is still figuring things out. As Yahoo’s Matt Harmon noted, it takes time for motion-heavy offenses in new places to get settled without pre-snap penalties. The Bears are tied for the league lead with six false starts. The much-ballyhooed new interior offensive line is still gelling together, and when Johnson has had to keep things simple, teams have been able to exploit their weaknesses, like when the Vikings got a free rusher up the A-gap on Williams on the play when DJ Moore was hit hard downfield (a spectacular throw, for what it’s worth). The Bears aren’t some finished product on offense, but they’re better than public perception suggests right now.

I can’t say the same about the defense, which has looked awful for the past five quarters. Even with their pick-six of J.J. McCarthy and a great three quarters to start the season against the Vikings, Dennis Allen’s unit ranks 31st in EPA per play, ahead of only the Dolphins. At times against the Lions, the Bears looked like a junior varsity squad playing bigger, faster, virtually uncatchable varsity players.

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1:04

How much will the Bears miss Jaylon Johnson?

“The Pat McAfee Show” crew reacts to the news about Bears cornerback Jaylon Johnson being out indefinitely after sustaining a groin injury against the Lions.

The problems start in the secondary, where the Bears haven’t had slot corner Kyler Gordon all season. Top corner Jaylon Johnson sat out the opener because of a groin injury and then, per Johnson, sustained a new groin issue against the Lions. He’s out indefinitely, leaving the Bears down to Tyrique Stevenson, Nick McCloud and Nahshon Wright at cornerback. Stevenson and Wright both allowed perfect 158.3 passer ratings as the nearest defender in coverage against the Lions, and McCloud was a relative shutdown corner with his 132.9 mark. In an ideal world for Allen, Stevenson would be the third-best cornerback on the team and the guy who gets the most help of the bunch. In this version of the Bears’ defense, he’s nominally their best CB on paper.

It’s a vicious cycle. Because the secondary is in a shambles, Allen can’t play much man coverage, which was a goal for this defense heading into the season. And without any faith in his cornerbacks, the Bears can’t send extra rushers, with Chicago running the NFL’s fourth-lowest blitz rate. And because they can’t blitz, the Bears don’t get any pressure, with their 20.8% pressure rate good for 28th in the league. And if you don’t get pressure, life’s going to be much tougher on your defensive backs.

The fairest thing to say for the Bears as a whole is that they’re still very much figuring things out. The same is true for Johnson, whose game management in his debut was sorely lacking. He threw the challenge flag for a fumble that was never going to be overturned. Then, with the Bears trying to get the kickoff back to the Vikings before the two-minute warning, he didn’t instruct Cairo Santos to kick the ball out of bounds or even just a yard or two forward to immediately create a landing zone violation. Instead, he trusted Santos to boot the ball all the way through the end zone, which failed.

This is a work in progress, and it’s closer to the beginning of that process than the end.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 5.1%

It seems like the Dolphins have been through a season’s worth of conflicts in two weeks. Visibly disgruntled wide receiver? Players-only meeting? Blowout loss? Blown fourth-quarter lead against a division rival at home? The Dolphins have done it all. The most popular conversation surrounding Miami is whether wide receiver Tyreek Hill or coach Mike McDaniel will be the first to leave town.

I’m not sure getting rid of either makes sense, at least not right now. Hill is clearly frustrated, and the organization essentially choosing to forget when he asked out of the lineup and requested a trade at the end of last season couldn’t have done wonders for locker room morale. But this offense isn’t going to get better without Hill in the lineup. And although McDaniel is unlikely to return for another season at this rate, given owner Stephen Ross’ history of firing coaches, the Dolphins are almost surely going to be looking outside the building for their next hire — which they’d obviously do only in the offseason.

Do the Dolphins have any hope of turning things around? Week 2 suggests so. The offense was completely inept in the Week 1 loss to the Colts, but one week later, it scored 20 points on eight drives against the Patriots. Hill had a 109-yard game, including his first 40-plus-yard catch in over a year. The Dolphins came within a De’Von Achane footstep of scoring a touchdown to take the lead with 1:15 to go. It wasn’t exactly the 70-point stomping of the Broncos in 2023, but it was a major step in the right direction after a truly awful week.

That game against the Broncos might actually be another reason to be patient. Denver allowed 70 points after giving up 35 to a Sam Howell-led Commanders offense one week earlier. The Broncos looked like a historically bad defense in the making. What happened? They got better. Vance Joseph’s defense was 12th in EPA per play over the remainder of 2023 and then led the league by the same metric the following season. I’m not saying that sort of turnaround is necessarily in the cards for the Dolphins, but one disaster game and one mediocre one shouldn’t be enough to insist upon a cleanout.

The problem for the Dolphins, at least on offense, is that it’s tough to see how they can unlock a new level of play. We saw the best version of this offense in 2022 and 2023, when they had a Pro Bowl-caliber left tackle in Terron Armstead and a solid guard in Robert Hunt. Armstead retired, Hunt left for the Panthers, and the Dolphins haven’t invested heavily in replacements. Patrick Paul and Jonah Savaiinaea are still working things out on the left side, while right tackle Austin Jackson just went on injured reserve. Tua Tagovailoa’s blind side is being protected by former Bears reserve Larry Borom.

The 2023 Dolphins hit another level by dominating on the ground, something that hasn’t recurred since then. Miami is 31st in EPA per play on designed runs since the start of 2024, and although it was excellent on them in the opener against the Colts, the early deficit took the run game out of the picture. McDaniel has essentially turned Achane into an every-down back, which gets Miami’s most talented runner the ball — but it also puts a lot of wear and tear on the 5-foot-9, 191-pounder. McDaniel is widely regarded as one of the most creative and revered run scheme builders in the NFL, so this appears to be more of a talent issue up front than a schematic concern.

Even if the offense gets going, though, the defense looks bad on paper and hasn’t played out much better in practice. The hope was always that a deep front four, led by Chop Robinson, Zach Sieler, Bradley Chubb and Jaelan Phillips, would be able to cover for the secondary — which looks like GM Chris Grier simply forgot about the concept of defensive backs. When the Dolphins fleshed out their biggest weak spot by signing Jack Jones and Rasul Douglas in training camp and then playing them for meaningful snaps right out of the gate, it spoke to just how much of a mess cornerback was (and still is) for the Dolphins.

Unfortunately for coordinator Anthony Weaver, the pass rush hasn’t taken over games yet. The Dolphins rank 29th in pressure rate this season, ahead of only the 49ers, Panthers and Colts. They’ve done that with the NFL’s fourth-highest blitz rate, which seems incomprehensible and illogical given how limited they are at cornerback. It would be one thing if those blitzes were working, but Miami is 27th in opponent QBR when sending extra rushers this season.

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1:20

Rich Eisen sounds off on Dolphins’ poor start

Rich Eisen rips into the Dolphins following their winless start to the NFL season.

After their ugly Week 1 loss, I said it was too early to rule the Dolphins out, considering how easy their schedule would be over the coming weeks. Well, one of those winnable games was at home against the Patriots, and the Dolphins just lost that one. Traveling to Western New York in September is a lot different from playing there in December or January, but the Dolphins now need to beat the Bills to save their season. If they lose to Buffalo — and follow that up with a loss to either the Jets or the Panthers over the two ensuing games — the wheels might come off entirely. Some might say they already have.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 3.7%

I wrote at length about Sunday’s dramatic loss to the Cowboys in my Monday column, so I won’t dwell on what we saw from Big Blue in Week 2. When I picked them before the season as one of the teams most likely to improve in 2025, I focused on a few factors that seemed likely to drive a more competent version of the Giants. Let’s check in on how those are faring through two weeks:

Better performance in the red zone. Last year’s Giants averaged just 3.8 points per red zone trip, becoming the only team in 2024 and just the third over the past five seasons to average fewer than four points per red zone possession. The 2020 and 2023 Jets were the only other teams to come up short of that four-point barrier. Does the turf suddenly go uphill at the 20-yard line in East Rutherford?

History tells us that teams that struggle that much in the red zone almost always get better inside the 20 the following year. Through two weeks, the Giants are proving to be the impetus for including “almost” in that prior sentence, averaging a league-low 2.7 points per red zone trip. They’ve notched just one touchdown on seven trips inside the 20, including a downright embarrassing sequence against the Commanders in Week 1 where the Giants failed to score on seven straight plays. Coach Brian Daboll simply shut down and decided to kick what could be the angriest field goal of the 2025 season.

There isn’t just one problem. The Giants aren’t a good conventional run team, so they rely heavily on bootlegs and quarterback movement to try to misdirect defenses. Those haven’t yielded open receivers. Malik Nabers is their best individual playmaker and the player most likely to win one-on-one in tight quarters, but while he was targeted three times inside the 20 in Week 1, the only completion came on a screen where none of the blockers arrived on time. Daboll is fluent in the quarterback run game from his time working with Jalen Hurts, Josh Allen and Daniel Jones, but he’s not going to run power with Russell Wilson.

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Could Jaxson Dart be the solution? He could help, though the one time he got to keep the ball Sunday produced a 3-yard loss on a failed zone read. Taking a longer view, this should get better with time and a larger sample. But I think it’s fair to wonder whether Daboll and coordinator Mike Kafka have any schematic answers. The Saquon Barkley-led 2022 offense was good for the seventh-best red zone touchdown rate, but the Giants fell to 31st there in 2023. Barkley is not coming through the door in North Jersey in Giants colors anytime soon, so New York will need to find something or someone it can lean on inside the 20.

A healthier year from left tackle Andrew Thomas. Outside of perhaps Nabers, there isn’t a more essential player on this roster than Thomas. The Giants are deep enough on the defensive line that they could lose one of their standouts and get by, but Thomas is arguably the only above-average pass protector on a unit that has been a perennial disappointment. As I wrote before the season, the Giants had the league’s 21st-best offense with Thomas on the field during Daboll’s past three years in New York; they had the 32nd offense when he was on the sidelines or inactive.

The Giants were hoping for a healthy season from Thomas after he missed most of 2024 with a Lisfranc injury, but he didn’t play during the preseason and hasn’t been able to suit up yet for the regular season. With Evan Neal a healthy scratch, the Giants first turned to James Hudson III, who struggled against the Commanders before melting down against the Cowboys. He committed four penalties in a four-play span before being benched.

Third-stringer Marcus Mbow didn’t actively set the offense back, but Giants left tackles have allowed 12 pressures this season, per NFL Next Gen Stats. In an ideal world, the Giants could rely on Thomas as an anchor and give right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor more help. Instead, they have needed to help out their left tackles, and Eluemunor allowed six pressures in the loss to the Cowboys, four of which were what Next Gen Stats defines as quick pressures (when a player loses almost immediately after the snap).

Great defensive line play. The Giants posted the best sack rate of the 21st century through eight games in 2024, and though they faded in the second half, the arrival of Abdul Carter added another potentially elite player to their front four. If the Giants were going to control games, it was going to be through that defensive line winning up front.

Through two games, the line hasn’t dominated. The Giants are posting a 19.4% pressure rate when they don’t blitz, which ranks 26th in the league. They’re running the third-best sack-to-pressure rate in those situations, which hints at the finishing talent they have up front, but the Giants were 10th in pressure rate without blitzing through eight games a year ago.

They’ve also been abysmal against the run, ranking dead last in EPA per play against designed runs. Losing linebacker Micah McFadden in the opener (foot) and replacement Darius Muasau in the third quarter against the Cowboys (concussion) hasn’t helped, but this Dexter Lawrence-led front is supposed to physically overwhelm opposing offensive lines. So far, it hasn’t been able to stop the run whatsoever.

The Giants came within a 64-yard field goal of beating the Cowboys, which would have been a pleasant victory, but there’s nothing in their formula or underlying play right now suggesting they’re about to go on a run. That might change once Dart gets into the lineup, but until they start winning the line of scrimmage and get through a difficult slate of early-season opponents, I’m not sure the identity of the quarterback matters much.

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0:43

Stephen A. is flabbergasted by Giants’ 14 penalties

Stephen A. Smith is shocked by the Giants’ undisciplined play leading to at least fourteen penalties in New York’s loss to Dallas.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 7.3%

Well, the good vibes around the Jets’ offense lasted exactly one week. Justin Fields posted the worst QBR of his career (1.1), going 3-of-11 for 27 yards with an interception before leaving Sunday’s game against the Bills with a concussion. The Jets ran the ball reasonably well for the second consecutive week, but they went 0-for-11 on third down, matching what they did against these same Bills from November 2023.

Though a few of those third downs were third-and-forever spots, the Jets were sloppier in Week 2 than they were against the Steelers in the opener. Fields (and Tyrod Taylor, who came in late to replace the injured starter) weren’t throwing with anticipation. Running back Breece Hall, who was very effective making defenders miss in Week 1, couldn’t pick up 3 yards on a throw to the flat. Wide receiver Garrett Wilson slipped after a catch and couldn’t grab extra yardage. The Jets missed contributions from players such as receiver Josh Reynolds, who was out with a hamstring injury.

This isn’t an offense built to play from behind. Fields hasn’t been a consistently effective dropback passer, and trailing takes the run game and the threat of play-action away from Tanner Engstrand’s offense. Wilson is the only reliable receiver in the offense. If the Jets go down double digits in the first half, as they did when the Bills scored 20 points, they will struggle to catch up. If they can stay close or take the lead, as they did against the Steelers, it will keep the playbook open for 60 minutes. That’s going to be a prerequisite for the Jets throughout the season.

Fields is already out for the Bucs game in Week 3, and when he will return is uncertain. And there’s obviously a conflict here. He has never finished a full season as a pro, missing time in each of his three years with the Bears because of injuries before spending much of 2024 on the bench in Pittsburgh. So the Jets need to protect Fields in their game plan. But the best version of their offense should include Fields on designed runs between the tackles, which invariably means a heavy hit rate. And then as a dropback passer, Fields has an astronomical 11.8% sack rate as a pro quarterback. Some of those sacks are extended plays where Fields is scrambling and can’t escape a defender, but he has taken too many hits in the pocket over the years.

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Some of the wrinkles the Jets tried in the first two weeks didn’t help. On the play where Fields reportedly suffered his concussion, the Jets got to the line and tried to quick-snap to catch the Bills off guard, leaving them in a simple protection look without any time to redeclare or reset the line. As a result, rookie tight end Mason Taylor was left one-on-one against edge rusher Joey Bosa, who easily won the mismatch and strip-sacked Fields. Those quick snaps worked for the Ravens in Week 1 against Buffalo, but Lamar Jackson is simply a much more dynamic and effective quarterback than Fields.

The more concerning thing might be that the Jets’ defense hasn’t bounced back from last season’s post-Robert Saleh firing swoon. It’s one thing for Josh Allen and the Bills to score 30, but the Steelers getting to 34 might end up being Pittsburgh’s highest-scoring game of the year. The Jets are 28th in EPA per play on defense through two games.

Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady did a good job of getting the Jets into uncomfortable positions. The Bills picked on third-year linebacker Marcelino McCrary-Ball, who has been playing the first regular snaps of his career when the Jets are in their base defense. Allen’s biggest pass of the game was a 32-yard crosser to Joshua Palmer, who lined up in the slot against Sauce Gardner, where the star cornerback is typically less comfortable.

Aaron Glenn unsurprisingly leaned more heavily into man coverage after majoring in it during his time as the Lions’ defensive coordinator. The Jets played man 50.6% of the time last season, but that went up to 61.8% in the opener before Glenn pared it back to 46.7% last week. The latter move was more about Allen than any sort of philosophy shift; the Bills’ QB torches man coverage with his arm and legs and led Buffalo to 48 points on the Lions a year ago. Gardner will do just fine in man, but it remains to be seen whether free agent signing Brandon Stephens — who got a curiously significant contract after a disappointing year with the Ravens — can do the same. He has allowed a 144.0 passer rating and two touchdowns through two games.

Nobody in the AFC East plays a particularly difficult schedule, and the Jets have games against the Dolphins, Cowboys, Panthers and Browns coming up. The Jets outplayed the Steelers and probably deserved to win that game. If they can keep Fields in the lineup and don’t fall too far behind, they’re going to be a frustrating out. Until the defense finds its way, though, the Jets won’t be able to get out to many early leads.

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0:48

Why Greeny calls Jets’ loss ‘alarming’

Mike Greenberg explains why he’s concerned after the Jets’ Week 2 loss to the Bills.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 5.5%

At least it’s less depressing than it was this time last year! After Week 2 in 2024, the Panthers were benching Bryce Young for Andy Dalton, a sign that the organization had given up on its 2023 No. 1 pick after a little more than one season. The Panthers told everyone who would listen that they weren’t actually moving on from their QB of the future, and to their credit, Young came back later in the season and looked like a much better passer. And heading into 2025, there was a renewed optimism surrounding Young, who looked a lot more like the guy the Panthers were hoping to add when they traded a massive haul to the Bears to acquire him.

Well, two games into 2025, some of that optimism has already evaporated. Young ranks 29th in QBR; his 36.3 mark is about halfway between where Young stood at this time a year ago (7.2) and how he played during the second half of 2024 after his return from the bench (62.7). Young doesn’t look overmatched in the way we saw during that brutal 2024 start, but he simply hasn’t been good enough. He’s averaging just 5.4 yards per attempt without completing even 60% of his passes through two games.

The worst part has been turnovers. Young has thrown three picks through two games, all of which have been on ill-advised decisions. A fourth, maybe the worst interception thrown by any quarterback in a game all season, was a pick-six against the Jaguars in Week 1 that was mercifully called back because of a penalty. An offense that’s not efficient, turning the ball over and not generating many big plays isn’t very appealing.

And while Young hasn’t often had much help at receiver, Tetairoa McMillan looks as if he’s going to be very good. He made a really nice subtle catch in Week 2 on what ended up being a 40-yard catch-and-run from Young, taking in a pass that was a little low without stopping his stride and running through the Cardinals’ secondary for extra yardage. He has averaged just over 2 yards per route run through two games. Xavier Legette, on the other hand, has 8 yards on 75 routes, for a smooth 0.1 yards per route run. Only five wide receivers who ran 50 routes in their team’s first two games since 2007 have gotten off to a worse start.

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0:55

Dopp: McMillan is low-end WR2 or high-end flex play in Week 3

Daniel Dopp shares why Tetairoa McMillan is a low-end WR2 or high-end flex play in Week 3 fantasy against the Falcons.

The line has been an issue. Yosh Nijman filled in at left tackle in the opener and gave up a league-high six quick quarterback pressures, most of which came at the hands of Josh Hines-Allen. Ikem Ekwonu was back from his appendectomy for Week 2, but he gave up four quick pressures in his first appearance of the season. (We’ve seen offensive linemen struggle to regain their form quickly after appendectomies, with Peter Skoronski’s rookie season as an example.)

Even worse, the Panthers lost two of their starting linemen, with Pro Bowl guard Robert Hunt going down because of a biceps injury that is likely to end his season, while center Austin Corbett hit injured reserve because of an MCL injury and is out indefinitely. In addition to fielding two backups in the middle of the line for the next couple of months, it’s worth noting that Ekwonu’s 2024 improvement came after the Panthers added a very good guard next door. I would be worried about the potential for regression there without Hunt in the lineup. This is a real problem for Young and the offense.

The Panthers also lost a key lineman early in 2024, but that was on the defensive side, where Derrick Brown went down in the opener and sat out the rest of the season. With Brown returning to the lineup and the addition of Tershawn Wharton in free agency, the hope was that a Panthers defense that was dire against the run might noticeably improve.

Not off to a great start. With Wharton limited to 18 snaps in the opener and sitting out Week 2 because of a hamstring injury, the Panthers have given up 188 rushing yards on designed runs through two games, ahead of only the Bills, who faced Derrick Henry and Lamar Jackson. They’re 17th by EPA per designed rush attempt after a solid day against the Cardinals, but Ejiro Evero’s defense almost singlehandedly revived Travis Etienne Jr.’s fantasy stock. Etienne went for 143 yards on 16 carries in Week 1, including a 71-yard run on split zone where new addition Tre’von Moehrig got caught up in flotsam and free safety Nick Scott couldn’t make a tackle as the last line of defense.

It’s just too easy to find a weak spot for this team on both sides of the football. Run the ball, and you’ll eventually get a missed tackle from someone like Scott or Christian Rozeboom. Don’t want to throw at Jaycee Horn? You can target the safeties or throw at Chau Smith-Wade. The Jags controlled the line by overwhelming Nijman, and if defenses are able to stop McMillan, I’m not sure anybody else in the passing game is going to be able to consistently win for Young against tight coverage.

It seems telling that FPI is willing to give the Panthers only a 5.5% shot of landing a playoff berth in the NFC South, where nobody has looked great in several years, let alone through two games of the 2025 season. This is Year 3 with Young and Evero, and it’s Year 2 with coach Dave Canales and GM Dan Morgan. We should be seeing signs of growth. But I’m not sure there have been many on the film or in the data through two games.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 3.6%

Titans fans hoping Cam Ward would be the latest top draft pick to propel a moribund team from the bottom of the standings into an immediate playoff berth are probably accepting that this isn’t the 2023 Texans or 2024 Commanders. Through two weeks, Ward is last in the NFL in QBR (19.8). He’s averaging 2.8 yards per dropback; of the 625 qualifying quarterbacks who started the first two games of their teams’ seasons going back through the 2007 season, Ward ranks 624th by that metric. Only Blaine Gabbert’s 2013 season (1.9 yards per dropback, somehow) was worse.

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Ranking 624th out of 625 is unquestionably not great, but I don’t think he has actually been anywhere near that bad. There’s no questioning his arm talent, and while there have been a few scattershot throws, you can pretty easily see why the Titans had no qualms about making him the first pick in this year’s draft. Ward is a fun improviser and shows nice touch on throws to the sideline, including the would-be completion to Elic Ayomanor that Brian Callahan neglected to challenge against the Broncos in Week 1, seemingly out of some confusion regarding the league’s catch rules.

Ward is averaging nearly 9 air yards per throw, so while his completion percentage (50.8%) is terrible, it’s at least partially mitigated by how often he is throwing downfield. He’s 5-of-24 on throws of 10 or more yards downfield, which obviously has to get better in the coming weeks if the Titans want to score more than one touchdown per game.

The big problem for Ward and the offense has been taking sacks. Every young quarterback seemingly needs to learn that running directly backward to escape pressure doesn’t work in the NFL unless you’re Lamar Jackson. Ward found that out in the fourth quarter against the Broncos, taking three sacks for double-digit yardage losses in the final 15 minutes alone. He didn’t take another one of those in the subsequent loss to the Rams, which is a positive sign.

With that being said, even on the plays in which Ward isn’t tunneling backward toward his end zone, pass protection has been a major problem. Playing the Broncos and Rams to start the season hasn’t helped, but the offensive line was supposed to be the backbone that propelled the offense forward in 2025. The Titans were moving JC Latham from left tackle to his natural position at right tackle. They spent big on Dan Moore Jr. at left tackle, added veteran guard Kevin Zeitler on the interior and welcomed back Lloyd Cushenberry III from a torn Achilles. With legendary offensive line coach Bill Callahan in his second season with the team, the Titans were supposed to be much better up front in 2025.

It hasn’t gone well so far. Moore, who gave up the most sacks in the NFL last season per the NFL Next Gen Stats, hasn’t looked any better in Tennessee than he did in Pittsburgh. He has given up three sacks and 12 pressures through two games, seven of which are of the quick pressure variety, which ties him for the most in the league. Latham gave up a sack and two pressures in the opener and then went down because of a hip injury; he was replaced by Olisaemeka Udoh in Week 1 and John Ojukwu in Week 2 against the Rams. Between the three of them, they’ve given up four sacks and 10 pressures in Ward’s first two games.

If you don’t trust your tackles, you can’t lean into play-action, which makes every quarterback’s life easier. Tennessee can try protecting with six or seven and helping the tackles out with chips, but that’s keeping receivers from getting into their routes and forces more attention on a group of receivers that might already be the least imposing in the NFL without the help. The Titans used a first-round pick on Latham and spent more than $20 million per year to sign Moore in free agency under the idea that they wouldn’t need to be worried about their tackles for years to come. The early returns aren’t promising.

I’ve been more enthused by the Titans’ defense, which has looked solid through three quarters in consecutive games before gassing out in the fourth. The Titans are 14th in EPA per play on defense through three quarters before falling to 28th in the final stanza, where the Broncos and Rams scored 20 of their 53 combined points.

Even with limited snaps for L’Jarius Sneed and a missing game from T’Vondre Sweat, the Titans have looked more cohesive in 2025. Jeffery Simmons has been the difference-maker the Titans need, leading the team with seven pressures, two of which produced turnovers. The new linebacker duo of Cody Barton and Cedric Gray has played well in coverage, with Barton producing a really impressive pick of Matthew Stafford last week, dropping all the way from the line of scrimmage into the flat to hand the Titans a short field.

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And the special teams, which was disastrously bad in 2023 and 2024, has made big plays. The Titans lead the league in special teams DVOA after ranking last in the same category a year ago. They recovered a muffed fumble by Marvin Mims Jr. in Week 1 that gave them a short field and set up what could have been a tying score, only for the offense to go backward. Chimere Dike earned them three points just before halftime that game when he returned a kickoff for 71 yards with six seconds left in the second quarter. Joey Slye is 8-for-8 on field goal attempts, including three from 50-plus yards. Good special teams will keep the Titans in games and could swing a close one or two later in the season.

All of those things help, but the focus in 2025 will obviously be on Ward and what he does in his first year under center. Callahan has to find ways to make his life easier and put less of a load on his young QB’s shoulders, especially in obvious passing situations. The Titans will face easier defenses in the weeks to come, though the Colts do lead the league in QBR after two weeks and the Texans and their brutally devastating set of edge rushers follow. There’s certainly something compelling here with Ward, but 2025 might be more about figuring out how to harness his talent than challenging for a postseason berth.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 5.1%

There are depressing bad teams and fun bad teams. The Saints, through two weeks, fall firmly into the latter category. Quarterback Spencer Rattler throwing the ball around 40 times per week? The Emory and Henry formation? Defensive coordinator Brandon Staley running out a defense with the highest sim pressure and creeper rate in the league? Linebacker Demario Davis thumping opposing run games the way he did in his mid-20s? The Saints have been an entertaining watch through two weeks.

A lot of these teams could make the case that they’re a play or two away from being 2-0. The Saints might be a play or two away from being a play or two away from being 2-0. Trailing 20-13 against the Cardinals in Week 1, Rattler hit tight end Juwan Johnson up the seam for what appeared to be a tying touchdown, only for the ball to come out on his way down. Last week against San Francisco, Rattler threw a pass behind wide receiver Chris Olave for what should have been a touchdown on the opening drive, which ended in a missed field goal attempt. The Saints extended two 49ers TD drives with third-down penalties, then failed to move the ball on two fourth-quarter drives while trailing by five points. It would be wrong to say the Saints came close to winning, but they were close to being close. And they did fun things while coming up just short.

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Coach Kellen Moore has the Saints playing at the fastest pace of any team by a considerable margin. Through two weeks, Rattler has thrown 80 passes and the Saints have two (Olave and Johnson) of the league’s 12 players with 20-plus targets. Leaning into tempo makes Rattler’s life easier in terms of seeing fewer exotic defensive looks and tiring out opposing pass rushes. He has been sacked on only 4.6% of his dropbacks this season, which is above league average. He also has not thrown an interception, though that’s not going to stick as long as Rattler is throwing into tight windows at one of the highest rates in the NFL.

Moore’s playcalling was weirdly polarized in the 49ers game. Before the final two drives of the game, when the Saints were essentially in their two-minute drill, 21 of the Saints’ 26 first-down snaps were runs. The Saints leaned heavily into the pass on second downs, with 18 of 25 snaps producing pass dropbacks. There’s nothing wrong with running on first down and throwing on second down, and some of those snaps are going to be RPOs in which Rattler is going to make a decision based on the defensive look. But it’s another quirky thing about what has been a unique offense.

Does all of that add up to a good offense? Not yet. Rattler is averaging 5.3 yards per attempt, which is 31st in the league. The Saints have done a good job limiting negative plays, but when we strip the interceptions and sacks out for everyone, just about everybody else is getting more out of their positive plays than the Saints. Rattler is 27th in EPA per snap excluding sacks and turnovers, right alongside the Vikings’ J.J. McCarthy.

Realistically, the Saints have too many weak spots where they’re either relying on unproven young players or journeymen who wouldn’t be playing on better teams. Up front, Kelvin Banks Jr. (left tackle), Taliese Fuaga (right tackle) and Dillon Radunz (left guard) gave up 10 quick pressures against the 49ers. Banks was one-on-one on nearly 90% of his dropbacks. That’s a lot to ask of a rookie in his second NFL game, even a first-round pick.

Another of the problems: The Saints can’t generate yards after the catch. By the NFL Next Gen Stats receiving model, just 32% of Saints catches have produced successful YAC versus expectation, the worst mark of any team in the NFL. The Saints are also one of just three teams that haven’t had a single play produce at least 20 yards after the catch this season. Some of that’s a product of their scheme, but the receiving model attempts to account for where players catch the ball and the speed of the players around them to estimate what a receiver “should” gain after making the catch. It’s tough to imagine that a team with guys like Olave, Rashid Shaheed and Alvin Kamara won’t do more in open space in the weeks to come.

Staley’s defense, meanwhile, is letting its freak flag fly. According to Next Gen Stats, the Saints are having defenders drop off the line of scrimmage a league-high 51.7% of the time; they’ve also paced the NFL in creepers and sim pressures (12.4%). It’s a necessary reality for a team that doesn’t have the talent to win by simply rushing its front four. Those pressure looks help the Saints define protections and create potential one-on-ones, but they also ask a lot of Staley’s linebackers (admittedly the best part of his defense). The play that decided Sunday’s loss started with six Saints at the line of scrimmage before Davis and Pete Werner dropped into coverage, only for Mac Jones to whiz a crosser past Werner’s ear to Jauan Jennings for a 42-yard touchdown.

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The secondary ranks 25th in EPA per play when the pass rush doesn’t get home. New Orleans has dealt with frustrating penalties from Kool-Aid McKinstry, who has had a rough start to the season, and Isaac Yiadom, who wasn’t able to contain Cardinals’ running back Trey Benson on a 52-yard run in the opener. As the Saints deal with more injuries throughout the season, they could be further exposed to replacement-level talent on the back half of their roster.

This isn’t going to be an easy season (or few seasons to come) in New Orleans. It would be a surprise if the Saints pulled out road victories over the Seahawks or Bills in the next two weeks. I don’t think anyone outside of Louisiana is expecting the Saints to start contending, but that doesn’t mean they can’t be entertaining along the way.

Chances of advancing to the postseason, via ESPN’s FPI: 5.4%

The path to an unexpected playoff berth for the Browns was always going to come through their defense, as it did in 2023 when Cleveland started five different quarterbacks and still made the postseason. Doing that without linebacker Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah and cornerback Martin Emerson Jr., both of whom are out for the 2025 season, wasn’t going to be easy.

Through their first six quarters of football, it looked like Jim Schwartz’s unit was doing its best to relive 2023. After limiting the Bengals to 17 points in the opener, the Browns held the Ravens to 10 points in the first half Sunday. One week after Baltimore lit up Buffalo in a wild shootout, it picked up just four first downs and 81 net yards on seven possessions in that first half against Cleveland.

Then the bottom fell out. The Ravens racked up 24 points on offense in the second half and added a touchdown on a scoop-and-score. Starting two of their four second-half drives on Cleveland’s 5- and 36-yard lines obviously helped, but when Joe Flacco is your quarterback, you have to expect to hand the opposing team some short fields with turnovers.

There are positives here, naturally built around Myles Garrett, who looks every bit as terrifying as we’ve come to expect on the edge. It’s fellow edge rusher Isaiah McGuire, though, who ranks third in pass rush win rate (33.3%) behind Nik Bonitto and Isaiah McGuire. Rookie Mason Graham has flashed on the interior, helping to create a near-safety against Joe Burrow in the opener. The defensive line isn’t a problem. It’s the cornerback position that is holding the Browns’ defense back.

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0:56

Should fantasy managers bench WR Jerry Jeudy in Week 3?

Mike Clay explains why fantasy managers should bench WR Jerry Jeudy in the Browns’ Week 3 matchup against the Packers.

Without Emerson and with Denzel Ward limited to 38% of the defensive snaps because of cramps last week, the Browns couldn’t cover up the weakest spots in their lineup. Lamar Jackson threw three touchdown passes past Cameron Mitchell in the second half and leveraged his zone responsibilities for a fourth. In 2023, there was no obvious corner for opposing teams to attack.

On offense, well, the expectations weren’t high, and they’re being met. Flacco’s stunning run at the end of 2023 earned him another opportunity for the Browns this season, but he isn’t playing at that level. Through two weeks, his 36.7 QBR ranks 28th in the NFL. The Browns have been fine when they’ve protected Flacco, but under pressure he sure looks like a guy who has played more than 13,000 NFL snaps. On those plays, Flacco threw two picks against the Bengals and then went 6-of-18 for 24 yards under duress against the Ravens.

One thing that has worked, though, is rookie tight end Harold Fannin Jr. Alongside David Njoku, Fannin has 12 catches for 111 yards and five first downs. It’s one thing to scheme up catches for a tight end, but Fannin has been able to run away from cornerbacks with his speed. He maxed out at 19 mph against the Ravens, a top speed only five other tight ends have topped on a single snap this season (per NFL Next Gen Stats).

The Browns have been a significantly more reliable offense leaning into those tight ends. They’ve run a 46% success rate in 12 personnel, a figure that drops to 34% when they replace one of those tight ends with a third wide receiver. Teams often post higher success rates in 12 personnel because of the situations in which they’re more likely to employ multiple tight end sets and trade that off by being more explosive in 11 personnel — but the Browns are averaging more yards per play in 12 personnel, too.

There are bright spots, but things might get uglier for Cleveland. The Browns’ next four games are against the Packers, Lions, Vikings and Steelers. They get three games against the AFC East afterward, but it would take an upset over what looks like the league’s best team Sunday afternoon to realistically keep their slim postseason hopes alive.



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September 18, 2025 0 comments
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NFL Week 2: Wild comeback wins for Cowboys, Colts, Bengals
Esports

NFL Week 2: Wild comeback wins for Cowboys, Colts, Bengals

by admin September 16, 2025


  • Bill BarnwellSep 15, 2025, 08:45 AM ET

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      Bill Barnwell is a senior NFL writer for ESPN.com. He analyzes football on and off the field like no one else on the planet, writing about in-season X’s and O’s, offseason transactions and so much more.

      He is the host of the Bill Barnwell Show podcast, with episodes released weekly. Barnwell joined ESPN in 2011 as a staff writer at Grantland.

You certainly can’t say it was a boring Sunday. While there were a few blowout victories here and there, we saw seven of the 12 games Sunday decided by seven points or fewer. Outside of the 49ers, who firmly shut the door on the Saints to seal up their second consecutive close victory on the road to start the season, none of those wins felt resounding.

Three teams pulled off comebacks by scoring in the final two minutes of regulation or overtime. The Cowboys topped the Giants, the Bengals beat the Jaguars and the Colts pulled out a last-second victory over the Broncos.

I’m going to break down those three games. What happened? How did those teams fuel their comebacks? Are these types of performances sustainable? And should we feel concerned about the three losers of those games?

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Let’s begin in Dallas, where the Cowboys needed help from one of the superstars it still has to overcome the absence of the one it traded away. (And if you want to read more about the Giants’ side of things, come back Thursday, when I’ll have my annual look at the league’s 0-2 teams and how they’re essentially all about to suit up for playoff games in Week 3. It’ll be the Chiefs’ first appearance in that column, too.)

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Demoted to the 1 p.m. ET window after seemingly decades of being a nationally televised game between two of the league’s most storied franchises, the Cowboys and Giants responded with their own version of last week’s Ravens-Bills game. After a Dak Prescott interception started the second half and the Giants responded by stalling out in the red zone and turning the ball over on downs, these two teams scored on nine of the remaining 10 possessions in regulation. The lead changed hands six times in the process before the Cowboys finally took advantage of an inexplicable Russell Wilson interception in overtime to set up Brandon Aubrey for a 46-yard field goal to win the game.

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It was Aubrey’s 64-yard field goal at the end of regulation that sent the game to overtime — a once-in-a-lifetime boot for most professionals that seems almost ho-hum for the league’s biggest leg. Cowboys kickers have a habit of bailing out coaches who mismanage end-game scenarios the moment their team crosses that fake “field goal range” line, and Brian Schottenheimer appears to be no exception.

After a Prescott pass to Jake Ferguson got the ball to midfield with nine seconds left, the Cowboys decided against using their two remaining timeouts and their $60-million-per-year quarterback to make Aubrey’s kick easier. Instead, they handed the ball off to Javonte Williams for a 3-yard gain. Aubrey came through, but that sort of late-game management won’t play well when the Cowboys try to beat stiffer competition.

The Giants weren’t supposed to give the Cowboys much trouble after an ugly loss to the Commanders in Week 1. But in what was seen as potentially his final start as a pro QB if he played poorly, Wilson put together his best start since leaving Seattle. Through the end of regulation, his 93.1 Total QBR was the second-best mark of the day and would have been the best mark he posted in a game since the 2021 season. After hitting Malik Nabers with a 48-yard touchdown pass to take the lead back for the Giants with 25 seconds to go, Wilson was 27-of-36 for 433 yards, three touchdown passes and no picks. He took just two sacks on 39 dropbacks and added a first down on a 15-yard scramble.

Of course, I’m leaving overtime out of that equation, and that appeared to be the moment when the carriage turned into a pumpkin. The Giants couldn’t score on the second drive of the extra session, when a field goal would have won them the game. When Wilson got the ball back again, he threw an incomprehensible interception under pressure.

Generously, I’d like to think that he was trying to throw the ball out of bounds in Nabers’ direction (or somewhere close enough to make it a 50-50 ball) and just missed by about 5 yards. However, there was nothing in the pass concept suggesting that Wilson was throwing somewhere Nabers was supposed to be on that play. The interception didn’t end the game — the Cowboys only took over on their own 30-yard line — but it changed the Giants’ best-case scenario from a win to a tie.

Before then, though, Wilson was having a blast picking the Cowboys apart deep. On throws traveling 20 or more yards in the air during regulation, Wilson went 7-of-10 for 264 yards and three scores. The last time somebody completed seven or more deep passes in a game was when Nick Mullens did it for the Vikings against the Lions on Christmas Eve in 2023. And frankly, while these aren’t easy throws, the only one of these completions that was really spectacular was the late TD pass to Nabers to take the lead. I say that less to disparage what Wilson did and more to just emphasize how vacant and open for business the Cowboys’ defense was downfield.

Wilson picked them apart with big throws against all kinds of coverages. The Giants hit two long completions against Tampa 2, where linebackers Kenneth Murray Jr. and Jack Sanborn couldn’t get near seam routes from Wan’Dale Robinson. Nabers torched Trevon Diggs off the line for a big gain on a fade. Wilson hit a couple more go balls against three-deep looks, where Diggs and fellow starting cornerback Kaiir Elam just couldn’t get close enough to squeeze routes. And then there were a pair of long completions against quarters coverage, where the two corners were simply going to have to run with the Giants’ wide receivers and couldn’t do so.

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0:19

Russell Wilson’s heave finds Malik Nabers for late go-ahead TD

Russell Wilson airs out a 48-yard touchdown pass to Malik Nabers to give the Giants a late lead in the fourth quarter.

Personnel-wise, perhaps none of this should be surprising. Elam wasn’t able to get on the field consistently for much of his tenure with the Bills, and he wasn’t convincing when Buffalo did get him in the lineup. Murray, another former first-rounder and fellow addition for the Cowboys this offseason, has allowed a career passer rating north of 107 in coverage. And Sanborn is in Dallas because he played under new defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus in Chicago and came cheap, with the former undrafted free agent making $1.5 million in 2025.

Diggs, meanwhile, is the microcosm of why things are so frustrating for the Cowboys on defense and unlikely to get better. He has struggled to get back to his former form after tearing his ACL early in the 2023 season, but it’s going to be even more difficult in 2025 because of what the Cowboys have done to their roster. Last season, even with Micah Parsons sidelined for four games (ankle), the Cowboys were sixth in pressure rate and second in sack rate. In fact, Dallas led the league in both categories across Parsons’ four years with the organization before his recent trade to Green Bay.

Without Parsons, the Cowboys are still generating pressures, but the sacks haven’t come. They rank sixth in pressure rate but just 19th in sack rate, and that has come against two of the most sack-friendly quarterbacks in football in Wilson and Jalen Hurts. Against pressure, Wilson was 6-of-10 for 99 yards and a touchdown throw before the overtime interception.

When Diggs and currently injured cornerback DaRon Bland were at their best during the Dan Quinn days in Dallas, the presence and even the threat of Parsons influenced what opposing coordinators were comfortable calling. It was easier for two of the league’s most aggressive corners to sit on routes, trusting that Parsons would get home before any receiver could get past them. And while that still led to some big plays and long completions, Diggs and Bland were able to more than make up for the missteps with league-leading interception totals.

Now, without that reliable pass rush, the cornerbacks can’t sit on routes at the sticks and trust that the ball is going to come out quick. They have to be prepared to consistently deal with scramble drills and plays out of structure. You might have noticed that Jayden Daniels went 3-of-10 for 44 yards on throws 10 or more yards downfield on Thursday night against Parsons’ new team; Green Bay’s corners — the weakest spot on its roster — suddenly have much easier lives as a product of their new star teammate.

Even while allowing the explosives downfield, the Cowboys were able to survive by relying on New York’s penchant for self-immolation in the red zone. In a matchup of last season’s worst red zone offense against its worst red zone defense, the Cowboys swung the game in their favor by limiting the Giants to one touchdown, three field goals and a turnover on downs across five trips inside the 20-yard line.

One of those was on a meltdown from fill-in left tackle James Hudson III, who was benched and limited to special teams duties after he committed two unnecessary roughness penalties and two false starts in a four-play sequence. One of the penalties cost the Giants a first-and-goal opportunity at the 2-yard line after a deep Robinson catch. It would have been one of the more unique moments of Sunday’s action if Xavien Howard hadn’t strung together four penalties in six plays for the Colts later in the afternoon.

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0:16

Donovan Wilson gives Cowboys ball back with OT INT

Donovan Wilson leaps to pick off Russell Wilson and give the Cowboys the ball back in overtime.

There isn’t just one problem for the Giants in the red zone. One drive stalled because of the Hudson penalties. Another ended on downs when Cam Skattebo dropped a pass into the flat that would have produced a first down. Kenny Clark had back-to-back pressures to blow up another sequence and force the Giants into a field goal. In general, the Giants can’t run the ball consistently, and the only truly dynamic playmaker they have in tight quarters is Nabers.

Through two weeks, by EPA per play, the Giants are the fourth-best offense in the NFL outside the red zone but the worst by a considerable margin inside the 20-yard line. I would say that has to regress toward the mean, but I was also saying that before the season — and well, it hasn’t yet.

The Cowboys narrowly avoided their nightmare scenario of starting 0-2 in the division. Amid the widespread frustration surrounding Parsons’ departure, there are a few reasons to be optimistic. The run game has been surprisingly effective early this season, with Williams turning 18 carries into 97 yards against the Giants, including a 30-yard touchdown. As Jerry Jones would happily tell you, Dallas’ run defense is better than it has been in years past, too. And with some better hands from CeeDee Lamb against the Eagles, they might be 2-0 right now.

Of course, without a spectacular kick from Aubrey, the Cowboys might also be 0-2.

Some back-and-forth battles are more spectacular than others. That fateful Bills-Chiefs game in the 2021 postseason was a prize fight with two great teams trading haymakers and somehow surviving to land another shot. The Broncos-Colts game in Indianapolis was something closer to two teams opening the door for each other and refusing to go through. The last one to make a critical mistake was going to lose.

That mistake came from the Broncos, who appeared to be escaping with a two-point win after a Spencer Shrader field goal miss from 60 yards, only for a long conference among officials to end with defender Dondrea Tillman getting flagged 15 yards for leverage. He attempted to dive over the center and instead hit him with an Ultimate Warrior-esque big splash. Teammate Eyioma Uwazurike clearly pushed down on long-snapper Luke Rhodes to help create more space for Tillman’s leap. It’s one of the more obscure rules in the NFL to decide a game in recent memory, but it is a clear and obvious foul. Shrader hit a 45-yarder with his ensuing kick to push the Colts to 2-0 and drop the Broncos to 1-1.

From the Broncos’ side, this felt like the same story for the second consecutive week, just told with a completely different plot and a new ending. Last week, an abysmal performance from Bo Nix kept the Titans in the game. But despite turning the ball over four times, the Broncos were able to ride a dominant defensive display against a hapless Titans offensive line to hold onto a narrow lead before sealing things up with their running game in the fourth quarter.

Catch up on NFL Week 2

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This week, Nix was much better for most of the contest, going 22-of-30 for 206 yards, three touchdown passes and an interception. The jittery feet, inconsistent ball placement and ill-advised decision-making that popped up throughout Nix’s Week 1 performance weren’t on display against the Colts, especially during an excellent first half. He made a beautiful throw on a scramble drill to hit Troy Franklin for 42 yards in the second quarter, wasn’t sacked and turned just under 37% of his dropbacks into first downs, which is right above league average. His 72.6 Total QBR was up more than 45 points from where it fell in Week 1, when Nix finished 29th of 32 quarterbacks.

But after turning the ball over three times against the Titans, Nix threw a critical interception in the fourth quarter. With the Broncos up five points and in position to either kick a field goal or potentially go up two scores with a touchdown, Nix was put into a dropback passing situation on third-and-3 and attempted to throw the ball with defensive lineman Grover Stewart in his face. The tackle deflected the pass, and while Nix had an open Courtland Sutton on a crosser, the throw wobbled and sailed to safety Cam Bynum, who picked up his second INT in two games with Indianapolis.

For the second week in a row, there also were special teams blunders. After a Colts field goal got them to within one score, the Broncos drove back into field goal range, only for Wil Lutz to miss a 42-yarder with 3:20 left that would have restored Denver’s five-point lead. On a day in which Shrader was 5-for-5 on field goal tries, the miss by Lutz meant the Broncos lost out on six points on trips near or into the red zone.

And there were also penalty issues. After J.K. Dobbins had a 23-yard run to put the Broncos briefly into the red zone, he was flagged and penalized five yards for spiking the football. On the next play, the Broncos ran Dobbins for no gain, and tight end Adam Trautman was flagged for a face mask penalty, pushing the Broncos into a first-and-25 situation. A screen on third-and-24 got them back into field goal range, but the penalties brought the drive to a halt and kept them from scoring a touchdown that probably would have sealed the game.

Last week, the Broncos had a significant margin of error for mistakes on offense and special teams because their defense was able to bully the opposing offense. But this week, the Broncos’ defense wasn’t able to carry Sean Payton’s team to a victory. It allowed the Colts to average more than 7 yards per play and make six trips into the red zone. And Indy became only the second team in NFL history (after the 2024 Commanders) to go two consecutive games without a punt, fumble or interception.

The Broncos weren’t able to slow down the Colts’ run game in particular, with Jonathan Taylor gashing Denver for 165 yards on 25 carries. Though the Colts lost Ryan Kelly and Will Fries to the Vikings in free agency and swapped out Anthony Richardson Sr. (who played a meaningful role in the quarterback run game) for Daniel Jones (who has mostly been limited to sneaks and scrambles), they’ve been extremely impressive on the ground to start the season.

They were able to take advantage of a tactic that’s becoming widespread around the NFL. Defenses have been stemming (or making slight adjustments to their alignment or front just before the snap) for years. But after seeing it come more into vogue with the best college defenses in recent seasons, we’re seeing more NFL defenses use it to create confusion for blocking schemes just before the snap.

On Sunday, the Colts hit three first downs in the second half on run plays in which the Broncos stemmed just before the snap, trying to change the blocking calculus for the offensive line or free up their linebackers to attack the football. Those runs all hit the places the Broncos were making late adjustments. There’s nothing wrong with stemming or making late adjustments on the front as a tool, but just as it creates uncertainty for the offense, it can also make things hairy for the defense on the fly. Take the 68-yard run by Taylor in the fourth quarter on the drive after the Nix interception.

THERE GOES JONATHAN TAYLOR. 69 YARDS!

DENvsIND on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/PJaCD6ZM0x

— NFL (@NFL) September 14, 2025

It’s tough to see on replay, but just before the play begins, edge defender Jonathon Cooper sneaks one gap to the interior and tries to create more difficult blocking angles for the run blitz that’s coming from cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian. The Colts are running a wham concept, where the tight end comes across the play after the snap and attempts to take on an unblocked defensive lineman; in this case, Tyler Warren has to get on his horse to try to influence nose tackle D.J. Jones. Jones nearly makes the tackle for a loss, but Warren does just enough to get him out of Taylor’s way, while McMillian is blocked out of the play by Michael Pittman Jr.

Now, the Broncos have to improvise. Alex Singleton ends up in the gap where Cooper was before he stemmed, but Taylor does a great job of quickly regaining his balance and juking Singleton before running away from him. Taylor actually has two potential lanes to hit for huge gains after beating Singleton; he chooses to go outside, simply accelerating away from safety Brandon Jones and heading up the sideline.

The Broncos thrive in coverage, meanwhile, by playing a ton of man. With cornerback Pat Surtain II capable of taking on anybody one-on-one, the Broncos played man coverage on 56.3% of opposing dropbacks last season, the second-highest rate in the NFL. They led the league in EPA per dropback (minus-0.07) on those man coverage snaps and were comfortably the best defense in man by the same metric against the Titans in Week 1.

Yet on Sunday, Jones went 13-of-22 against man coverage for 221 yards. The Broncos pressured him on more than 54% of his man-coverage dropbacks but turned only one of those 12 pressures into a sack. Jones and his offense deserve credit for what they accomplished in those moments, but Colts coach Shane Steichen also had an answer for all the man coverage ready to go.

Everyone’s favorite man-beating play in the NFL is mesh, the concept that almost always includes two crossers passing in opposite directions over the middle of the field, an over route above those crossers and a wheel or “rail” route out of the backfield. Steichen’s Colts run mesh more than most teams, and while it wasn’t always a success, they went back to mesh over and over again in key situations Sunday, when they felt as if the Broncos were likely to play man.

I counted at least four instances of mesh in important spots. Two were disappointing; Pittman dropped one crosser in the red zone, and though Warren got open on an underneath drag route on fourth-and-2 with 13 minutes to go, Jones was pressured and sailed his throw. (He also had Taylor open on a wheel route against Tillman for what could have been a touchdown.)

But it worked in two other situations. Taylor caught a touchdown pass in the red zone when the Broncos simply didn’t cover the wheel route, giving Jones one of the easiest throws he’ll ever make for a score. And then on a critical third-and-6 with 1:50 to go, the Colts not only dialed up mesh again but also threw at Surtain, hitting Alec Pierce on the underneath drag route for a huge first down and forcing the Broncos to use their final timeout.

play

0:25

Colts stun Broncos after penalty gives Indy a second chance

Spencer Shrader misses his initial kick, but the Broncos are called for a personal foul, giving the Colts a second chance which is converted for a game-winning field goal.

From there, Steichen curiously chose to take the air out of the football. Indy ran twice for 2 yards, drew the clock down to 17 seconds, took a timeout and then ran the ball a third time with Taylor, who lost two yards on a failed counter run. The Colts obviously were hoping to gain more than 1 yard on those three plays, but I was surprised to see Steichen almost entirely take the ball out of Jones’ hands. Settling for what ended up being a 60-yard field goal was a bad process, even if it ended up working out well for them in the end.

It seems foolish to start the discussion about this game without touching on the biggest storyline. It’s clear that Bengals star quarterback Joe Burrow is going to miss time after suffering a serious toe injury during Sunday’s win over the Jaguars, with further testing to determine whether he will be week-to-week as he heals or sidelined for several months if the injury requires surgery. (Update: Sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter that Burrow will need surgery.) Neither option would be good, but it’s easier to imagine the Bengals hanging on and playing vaguely .500 ball with Jake Browning at quarterback for one month than it would be for three.

When we last saw Browning starting in 2023, he went 4-3 and had a 60.9 Total QBR, which was good for ninth in the NFL from Week 10 onward. The Bengals helped Browning out by posting the league’s second-best average YAC per reception over that span, but he also had the league’s third-best off-target rate and third-best precise pass rate, the latter measuring how reliably each QB puts the ball on his receivers in stride with throws near the torso. Browning was throwing some of the shortest passes in the league, but he’s an accurate passer.

He’s also prone to more negative plays than Burrow, as Browning ran worse-than-average sack and interception rates during his time under center. While he was sacked only once on Sunday, the backup did throw three interceptions after entering the lineup. Two were wild throws under pressure, including one where the Bengals were not able to pass off a simple twist up front. The third was an attempt to fit a dig into a space that simply was not there. Those sort of throws are going to happen when you haven’t played live football in more than a year.

If all you knew about this game was that Burrow went out in the second quarter, Browning threw three interceptions and the Jaguars scored 27 points, you probably would have assumed that this was going to be a fourth straight losing home opener for the Bengals. And frankly, this should have been a Jags win; when Devin Lloyd intercepted Browning’s pass and handed the ball to Trevor Lawrence’s offense on the Cincinnati 12-yard line with 5:22 to go, the Jaguars were in the driver’s seat. Up three, they needed one touchdown to make it a two-score game, which could have put things out of reach.

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Instead, Jacksonville melted down. It had some solid success running the football for the second consecutive week, but a misdirection attempt with Travis Etienne Jr. on first down lost four yards. A second-down pass went off Dyami Brown’s fingertips (his second drop of the game). After a third-down run got the Jags to fourth-and-5, Liam Coen called for the Jags to run mesh. (Yes, everybody runs it — and often in key situations.) The Bengals responded by playing zone, which isn’t the ideal look for mesh, but Brian Thomas got open right over the ball, only to drop Lawrence’s pass and turn the ball over on downs.

Let’s talk about the play itself before we get to the decision. Thomas is being hounded on social media after this game for wanting to avoid hits, with the most damning evidence being Lawrence’s second interception of this game, where Thomas appeared to stick one arm out halfheartedly with a collision coming. It’s not a great look, though I’m not sure why Thomas would suddenly exhibit some reticence about contact after breaking plenty of tackles a year ago and racking up 146 yards on tight-window catches, per NFL Next Gen Stats.

I’m also not sure the fourth-down incompletion has anything to do with the other play. While the Jags are running these crossing routes, Thomas’ shallow route has only about two yards of depth, meaning he needed to pick up three yards after the catch to at least move the chains. Because he’s facing zone, he is supposed to throttle down and present a stationary target for Lawrence. (Against man, he would continue running his route to run away from coverage.) As the ball arrives, Thomas begins to turn upfield to look and see where he needs to run for the first down, not whether a hit is coming. It seems more likely that he took his eye off the ball a fraction of a second too early than anything else (although only the second-year wideout can say for sure).

Should the Jags have kicked a field goal to go up six? Overwhelmingly, we can say the answer to this question is no, and it shouldn’t even be considered anything revolutionary or aggressive at this point. Going for it allows you to score a game-sealing touchdown or hold onto the football with a first down or penalty. Even if you fail, you’re handing the ball over deep in opposing territory, with that opponent often anchored to a game-tying field goal down three as opposed to striking for a game-winning touchdown. Down six, that team would have no choice but to play four-down football and go for the jugular.

ESPN’s model had the decision to go for it as a 5.9% win probability swing relative to trying a field goal. The Bengals ultimately didn’t settle for three, but their drive also required two fourth-down conversions, including a 25-yard pass interference penalty on Travis Hunter that extended the game and served as Cincinnati’s biggest play. And if you want to treat what we saw as gospel, of course, the Bengals proved that Jacksonville kicking a field goal to go up six wouldn’t have made a difference, given that they marched downfield for a touchdown on a long field anyway.

Hunter is off to a slow start as a pro. Through two games, he has nine catches for 55 yards on 14 targets as a receiver. An early injury to Jarrian Jones forced Hunter to play 60% of the defensive snaps on Sunday, and while he forced Andrei Iosivas out of bounds to prevent a catch, Hunter allowed a first down via illegal contact before the 25-yard pass interference call that extended the game. With Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins on the other side, it seems telling that the Bengals were willing to put their game on the line with a fade to Iosivas, their third-best wideout, isolated against Hunter. It’s obviously too early to draw meaningful conclusions, but so far, Hunter hasn’t been a difference-maker on either side of the ball.

Realistically, the Jags should have put this game away before it came down to a final drive. In the second quarter, Lawrence threw a brutal interception in the red zone under pressure from Trey Hendrickson and then nearly threw another, only for that one to be overturned. That second drive ended when Lawrence scrambled 3 yards past the line of scrimmage, threw a pass to Brenton Strange and argued for pass interference on what was an illegal forward pass. Brown dropped what should have been an easy touchdown catch on a crossing route in the fourth quarter, too. Both those drives ended in field goals when they should have been touchdowns.

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0:16

Jake Browning storms over for go-ahead Bengals TD

Jake Browning leaps into the end zone to give the Bengals the lead late in the fourth quarter vs. the Jaguars.

Of course, this stuff happens to the Jaguars all the time. The malaise that eventually ended the Doug Pederson era and brought Coen into town started with the help of Browning, who took on an 8-3 Jaguars team in his second start filling in for Burrow. The Jags were competing for the top seed in the AFC that day, but after Lawrence was injured late and the Jags lost in overtime, it started a brutal losing streak. They lost 18 of Pederson’s final 23 games in charge. They went from ascending to rapidly descending overnight.

And with that in mind, you can understand why there’s a fatalistic feeling about what’s going on with the Jags, even though I’m not sure it’s entirely supported by the evidence. Thomas stopping on a route is proof that he doesn’t want to get hit. Lawrence visibly waiving off a Coen criticism in the fourth quarter is a sign that he’s not impressed with his new coach. Blowing the late lead with some dismal work in the red zone is a sign that these are the same old Jaguars.

Maybe they are. I’m just not sure I’m comfortable drawing that conclusion after two games, especially given that they were a drop or a pass interference penalty away from starting 2-0. That Coen has finally gotten the run game going and that the defense has nearly as many interceptions in two games (five) as it did all of last season (six) are more meaningful positives to me.

And as for the Bengals, well, luck is in the eye of the beholder. It’s obviously not lucky to lose your MVP candidate at quarterback for a significant stretch of time in September. And yet, does this feel like a team that deserves to be 2-0? The offense melted down against the Browns, who lost after their kicker missed an extra point and a chip-shot field goal in the second half. The Bengals turned the ball over three times and needed some very fortuitous drops to win Sunday. I’m not sure they can keep playing this way and expect to keep racking up victories.

And unfortunately, with a two-game road trip against the Vikings and Broncos to come, they’re about to face much stiffer defensive competition without their best player.





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49ers vs. Saints Livestream: How to Watch NFL Week 2 Online Today
Gaming Gear

49ers vs. Saints Livestream: How to Watch NFL Week 2 Online Today

by admin September 15, 2025


When to watch San Francisco 49ers vs. New Orleans Saints

  • Sunday, Sept. 14 at 1 p.m. ET (10 a.m. ET).

Where to watch

  • The 49ers-Saints game will air on Fox, with Kevin Kugler and Daryl Johnston on the call.

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The 49ers started the season with a win, but lost quarterback Brock Purdy in the process. With Purdy unlikely to play, backup Mac Jones is in line to start in New Orleans. Second-year QB Spencer Rattler is the Saints’ starter, and helped keep them in the game last week before a late rally came up short in Arizona. Rattler started six games last year for New Orleans and is still looking for his first NFL win. 

The 49ers and Saints kick off at 1 p.m. ET (10 a.m. PT) on Fox. Here’s how you can watch or stream it live, even if the game isn’t available on your local Fox channel.

The game will be shown on TV in the San Francisco and New Orleans areas (according to 506 Sports) and on live TV streaming services, but there may be cases where you’re blocked because of an internet location glitch. But there’s an option that doesn’t require subscribing to something like NFL Sunday Ticket or NFL Plus or searching the internet for a sketchy website: You can use a virtual private network.  

Here’s how you can watch the game from anywhere in the US with a VPN.  

Read more: How to Watch NFL Games Without Cable in 2025

Mac Jones is set to make his 50th career start on Sunday as he fills in for the 49ers’ first-choice QB Brock Purdy.

Steph Chambers/Getty Images

How to watch the 49ers vs. Saints game online from anywhere using a VPN

If you find yourself unable to view the game locally due to incorrectly applied blackout restrictions, you may need a different way to watch the game and that’s where using a VPN can come in handy. A VPN is also the best way to stop your ISP from throttling your speeds on game day by encrypting your traffic, plus it’s a great idea for when you’re traveling and find yourself connected to a Wi-Fi network, and you want to add an extra layer of privacy for your devices and logins. 

With a VPN, you’re able to virtually change your location on your phone, tablet or laptop to get access to the game. So if your internet provider or mobile carrier has stuck you with an IP address that incorrectly shows your location in a blackout zone, a VPN can correct that problem by giving you an IP address in your correct, nonblackout area. Most VPNs, like our Editors’ Choice, ExpressVPN, make it really easy to do this. 

Using a VPN to watch or stream sports is legal in any country where VPNs are legal, including the US and Canada, as long as you’ve got a legitimate subscription to the service you’re streaming. You should be sure your VPN is set up correctly to prevent leaks: Even where VPNs are legal, the streaming service may terminate the account of anyone it deems to be circumventing correctly applied blackout restrictions. 

Looking for other options? Be sure to check out some of the other great VPN deals taking place right now. 

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ExpressVPN is our current best VPN pick for people who want a reliable and safe VPN, and it works on a variety of devices. Prices start at $3.49 a month on a two-year plan for the service’s Basic tier.

Note that ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money-back guarantee.

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How to watch 49ers vs. Saints in the US

Sunday’s 49ers vs. Saints game is on Fox. The good news for football fans is that Fox is available on all five major live TV streaming services, but not every service carries every local network, so check each one using the links below to make sure it carries Fox in your area. You can also stream games broadcast on Fox with the new Fox One streaming app.

Fox

Fox’s new direct-to-consumer streaming service launched in August. Fox One costs $20 a month or $200 a year and lets NFL fans watch their local Sunday afternoon games on Fox. You’ll also get access to Fox’s complete TV portfolio, including sports-related channels such as Fox Sports, B1G, FS1, FS2 and local Fox stations.

Sling’s new skinny bundle costs $20 and includes local Fox, ABC and NBC stations in select markets. It does not, however, offer CBS in any of its plans. It’s also worth noting that Sling Select charges an extra fee of $5 or $10 in select markets for Fox in addition to the $20 base fee.  

Sling also offers a Day Pass for $5 or a Weekend Pass for $10. If you also wanted to get ESPN in addition to the local networks, you would need to get the $61-a-month Sling Orange and Blue plan. Read our Sling TV review.

Fubo

Fubo’s main package costs $85 per month, but it has a new skinny bundle that includes most of the channels you need for the NFL. This new Fubo Sports plan costs $56 per month ($46 for the first month) and includes Fox along with ABC and CBS (but not NBC) in addition to ESPN and NFL Network. It also includes access to ESPN’s new streaming app. Click here to see which local channels you get in your region with Fubo. Read our Fubo review.

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For $83 a month, you’ll get all the major football channels with YouTube TV, including Fox. You can also add RedZone for an extra $11 per month. Plug in your ZIP code on YouTube TV’s welcome page to see which local networks are available in your area.

YouTube TV is also the exclusive home to NFL Sunday Ticket. But note that Sunday Ticket doesn’t include local games. You can only watch Sunday afternoon games that aren’t being broadcast on CBS or Fox in your area. If you want to watch all the football on Sundays you’ll need Sunday Ticket plus a YouTube TV subscription (or just get Sunday Ticket and then use an antenna for local games).

To get the full experience of your local games, NFL Sunday Ticket and NFL RedZone, you’ll need the YouTube TV base plan ($83 per month), Sunday Ticket ($276 for returning subscribers or $480 for new subscribers for the season) and the Sports Plus add-on ($11 per month).

DirecTV

All the live TV streaming services above allow you to cancel anytime and require a solid internet connection. Looking for more information? Check out our live TV streaming services guide. 

An over-the-air antenna connected to your TV provides another option for Fox. The best part about antennas is that there are no streaming or monthly fees required, although you will need to make sure you have good reception.

Quick tips for streaming the 49ers vs. Saints game using a VPN 

  • With four variables at play — your ISP, browser, video streaming provider and VPN — experience and success may vary. 
  • If you don’t see your desired location as a default option for ExpressVPN, try using the “search for city or country” option.
  • If you’re having trouble getting the game after you’ve turned on your VPN and set it to the correct viewing area, there are two things you can try for a quick fix. First, log into your streaming service subscription account and make sure the address registered for the account is an address in the correct viewing area. If not, you may need to change the physical address on file with your account. Second, some smart TVs — like Roku — don’t have VPN apps you can install directly on the device itself. Instead, you’ll have to install the VPN on your router or the mobile hotspot you’re using (like your phone) so that any device on its Wi-Fi network now appears in the correct viewing location.
  • All of the VPN providers we recommend have helpful instructions on their main site for quickly installing the VPN on your router. In some cases with smart TV services, after you install a cable network’s sports app, you’ll be asked to verify a numeric code or click a link sent to your email address on file for your smart TV. This is where having a VPN on your router will also help, since both devices will appear to be in the correct location. 
  • And remember, browsers can often give away a location despite using a VPN, so be sure you’re using a privacy-first browser to log into your services. We normally recommend Brave.



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September 15, 2025 0 comments
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Game Reviews

These Limited-Edition NFL Echo Dot Bundles Hit an All-Time Low Right as the Football Season Kicks Off

by admin September 13, 2025


The weather is cooling down. The leaves will be changing soon. And football season has officially begun. Any true fan it’s going to have some memorabilia of their favorite team. Most of them just sit there for display, but not this. Amazon’s Echo Dot now comes bundled with miniature NFL helmets. There are 32 different options, one for each NFL team in these limited-edition bundles. And then beyond that, you have your choice of color for the Echo dot itself, coming in either charcoal, glacier white, or deep sea blue.

Amazon currently has a sale going on for the NFL Echo Dot bundle, but not for every team. Between each helmet and Echo Dot color, I’ve taken on the tedious task of clicking on all 96 combinations to confirm which are on sale and which are still full price. After going through the full league, I can confirm only one set is on sale—the Green Bay Packers. All three color options for the Wisconsin team are $25 off, bringing the price down to just $85. Cheeseheads get to live large this week. Sorry all other NFL fans in the country, but you’ll be paying full price for your team’s limited-edition NFL Echo Dot bundle.

See at Amazon

Vibrant Sound, Small Package

Why even get an Echo Dot in the first place? Well this smart speaker, despite it’s small stature, is capable of producing powerful sound with a rich and deep bass. It’s got a front-firing 1.73-inch speaker which pumps out room-filling audio.

Streaming from you Echo Dot, be it music, podcasts, or audiobooks, comes through with clear vocals. It uses lossless HD audio from a handful for streaming services, Amazon Music HD included. Beyond Amazon’s own stuff, the Echo Dot can play from Apple Music, Spotify, SiriusXM, and more. Control the volume or start and stop the track with simple voice commands.

Not just a speaker, the Echo Dot is first and foremost a smart home hub. You can control other smart products in your home by just asking Alexa. Use it to adjust settings on your TV. Change the lights from off to on or dim them without getting up from the couch. You can set cooking times, ask questions, create calendar events and so much more. You can even connect with family and friends who also have an Echo device or even just the Alexa app on their phone. Use multiple Echos to communicate between rooms of your house if you so please.

Come grab the NFL Echo Dot bundle (exclusively the Green Bay Packers edition) for the reduced price of $85.

See at Amazon



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September 13, 2025 0 comments
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Who calls plays for every NFL team in 2025? What to know
Esports

Who calls plays for every NFL team in 2025? What to know

by admin September 9, 2025


  • NFL NationSep 9, 2025, 06:00 AM ET

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      NFL Nation is made up of 32 team-specific reporters who cover the NFL year-round across ESPN.com, ESPN television shows, ESPN Radio, ESPN+ and social media platforms. It was established ahead of the 2013 season.

The 2025 NFL season is underway, which means we got our first look at new playcallers such as the Detroit Lions’ John Morton, Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Josh Grizzard and the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles’ Kevin Patullo in Week 1.

We also saw some recognizable faces in new places, as Ben Johnson took over as Chicago Bears head coach, Kellen Moore as New Orleans Saints HC and Brian Schottenheimer with the Dallas Cowboys. Each of them will carry the dual responsibility of coaching and calling offensive plays.

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Meanwhile, veteran coaches Andy Reid (Kansas City Chiefs), Sean Payton (Denver Broncos) and Sean McVay (Los Angeles Rams) continue to churn out creative offensive systems. And Josh McDaniels is back for his third stint as the New England Patriots’ offensive coordinator, aiming to push second-year quarterback Drake Maye to another level.

Will Klint Kubiak continue to get the most out of Jayden Daniels with the Washington Commanders? Will Arthur Smith and Aaron Rodgers stay in sync with the Pittsburgh Steelers? How about new Jacksonville Jaguars coach Liam Coen and Trevor Lawrence?

Here is who is calling plays for all 32 teams (with a key stat provided by ESPN Research).

Jump to:
ARI | ATL | BAL | BUF | CAR | CHI | CIN
CLE | DAL | DEN | DET | GB | HOU | IND
JAX | KC | LAC | LAR | LV | MIA | MIN
NE | NO | NYG | NYJ | PHI | PIT | SF
SEA | TB | TEN | WSH

AFC EAST

Playcaller: Joe Brady, offensive coordinator

Experience: Brady is in his second full season in his role after initially inheriting the job in an interim capacity during the 2023 season after Ken Dorsey was fired. He initially joined the Bills organization as the team’s quarterbacks coach in 2022, and prior to that served as the Panthers’ offensive coordinator from 2020 to December 2021.

What to know: In the first full season with Brady as coordinator, the Bills ran the highest percentage of designed rushing plays (42.7%) since Allen was drafted in 2018. A more balanced offense helped the unit set franchise records for a single season in points (525) and touchdowns (65) and led to Allen’s first MVP season, in addition to a career scoring season for running back James Cook. Expect a similar approach this season. “Everybody Eats” is the major philosophy in Buffalo under Brady, which stresses the importance of players staying ready to get involved on any play. — Alaina Getzenberg

Key stat: Entering the season, the Bills rushed on 63% of their red zone plays under Brady, compared to 50% of the time under Dorsey. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Mike McDaniel, head coach

Experience: McDaniel has called offensive plays in each of his three previous seasons in Miami and continues in the role in 2025. He called plays sparingly during his time as the 49ers’ offensive coordinator prior to his tenure in Miami. He was mainly involved in play design and run game coordination.

What to know: The Dolphins finished sixth in total offense in 2022 and led the league in 2023, but they dropped to 18th last season amidst instability at the quarterback position. With game-breaking speed at wide receiver and running back, Miami could return to the top 10 in 2025. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

Key stat: The Dolphins utilized motion on 81% of their offensive plays last season, the highest rate in the league. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Josh McDaniels, offensive coordinator

Experience: This is McDaniels’ 24th NFL season and 19th in New England as he returns for a third separate stint as coordinator. Of his 19 years in New England, McDaniels has spent 14 of them as coordinator.

What to know: In his previous 13 seasons as Patriots coordinator, McDaniels helped guide the offense to eight top-10 rankings, including the NFL’s No. 1-ranked offense in 2007, 2012 and 2017 with Tom Brady at quarterback. McDaniels spent 2024 out of football and visited with several coaches at different levels, and that has primed him to add new elements to his system, especially when tailoring plans to a QB (Drake Maye) who has physical and running skills that many of those McDaniels worked with in the past didn’t have. — Mike Reiss

Key stat: The Raiders took 46.3% of their snaps from under center when McDaniels was head coach and playcaller from 2022 to 2023, which was tied for second most in the league (Lions, 46.7%). — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Tanner Engstrand, offensive coordinator

Experience: Engstrand is a first-time coordinator and a first-time playcaller on the NFL level. He spent the past five seasons on the Lions’ staff (his only NFL experience), working under coach Dan Campbell and then-OC Ben Johnson.

What to know: Much like the Lions, the Jets want to win the line of scrimmage with a physical, run-oriented brand of football, but they will go about it differently because QB Justin Fields — unlike Jared Goff — is capable of being a factor in the rushing attack. Engstrand has only one proven weapon on the outside (Garrett Wilson), so he will have to scheme up ways to get open looks for Fields, who can struggle with his accuracy. — Rich Cimini

Key stat: During Engstrand’s tenure as pass game coordinator in Detroit (2022-24), 8% of the Lions’ pass attempts went 20 or more air yards downfield, the lowest percentage in the NFL during that span. — ESPN Research

AFC NORTH

Playcaller: Todd Monken, offensive coordinator

Experience: Monken enters his third season as offensive coordinator for the Ravens after spending three seasons as the offensive coordinator at the University of Georgia. His previous playcaller experience in the NFL includes the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2016-2018) and Cleveland Browns (2019).

What to know: Monken is the mastermind behind one of the NFL’s best and most explosive offenses. In Monken’s first season as coordinator, quarterback Lamar Jackson was named NFL MVP. In Monken’s second season, the Ravens finished as the No. 1 offense in the NFL for the first time in their history. In two seasons with Monken, the Ravens have produced the second-most points (29.4) and yards (397.6) in the league. Now, with Baltimore’s offense returning 10 of 11 starters, the biggest challenge for Monken is to make sure the Ravens are as efficient and sound in the playoffs as they are in the regular season. — Jamison Hensley

Key stat: The Ravens took 16% of their snaps under center in Monken’s first season in 2023 (which ranked 30th in NFL), but last season they nearly doubled it to 31% (13th). — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Zac Taylor, head coach

Experience: Taylor has been the playcaller since the Bengals hired him in 2019. Dan Pitcher is entering his second year as the team’s offensive coordinator after previously being the staff’s quarterbacks coach.

What to know: Taylor is living a playcaller’s dream. The Bengals not only have one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL in Joe Burrow, but Cincinnati also signed star receivers Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins to long-term deals during the offseason. The Bengals have committed 68.6% of their cap space to the offense, per Roster Management System, the third-highest rate in the league. Taylor will be tasked with maximizing that group and making it one of the NFL’s best offenses. Last season, the Bengals ranked eighth in points per drive (2.48). — Ben Baby

Key stat: Of the Bengals’ rushes, 78% were inside the tackles last season, which was the highest rate in the NFL and for the Bengals since Taylor became head coach. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Kevin Stefanski, head coach

Experience: Stefanski took over as the Minnesota Vikings interim offensive coordinator in 2018 and was promoted to full-time OC for the 2019 season. In 2020, he became the head coach in Cleveland, where he has called plays, outside of relinquishing the duties midway through the 2024 season. He has since taken back the role.

What to know: Stefanski is a two-time NFL Coach of the Year (2020, 2023), but quarterback stability has eluded him and the franchise; 11 different passers have started a game in Stefanski’s five seasons as head coach. After tweaking the offense to fit Deshaun Watson’s skill set, the Browns are returning to the scheme Stefanski operated in his first couple of seasons, with Joe Flacco under center to begin the season. Stefanski is also reassuming playcalling duties after giving them up midseason, so expect a reemphasis on running the ball and an increased use of two-tight-end personnel groupings. — Daniel Oyefusi

Key stat: The Browns have increased their usage of plays out of the shotgun each season under Stefanski. They ran 78% of their snaps out of the shotgun last season (seventh most in NFL), a 13% increase from 2023. — ESPN Research

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Playcaller: Arthur Smith, offensive coordinator

Experience: Smith enters his second season as Pittsburgh’s offensive coordinator, but he brings a wealth of experience to the role as the former Falcons head coach and two seasons as the Titans’ playcaller.

What to know: The Steelers’ offensive success this season depends on Smith’s ability to adapt his scheme to 41-year-old Aaron Rodgers’ style and limitations. Smith’s offense comes with a heavy dose of play-action, which Rodgers has had success running in the past. And with a deep tight end room that includes Pat Freiermuth and Jonnu Smith, look for the 2025 offense to also utilize the middle of the field more than last season, when the Steelers were among teams that targeted the middle of the field the least. — Brooke Pryor

Key stat: Last season, the Steelers ran 15% of their snaps in 13 personnel (1 RB, 3 TE, 1 WR) — the second-highest rate in the league (Cardinals) and Pittsburgh’s highest since ESPN began tracking personnel in 2006. — ESPN Research

AFC SOUTH

Playcaller: Nick Caley, offensive coordinator

Experience: This is Caley’s first year in the role for the Texans, and he has never called plays.

What to know: Caley has a Patriots background (2015-22), the last six years serving as the tight end coach. In 2024 and 2025, he served as the Rams tight ends coach — and took on the pass game coordinator role in 2024. Expect his offensive scheme to have a blend of what he learned with the Patriots during the Bill Belichick era and the Rams with Sean McVay. — DJ Bien-Aime

Key stat: During Caley’s time as the pass game coordinator for the Rams in 2024, Los Angeles utilized play-action on 32% of its snaps, the third-highest rate in the NFL. The Texans ranked 11th in play-action usage last season. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Shane Steichen, head coach

Experience: Steichen enters his third season calling plays in Indy after previously doing so for three combined seasons with the Chargers and Eagles.

What to know: Steichen built a reputation as a high-level playcaller during his time with the Chargers and Eagles. His orchestration of the Eagles’ offense in 2022, which ended with a run to the Super Bowl, paved the way for his hire as head coach in Indianapolis in February 2023. The Colts have had too much instability at quarterback to duplicate the results Steichen produced elsewhere, but they managed to be 14th in points scored per game since his arrival despite a revolving door of starters: Anthony Richardson Sr., Gardner Minshew and Joe Flacco. Now he has Daniel Jones as his starter. — Stephen Holder

Key stat: Under Steichen, the Colts have operated out of the shotgun on 89% of their snaps, by far the most in the NFL over the past two seasons. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Liam Coen, head coach

Experience: This will be Coen’s second season as an NFL playcaller (Buccaneers), though he also called plays in college at Kentucky and Maine.

What to know: Coen took the Bucs’ run game from last in 2023 to fourth in 2024 and helped Baker Mayfield set career highs in completion percentage (71.3), passing yards (4,500) and passing TDs (41). The Jaguars hired him to have the same kind of impact on a run game that finished 26th last season and to get QB Trevor Lawrence to play consistently over a full season. — Michael DiRocco

Key stat: With Coen as offensive coordinator in Tampa Bay last season, the Buccaneers were the only team in the league to convert at least half of their third downs (51%). The Jaguars ranked 22nd. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Brian Callahan, head coach

Experience: Callahan got his first shot at calling plays last year after serving five seasons as the Bengals offensive coordinator. Callahan’s first go at it was rough, as the Titans were among the league’s worst at points scored per game (18.3), leading to a 3-14 finish.

What to know: An improved offensive line and focus on eliminating costly penalties early in downs that put the offense behind the chains should help. Not falling behind the chains will allow Callahan to open up his playcalls a bit more. That’s compounded by the improved line that will give rookie quarterback Cam Ward time to scan the field and allow pass catchers to complete their routes. Ward appears to be a solid fit for Callahan’s scheme. He likes to spread the ball around and will have the freedom to make plays out of structure if things break down. Callahan’s success depends on how well he can get Ward to play. — Turron Davenport

Key stat: The Titans are in no hurry on offense under Callahan, finishing with the second-largest time of possession (30.6 seconds) per play in the NFL last season. — ESPN Research

AFC WEST

Playcaller: Sean Payton, head coach

Experience: Payton is one of the most experienced playcallers in the league, now into his third decade on the headset in the NFL. Payton has called plays for the New York Giants and Dallas Cowboys, and has been the playcaller as head coach since he was hired by the New Orleans Saints in 2006 and in his third season with the Broncos.

What to know: Payton has a full plate as the team’s head coach, but he still carves out plenty of time to meet with the team’s quarterbacks and coordinate the week-to-week game-planning. He has plenty of help for the heavy lifting on the offensive staff with long-time assistants such as Joe Lombardi, Zach Strief and Pete Carmichael. Quarterbacks coach Davis Webb has the most day-to-day contact with the quarterbacks, but on game day, Payton is front and center with the play sheet, and he continues to say his priority as playcaller is to find the individual matchups and adjustments against the particular defense the team faces each week. — Jeff Legwold

Key stat: In 2024, the Broncos ranked ninth in the league in play-action usage (28%) and quarterback Bo Nix recorded 14 passing touchdowns in those situations, the second most in the league behind Jared Goff (15). — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Andy Reid, head coach

Experience: Reid has the most experience in the league. He has been calling plays throughout his 27 seasons as a head coach — 14 with the Eagles and 13 with the Chiefs. He is assisted by offensive coordinator Matt Nagy and eight-year starting quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

What to know: Much of Reid’s playcalling will be determined by the success or struggles of the Chiefs’ revamped offensive line, featuring new left guard Kingsley Suamataia and rookie left tackle Josh Simmons. If Mahomes is better protected, expect Reid to dial up more deep shots and counterattacks through a variety of screens. When compared to last season, the Chiefs hope to stay healthier on offense. In Week 7, Reid and Mahomes could have their top three receivers — Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy and Hollywood Brown — finally play a snap together for the first time in two years. — Nate Taylor

Key stat: Last season, the Chiefs used motion at the snap 20% of the time, their highest in a season since Reid became head coach. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Chip Kelly, offensive coordinator

Experience: Kelly returns to the NFL after helping Ohio State win a national title as an offensive coordinator in 2024. Kelly previously served as a head coach for the Philadelphia Eagles (2013-2015) and San Francisco 49ers (2016).

What to know: Kelly’s time away from the NFL taught him to adapt. During his time with Philadelphia, Kelly was known for his up-tempo, high-scoring offenses. The Eagles ranked third in points (26.9) in the three seasons he was with the organization. Even when he was at Oregon (2009-12), the Ducks were first in the nation in points per game (44.72) and 11th in plays per game (75.1). But at Ohio State, Kelly orchestrated an efficient offense despite slowing down the pace. The Buckeyes ranked 14th in points (35.69) but were 120th in plays per game (61.8) and 18th in time of possession per play (29.4 seconds). — Ryan McFadden

Key stat: Kelly’s offenses consistently ranked in the top 10 in play-action usage in his previous stints in the NFL — second from 2013 to 2015 with the Eagles at 28%, and sixth in 2016 with the 49ers at 24%. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Greg Roman, offensive coordinator

Experience: Roman got his first NFL offensive coordinator job with Jim Harbaugh and the San Francisco 49ers in 2011. Roman is in his second year with the Chargers.

What to know: Roman has been a successful coordinator, winning AP assistant coach of the year honors with the Ravens in 2019. Roman is responsible for some of the most creative rushing concepts in league history, but his passing offenses lacked creativity, leading to his exit from Baltimore. L.A.’s offense struggled in Roman’s first season, consistently sputtering in second halves with a rushing offense that was below league average. If the Chargers’ offense doesn’t improve this season, Roman’s job status could be in question. — Kris Rhim

Key stat: In Roman’s first season with the Chargers, the team utilized play-action 34% of the time, the second-highest rate in the NFL. Justin Herbert had a QBR of 85 when using play-action, the best among all quarterbacks. — ESPN Research

NFC EAST

Playcaller: Brian Schottenheimer, head coach

Experience: Schottenheimer is in his first year as the Cowboys playcaller after spending the two previous seasons as the offensive coordinator, while head coach Mike McCarthy called the plays. This is the first time he has called plays since 2020 when he was with Seattle. He was the playcaller from 2018 to 2020 for some of Russell Wilson’s best moments. He also called plays for the Jets from 2006 to 2011.

What to know: He has a lean toward running the ball that might come from his genes and his father Marty’s famous “Martyball” teams in Cleveland and Kansas City that loved to run it. But he was also responsible for Wilson’s two highest-touchdown pass seasons (40, 35). This will be the first time he is operating as a playcaller without a defensive head coach (Rex Ryan, Pete Carroll). The Cowboys had a sharp first half in the Week 1 loss to the Eagles, only to lose momentum in the last two quarters.– Todd Archer

Key stat: Schottenheimer has said he intends to use more motion in 2025. The Cowboys used motion at the snap 15% of the time last season, which was the fourth-lowest rate in the league. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Mike Kafka, assistant head coach and offensive coordinator

Experience: Kafka was the offensive playcaller for most of his first two seasons with the Giants. He came to New York after being with Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes in Kansas City, working his way up to quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator.

What to know: It has been a little bit of a roller coaster for Kafka since coming to New York. He was the playcaller, then he wasn’t, now he is again this season. His first season was the most successful for the Giants under coach Brian Daboll. Eventually Daboll took control of the offense and called plays last year when the team finished 3-14. Kafka was minimized, according to multiple players familiar with his role. But it has been trending in this direction of Daboll giving back play-calling duties since co-owner John Mara hinted after last season it might be a good idea. It has been Kafka calling plays all spring, summer and preseason. — Jordan Raanan

Key stat: Over the past two seasons, the Giants have run a passing play on first down 60% of the time, the highest rate in the NFL. The Giants had max protection (at least seven blockers) 13% of the time last year, the fourth-highest rate in NFL. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Kevin Patullo, offensive coordinator

Experience: This is Patullo’s first year on the job. But he has been Nick Sirianni’s right-hand man since Sirianni became head coach in 2021, serving as the team’s pass game coordinator and associate head coach before taking over for Kellen Moore this offseason.

What to know: Patullo has a strong relationship with many key players on offense, most notably QB Jalen Hurts. There are some things to iron out, but the operation seemed mostly smooth in a Week 1 win over Dallas. “First games, there’s so much unknown, but you’ve got to be able to be not on the reactive side of things, more so proactive and being able to play smart ball and put yourself in advantageous positions,” Hurts said. “I’m happy for him to come out here and get his first win as an offensive coordinator. I know he’s waited a long time for this opportunity and we just want to keep building. I know we’re all hungry for that.” — Tim McManus

Key stat: Under Moore last season, the Eagles had the highest designed rush rate in the NFL at 51%. Since Patullo became pass game coordinator in 2021, the Eagles have run 87% of their plays out of the shotgun, the highest rate in the league. — ESPN Research

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Playcaller: Kliff Kingsbury, offensive coordinator

Experience: Kingsbury is in his second season as Washington’s playcaller. He also called plays while a head coach with the Arizona Cardinals from 2019 to 2022

What to know: Kingsbury stuck around for a second year because, as he told ESPN in December, it would take a lot for him to leave quarterback Jayden Daniels. The two work well together; both like to arrive early and leave late. Kingsbury had Daniels operate the quick passing game — while also calling for designed runs — but didn’t shy from being aggressive in crucial moments. Kingsbury will use players creatively and has a new option in the versatile Deebo Samuel. A knock on Kingsbury before he arrived in Washington was that his offenses dipped in the second half. But, last season, the Commanders averaged 28.1 points for the season — but it was 29.4 in the final eight games, including the playoffs. — John Keim

Key stat: The Commanders were in shotgun formation 91% of the time last season, the highest rate in the league. They ran motion 46% of the time, the third-lowest rate in the NFL. — ESPN Research

NFC NORTH

Playcaller: Ben Johnson, head coach

Experience: Johnson spent three seasons as Detroit’s offensive coordinator (2022-24), where he called plays for the first time in his career. His Lions offenses never ranked lower than fifth in scoring and were a top-four unit in total yards in all three seasons.

What to know: There are several characteristics that define a Johnson offense. In 2024, the Lions ranked first in play-action usage (36%), were fifth in pre-snap motion usage (70%) and used 12 personnel (1 RB, 2 WR, 2 TE) at the third-highest rate in the NFL (32.2%). Detroit’s Jared Goff was one of four quarterbacks to throw for 4,000 yards (which he did all three seasons with Johnson as his OC) and complete 70% of his passes, a mark that the Bears want Caleb Williams to reach in 2025. Johnson will call plays from the sideline while offensive coordinator Declan Doyle will be in the coaches box. — Courtney Cronin

Key stat: Johnson’s Lions lined up under center on 56.2% of plays in 2024, the highest rate of any team. During Johnson’s three-season run as Detroit’s offensive coordinator, the team ranked first in percentage of plays run from under center. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: John Morton, offensive coordinator

Experience: Morton enters his first season as offensive coordinator in Detroit but has more than two decades of NFL coaching experience with the Broncos, Raiders, Lions, Jets, Saints and 49ers.

What to know: Morton is a very detailed coach who steps into his position following Ben Johnson, who left for the head coaching job in Chicago. The 55-year-old was Detroit’s senior offensive assistant in 2022 before spending the past two seasons as Denver’s pass game coordinator, where Broncos rookie quarterback Bo Nix flourished last season. He also has served in offensive assistant roles under Jon Gruden with the Raiders, Jim Harbaugh in San Francisco and Sean Payton in New Orleans. Gruden, Morton’s mentor, describes him as a hardworking guy. “For all the Detroit fans, what you don’t see is the work ethic you’re getting. This guy is nuts,” Gruden said. “People thought I was nuts — this guy is freakin’ nuts, man. He loves it. He’s a creative guy.” — Eric Woodyard

Key stat: During Morton’s tenure as the pass game coordinator in Denver (2023-24), only the Chiefs (59.9%) had a higher percentage of their receiving yards come after the catch (55.9%). — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Matt LaFleur, head coach

Experience: LaFleur has called the offensive plays during his time as Packers coach, beginning in 2019. Previously, he had only one season of NFL playcalling experience with the Titans in 2018.

What to know: LaFleur faced perhaps his biggest challenge as a playcaller last season after Jordan Love sustained a knee injury in the opener and sat out the next two games. LaFleur pivoted to backup quarterback Malik Willis, who was thrust into the QB1 role less than three weeks after he arrived in Green Bay. In the first game, LaFleur called a run-heavy plan, which included only 14 passes, to defeat the Colts. The next week, he opened it up a little more against the Titans and Willis threw 19 times in another win. — Rob Demovsky

Key stat: In 2024, 48.7% of the Packers’ plays were designed rushes, which was second most in the NFL behind only the Eagles (51.0%). This came after the Packers called a designed run on 38.7% of plays in 2023, which ranked 18th in the league. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Kevin O’Connell, head coach

Experience: O’Connell has called plays in every game since he joined the Vikings as head coach for the 2022 season. He also called plays during parts of the 2019 season with Washington.

What to know: O’Connell balanced his run-pass distribution more in 2024 after a heavy dose of passing in his first two seasons with the team. He is likely to continue that trend in 2025 as he breaks in new quarterback J.J. McCarthy. The Vikings had the NFL’s third-most dropbacks (1,438) and the eighth-fewest rushes by running backs (683) in 2022 and 2023, but in 2024 they ranked No. 17 in dropbacks (625) and No. 11 in rushes by running backs. One of O’Connell’s top strengths as a playcaller is the pre-snap feedback and suggestions he gives quarterbacks over their radio communication. — Kevin Seifert

Key stat: Since O’Connell became head coach in 2022, only the Dolphins (30.7%) have used play-action on more of their dropbacks than the Vikings (29.9%). — ESPN Research

NFC SOUTH

Playcaller: Zac Robinson, offensive coordinator

Experience: Last season was Robinson’s first time calling offensive plays in regular-season games. Before that, he was able to cut his teeth in preseason games with the Los Angeles Rams where he was the quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator. Former Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris brought Robinson, a former college and NFL quarterback, to Atlanta when he was hired as head coach in 2024.

What to know: Robinson, like his mentor Sean McVay, favors 11 personnel. No team used the three-WR offensive formation more than the Falcons in 2024 (85.5% of snaps). The Rams, naturally, were second. The Falcons were 16th in passing EPA and 12th in rushing EPA in Robinson’s first year as offensive coordinator, which were solid marks despite quarterback Kirk Cousins’ struggles beginning in Week 10. Cousins was coming off a torn Achilles and immobile, sometimes unable to execute play-action passes. Robinson should have more playcalling flexibility with Michael Penix Jr. as his quarterback. Penix is also more willing to take chances downfield. — Marc Raimondi

Key stat: Last season, the Falcons ran the lowest percentage of plays using play-action in the NFL at 15%. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Dave Canales, head coach

Experience: Canales learned his craft in Seattle under Pete Carroll. He got his big break running the Tampa Bay offense in 2023, then kept the playcalling duties last season as head coach of the Panthers.

What to know: His philosophy is built around a flexible system that focuses on the strength of his quarterback versus a specific system like the West Coast offense. There’s an emphasis on a balanced run-pass attack. It’s not a complex system. It’s built on simple, easy-to-run concepts with twists and variations to each of those concepts. — David Newton

Key stat: In Canales’ first season with the Panthers, Carolina’s offense was under center 33% of the time, compared to 18% in 2023. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Kellen Moore, head coach

Experience: This is Moore’s first year as a head coach. He previously called plays as offensive coordinator for the Cowboys (2019-2022), Chargers (2023) and Eagles (2024)

What to know: Moore has had three stints as a playcaller, as OC of the Cowboys, Chargers and the Eagles. Moore was part of the Eagles’ Super Bowl-winning staff last season. He is the youngest head coach in the league at 37. — Katherine Terrell

Key stat: During Moore’s time as offensive coordinator for the Eagles in 2024, Philadelphia used shotgun formation 82% of the time (fourth most in the NFL). The Saints used it 58% last season. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Josh Grizzard, offensive coordinator

Experience: Grizzard is in his first season as the Bucs offensive coordinator, having spent last year as their pass game coordinator, and this will mark his first time calling plays. Before Tampa, the Yale graduate and East Wake (North Carolina) High School valedictorian spent seven seasons on the Dolphins staff, serving as a quality control coach and wide receivers coach, working under Adam Gase, Brian Flores and Mike McDaniel.

What to know: Grizzard was offensive coordinator Liam Coen’s “eye in the sky” in the press box and was specifically responsible for their third-down packages, helping the Bucs to a league-best 50.9% third-down conversion rate, which ranks sixth best in the league since 2001. “We knew what was coming on those down distances,” Pro Bowl wide receiver Mike Evans said. He also helped identify the Bucs’ proficiency in their gap running scheme in 2024. All-Pro left tackle Tristan Wirfs said, “He’s a wizard. He knows what to do. He knows what to call.” They’re essentially running the same scheme as Coen did last year, but with a greater emphasis on downfield passing. His first big test will be not having Wirfs and two of his top receivers in Chris Godwin Jr. and Jalen McMillan to open the season. — Jenna Laine

Key stat: Serving as a quality control coach with the Dolphins in 2023, Grizzard contributed to a Miami offense that ranked first in YPG (401.3) and passing YPG (265.5). The Dolphins used play-action 30% of the time in 2023 (second most in the NFL). — ESPN Research

NFC WEST

Playcaller: Drew Petzing, offensive coordinator

Experience: Petzing is in his third season as the Cardinals’ offensive coordinator and his third calling plays.

What to know: Petzing has started to become known for his creativity and ingenuity in both play design and playcall. But this season will be defining for him. With quarterback Kyler Murray showing no lingering effects from his 2022 ACL injury, with wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. taking the Year 1 to Year 2 jump and with tight end Trey McBride blossoming into an elite playmaker, Petzing will have his pick of weapons. If Arizona has a great season, he could be a hot name in the 2026 head coaching cycle. — Josh Weinfuss

Key stat: The Cardinals are second in the NFL in yards per rush (5.2) the past two seasons under Petzing, and they’ve thrived outside. Of their runs, 32% have come outside the tackles, which is the third-highest rate in the league. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Sean McVay, head coach

Experience: McVay has been calling plays since he was hired as head coach of the Rams in 2017. In those eight seasons, McVay has led the Rams to six playoff appearances, two Super Bowls, including a victory in Super Bowl LVI.

What to know: Before he was hired in Los Angeles, McVay spent time in Washington coaching under Jay Gruden. Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford described McVay as “a really smart playcaller” who has “a great feel within the game. “He obviously understands how to scheme people up during the week,” Stafford said. “Then if there are adjustments that need to be made, he’s as quick as I’ve ever been around to make those adjustments.” — Sarah Barshop

Key stat: The Rams have been under center for 44% of snaps since Stafford arrived in 2021 (third in NFL), and Stafford has the second-most pass yards from under center (4,198) during the past four seasons. He trails only former Rams quarterback Jared Goff (5,687). — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Kyle Shanahan, head coach

Experience: Shanahan is entering his ninth season in San Francisco and has called the plays in each of them. Before that, he served as offensive coordinator and primary playcaller for nine seasons split among stops with the Texans, Commanders, Browns and Falcons.

What to know: Although Shanahan hired Klay Kubiak as offensive coordinator during the offseason and allowed Kubiak to call the plays in the preseason, he remains at the controls of the Niners offense. Under Shanahan, San Francisco has ranked in the top five in yardage five times and finished top-eight in offensive expected points added four times. While the 49ers went through massive roster changes in the offseason, they welcome back nine starters on offense, which could mean a return to top-level production if paired with improved health, especially for stalwarts such as running back Christian McCaffrey, left tackle Trent Williams and tight end George Kittle. — Nick Wagoner

Key stat: Since 2023 with Brock Purdy as the full-time starting QB, Shanahan’s offense ranks second in percentage of plays using pre-snap motion (76%). Purdy is averaging 8.7 yards/attempt with motion in the past two seasons, tops in the NFL. — ESPN Research

Playcaller: Klint Kubiak, offensive coordinator

Experience: Kubiak previously served as offensive coordinator for the Vikings in 2021 and the Saints last year, with both stints lasting only one season because of head coaching changes. The son of Super Bowl-winning head coach Gary Kubiak and the brother of 49ers OC Klay Kubiak, Klint (38) joined the Seahawks in January after they fired Ryan Grubb.

What to know: Kubiak is, in many ways, the antithesis of his playcalling predecessor. Grubb had never coached in the NFL until last season, when he imported a college-style, dropback-heavy offense that operated mainly out of the shotgun. Kubiak, on the other hand, will lean on the run game, utilizing a fullback and a heavy dose of outside zone, and with much more of the offense coming from under center. He runs a version of Kyle Shanahan’s West Coast offense, a tried-and-true system that appealed to coach Mike Macdonald after his failed leap of faith in Grubb and a scheme that was unproven at the NFL level. — Brady Henderson

Key stat: As the Saints playcaller last season, Kubiak’s offense dialed up the fifth-most deep balls in the NFL (70 attempts 20-plus yards downfield). His new quarterback, Sam Darnold, finished first in completion percentage on such passes (55.7%) in 2024 with the Vikings. — ESPN Research



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In NFL debut, QB J.J. McCarthy rallies Vikings past Bears
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In NFL debut, QB J.J. McCarthy rallies Vikings past Bears

by admin September 9, 2025


  • Kevin SeifertSep 9, 2025, 02:16 AM ET

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      Kevin Seifert is a staff writer who covers the Minnesota Vikings and the NFL at ESPN. Kevin has covered the NFL for over 20 years, joining ESPN in 2008. He was previously a beat reporter for the Minneapolis Star Tribune and Washington Times. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia.

CHICAGO — Everyone in the Minnesota Vikings locker room had their own favorite J.J. McCarthy moment of the night. And in the end, they all added up to a thrilling 27-24 victory over the Chicago Bears on Monday night.

Defensive tackle Javon Hargrave recalled McCarthy telling him that “he’s got us” as the team trudged off the field at halftime, trailing by four points after an anemic offensive showing. Coach Kevin O’Connell noted the “unbelievable look” in McCarthy’s eyes as the Vikings launched into a fourth-quarter comeback, with McCarthy accounting for three touchdowns.

After McCarthy had an interception returned for a touchdown early in the third quarter, right tackle Brian O’Neill listened intently as McCarthy — a 22-year-old quarterback making his NFL debut — spoke to players on the sideline.

“He believed that it was about to pop,” O’Neill said. “There’s a lot of times where you’re like, ‘Yeah, all right, cool. Let’s go, whatever.’ But the conviction in his voice and how he was walking up and down the sideline talking to everybody, little details about different plays, getting guys locked in in the huddle. It was really cool to see.”

And running back Aaron Jones Sr., whose 27-yard touchdown reception gave the Vikings their first lead with 9 minutes, 46 seconds left in the fourth quarter, recalled seven words McCarthy used once in the huddle: “Is there any place you’d rather be?”

McCarthy’s previous competitive football game was on Jan. 8, 2024, when he was playing for the college football national championship at the University of Michigan. In the ensuing 609 days, he was the No. 10 pick in the 2024 draft by the Vikings and then sat out his rookie season because of a torn meniscus in his right knee.

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The Vikings committed to him as their 2025 starter as they bid farewell to veterans Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones, both of whom finished 2024 on their roster, and passed on an opportunity to sign free agent Aaron Rodgers. Early Monday night, though, McCarthy looked like a quarterback who wasn’t ready to assume the mantle.

He managed only 48 passing yards in the first half, and the Vikings didn’t convert a third down until his 13-yard touchdown pass to receiver Justin Jefferson with 12:13 left in the game. That cut an 11-point deficit to a 17-12 score, and McCarthy went on to throw his scoring strike to Jones and score himself on a 14-yard run with 2:53 left.

In all, McCarthy completed 13 of 20 passes for 143 yards. In the process, he became the first quarterback in NFL history to account for three touchdowns in the fourth quarter of his NFL debut. He also joined Steve Young as the only quarterbacks in the past 45 years to overcome a double-digit deficit in the fourth quarter of their debut and win.

McCarthy grew up in La Grange Park, outside of Chicago, and said he largely blocked out the cheers and jeers Bears fans subjected him to. Instead, he leaned on his experience in the semifinals of the 2022 College Football Playoff — when he had two interceptions returned for touchdowns in a 51-45 loss to TCU.

“You never want to earn wisdom that way,” he said, “but it just brought me straight back to TCU when I had that first one early on in the game and then the second one later and at the end of the day. It sucks. It’s one of the worst things you could do as a quarterback, but you can’t do anything about it. You got to focus on the next play. The defense kept us in it the whole time, so it was just on our shoulders to go out there and execute and play as one and move on from that. That’s one of those things I don’t really hang on. And I was really grateful the way coach O’Connell handled it and was everyone on the same page.”

Jefferson said last week that McCarthy’s college career gave him confidence that, despite an uneven training camp, he would perform well when needed. McCarthy is now 64-3 in games that his team starts, dating to his sophomore year in high school.

“We knew he had that dog in him,” Jefferson said.

The Vikings have tried to build a support system around McCarthy to reduce the likelihood that he would have to carry the team late in a game. O’Connell leaned heavily on tailback Jordan Mason, who rushed for 54 yards in the second half, and the Vikings got strong play from their defense and special teams all game.

“But,” O’Connell said, “there’s no way to deny that we don’t win this game unless J.J. plays the way he did in the second half, and most importantly kept the belief of his football team behind him. And now we know it’s possible. So we hope to not be in these circumstances very often, but his team’s made of the right stuff.”



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September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Why Former NFL All-Pros Are Turning to Psychedelics
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Why Former NFL All-Pros Are Turning to Psychedelics

by admin September 8, 2025


Roam the wide-open halls and cavernous showrooms of the Colorado Convention Center during Psychedelic Science, the world’s largest psychedelics conference, and you’ll see exhibitors hawking everything from mushroom jewelry, to chewable gummies containing extracts of the psychoactive succulent plant kanna, to broad flat-brim baseball caps emblazoned with “MDMA” and “IBOGA.” Booths publicize organizations such as the Ketamine Taskforce and the Psychedelic Parenthood Community, and even The Faerie Rings, a live-action feature film looking to attract investors.

It’s a motley, multifarious symposium where indigenous-plant-medicine healers mingle with lanyard-clad pharma-bros, legendary underground LSD chemists, and workaday stoners tottering around in massive red and white toadstool hats that make them look like that cute little mushroom guy from Mario. And yet, oddest among such oddities may be the sight of enormously burly NFL tough guys talking candidly about their feelings.

Among Psychedelic Science 2025’s keynote talks was “Healing Behind the Highlights.” Hosted by the podcaster and nutritional supplement salesman Aubrey Marcus, the panel gathered three NFL stars—Buffalo Bills safety Jordan Poyer, retired Raiders guard Robert Gallery, and San Francisco 49ers guard Jon Feliciano—to discuss how psychedelic drugs have benefited their lives off the turf. They talked about their journeys to retreat centers where they imbibed the heady hallucinogenic brew ayahuasca, and how these drug experiences allowed them to reconcile their gladiatorial ideals of on-field toughness with the fact that they are, at the end of the day, mere mortals.

The effects of psychedelics like ayahuasca (and its primary psychoactive chemical, N,N-Dimethyltryptamine, or DMT) are fairly well documented. It’s believed that such powerful hallucinogens can bring significant shifts in self-understanding, via a psychological mechanism sometimes labeled by researchers as the “mystical experience.” But Poyer and other athletes are pushing this idea even further. It’s not only that psychedelics can stimulate a psychological—or mystical, or spiritual, or otherwise metaphysical—change in a person’s mind, but that these drugs can offer physical, neurological benefits to a damaged brain. It’s an idea that is especially appealing to athletes competing in high-contact arenas, like professional football, hockey, and combat sports, where players are routinely exposed to concussions.

Poyer says he “absolutely” buys into the idea that psychedelics can help heal the effects of repeated head trauma. “I’ve had many concussions,” he admits, with a shrug, speaking with WIRED after the panel. “But I’d like to think I overcame some of those brain injuries.”

Poyer, second from the right, on stage at Psychedelic Science 2025.

Courtesy of MAPS

On January 22, 2023, the Buffalo Bills squared off against the rival Cincinnati Bengals in the AFC Divisional matchup of the NFL playoffs. With about 12:54 remaining in the fourth quarter, and the Bills lagging by two scores, Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow dropped back and fired a deep pass to wide receiver Tee Higgins. Attempting to stop Higgins, Poyer and Buffalo cornerback Tre’Davious White collided on the edge of the end zone. It was a case of “friendly fire” that produced the loud crack of head-to-head, helmet-to-helmet contact familiar to any football fan. “You could hear that hit up here,” play-by-play announcer Tony Romo said from the broadcast booth, as Buffalo’s medical staff shuffled onto the snow-covered field. “That was as wicked a sound as I’ve heard.”

Poyer was knocked to the ground, rising to his knees before sinking back down into the turf, and after a head injury evaluation, he was forced to exit the game. But his issues with concussion predate that especially brutal hit. Before that game, he recalls bouts of extreme anger and irritability, and cluster headaches: all symptoms of repeated trauma to the head. While improved safety equipment and key rule changes have decreased the incidence of concussion in the NFL, neurotrauma remains an unavoidable fact—or, for fans, players, owners, and league executives, more of an inconvenient truth—of such a fast, crunchy, extremely physical sport. NFL injury records reported some 692 concussions over a five-season period between 2019 and 2023.

Concussions are a form of traumatic brain injury—the broad medical term for damage caused to the brain by an external force—that can result in the loss of neurons in the brain as well as other neurological disorders and cognitive deficits. Concussions have been linked to both short- and long-term impairment, the most severe of which is chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative disease believed to be caused by repeated head trauma. CTE affects memory, judgment, and executive function, and it occurs at an alarmingly high rate among former NFL players.



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September 8, 2025 0 comments
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NFL Week 1: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game
Esports

NFL Week 1: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game

by admin September 7, 2025


  • NFL NationSep 7, 2025, 04:05 PM ET

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      NFL Nation is made up of 32 team-specific reporters who cover the NFL year-round across ESPN.com, ESPN television shows, ESPN Radio, ESPN+ and social media platforms. It was established ahead of the 2013 season.

The opening week of the 2025 NFL season is underway, and we’re already off to a wild start.

In the season opener on Thursday, the Eagles held off the Cowboys despite a lightning delay and the ejection of defensive tackle Jalen Carter before the first play from scrimmage. The action continued Friday night, when the Chargers stunned the Chiefs with a tight win in São Paulo, Brazil. And in the early window Sunday, new Colts quarterback Daniel Jones scored three total touchdowns in a blowout win over the Dolphins.

Our NFL Nation reporters are reacting to all the action, answering lingering questions coming out of each game and detailing everything else you need to know for every team. Let’s get to it.

Jump to:
MIA-IND | KC-LAC | DAL-PHI

Catch up on the action: Box score | Recap

Colts

What does Sunday’s performance say about Daniel Jones’ potential? This game went exactly according to plan for Jones and the Colts. All along, coach Shane Steichen had predicted Jones would be a quick decision-maker and not force bad throws. He showed that by delivering on-time, quick throws but also utilizing timely aggressive downfield targets to Michael Pittman Jr., Tyler Warren and Alec Pierce. Jones finished 22-of-29 for 272 yards and a touchdown pass. He also added two rushing scores on goal-line sneaks, becoming the first Colts quarterback with two rushing touchdowns in a season opener.

Trend to watch: The Colts used a variety of blitzes Sunday, something the team rarely employed under former defensive coordinator Gus Bradley. But under new coordinator Lou Anarumo, the Colts got aggressive. DBs Kenny Moore II and Nick Cross recorded sacks and defensive end Laiatu Latu had an interception while dropping into coverage on a creative blitz call. Indianapolis ranked 29th in blitz rate in 2024 at 18.7%. — Stephen Holder

Next game: vs. Broncos (Sunday, 4:05 p.m. ET)

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Dolphins

Where was the connection between Tua Tagovailoa and Tyreek Hill? Tagovailoa appeared out of sync with his top target, which makes sense considering he hasn’t taken live game snaps with Hill since last December. The Dolphins’ leading receiver finished with four catches for 40 yards on six targets, but 21 of those came on a single completion. Neither player seemed concerned about their cohesiveness during the week, but this performance raised eyebrows. They now have a date next week with the Patriots and coach Mike Vrabel, whose Titans teams gave Miami trouble in 2021 and 2023.

Most surprising performance: The Dolphins’ front seven is supposed to be the strength of their defense, but it failed to make an impression Sunday. Indianapolis scored on its first seven possessions, gashing the Dolphins’ defense with 156 rushing yards. Jones was also surgical whenever Miami was able to pressure him, completing 5-of-6 passes for 72 yards and a touchdown — with a whopping plus-16% completion percentage over expectation, per NFL Next Gen Stats. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

Next game: vs. Patriots (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)

Catch up on the action: Box score | Recap

Chargers

What’s going on with right guard Mekhi Becton? Becton looked exhausted throughout Friday night’s game and spent time on the sideline receiving oxygen during offensive series. He missed three weeks of training camp practice with an undisclosed injury and came into Friday night’s game questionable with an undisclosed illness. The positive sign for the Chargers is that Becton finished the game on the field, but the number of snaps he missed was concerning.

Most surprising performance: Chargers wide receiver Quentin Johnston finished with five catches for 79 yards and two touchdowns, buoying the Chargers’ victory. He has been one of the Chargers’ most maligned players in his first three years, struggling to find consistency since his rookie season. Friday was a sign that he could reach the potential that made him a first-round pick in 2023. — Kris Rhim

Next game: at Raiders (Monday, 10 p.m. ET)

play

0:25

Herbert’s big 1st-down run seals Chargers’ win

Justin Herbert converts a crucial 3rd-and-long and seals the Chargers’ big win over the Chiefs.

Chiefs

Will Xavier Worthy’s injury put the Chiefs’ offense back in the same predicament as last season? After his first pass of the season, quarterback Patrick Mahomes was without three of his key receivers — Rashee Rice (suspended the first six weeks), rookie Jalen Royals (knee tendonitis) and Worthy (right shoulder). If Worthy and Royals are unavailable next week, Mahomes will likely have to be a superhero again, relying primarily on tight end Travis Kelce and his improvisational skills. The one receiver who can still make a difference is Hollywood Brown, who finished last week’s game with 99 receiving yards.

Stat to know: Entering the season opener, the Chiefs had won a league-record 17 straight one-score games, including the playoffs. Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert was excellent in the second half, allowing his team to keep its lead despite Mahomes’ impressive rallying efforts. In the second half, Herbert completed 13 of his 16 pass attempts for 147 yards and two touchdowns. The Chiefs blitzed him often, sacking him twice, but he sealed the victory when he scrambled to his right for a 19-yard gain on a third-and-14 just before the two-minute warning. — Nate Taylor

Next game: vs. Eagles (Sunday, 4:20 p.m. ET)

Catch up on the action: Box score | Recap

Eagles

Can the secondary get things buttoned up for their Week 2 matchup against the Chiefs? The cornerback spot opposite Quinyon Mitchell was a question mark all summer and remains so after Adoree’ Jackson was flagged for a pass interference, yielded five catches for 103 yards and missed two tackles, per NFL Next Gen Stats. The outcome could have been worse if not for some critical drops by Cowboys receiver CeeDee Lamb. Defensive coordinator Vic Fangio will have to decide whether to make the move to Jakorian Bennett, who was acquired from the Raiders in August, or stick with Jackson for the Super Bowl rematch against Patrick Mahomes.

What to make of the QB performance: Super Bowl MVP Jalen Hurts picked up where he left off, taking advantage of large rushing lanes to score a pair of rushing touchdowns and propel the Eagles’ offense. He now has 16 games with multiple rushing touchdowns, extending his NFL record for a QB (second is Josh Allen with 12). — Tim McManus

Next game: at Chiefs (Sunday, 4:20 p.m. ET)

Cowboys

Is there a reason to be encouraged even in a loss? Probably so, but let’s remember that an ugly win is better than a morale-serving loss. The offense has a chance to be explosive, and the young line performed much better than expected. The defense struggled at the start (123 rushing yards in the first half) but only allowed three points in the second half. Playing the defending Super Bowl champ on their celebratory night is never easy, yet the Cowboys hung with the Eagles. They opened some eyes with what they did, but they still need a win in Week 2 in a bad way.

Turning point: In games against teams like the Eagles, margins for error are slim, which is why Lamb’s drops were critical. But Miles Sanders’ fumble at the Eagles’ 9-yard line in the third quarter flipped the momentum. Sanders got the Cowboys in position to retake the lead in the third quarter with a 49-yard gain, his longest since 2020, but then he lost the ball on his next carry. On the next three possessions, the Cowboys did not make it to Eagles’ territory. — Todd Archer

Next game: vs. Giants (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET)



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September 7, 2025 0 comments
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NFL Week 1 latest buzz, questions, news and fantasy tips
Esports

NFL Week 1 latest buzz, questions, news and fantasy tips

by admin September 5, 2025


  • Jeremy Fowler

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    Jeremy Fowler

    senior NFL national reporter

      Jeremy Fowler is a senior national NFL writer for ESPN, covering the entire league including breaking news. Jeremy also contributes to SportsCenter both as a studio analyst and a sideline reporter covering for NFL games. He is an Orlando, Florida native who joined ESPN in 2014 after covering college football for CBSSports.com.
  • Dan Graziano

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    Dan Graziano

    senior NFL national reporter

      Dan Graziano is a senior NFL national reporter for ESPN, covering the entire league and breaking news. Dan also contributes to Get Up, NFL Live, SportsCenter, ESPN Radio, Sunday NFL Countdown and Fantasy Football Now. He is a New Jersey native who joined ESPN in 2011, and he is also the author of two published novels.

Sep 4, 2025, 06:10 AM ET

Week 1 of the 2025 NFL season is finally here, and league insiders Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano are breaking down the biggest questions, latest news and notable buzz heading into the season opener.

The top story of the past week was the Cowboys trading star edge rusher Micah Parsons to the Packers last Thursday. Now that the dust has settled a bit, where does that leave Dallas? Jeremy and Dan checked in with sources around the league.

But they have more ahead of Week 1. Our insiders also made picks for under-the-radar teams that could make the playoffs, predicted which players could break out in Week 1, pointed out coaching situations that need fast starts and even gave some fantasy football advice based on what they are hearing. It’s all here, as Dan and Jeremy answer big questions and empty their reporting notebooks with the latest heading into Week 1.

Jump to:
Post-Parsons Cowboys | Playoff sleepers
Breakout candidates | Coaching situations
Fantasy intel | More notes for Week 1

What are people in the league saying about the ceiling for this Parsons-less Dallas team in 2025?

Graziano: I think the offense is expected to be good as long as quarterback Dak Prescott stays healthy. The addition of wide receiver George Pickens makes the Cowboys potentially explosive in the passing game, and while their running back room might be uninspiring, they’ll run effectively if the offensive line performs.

There’s obviously curiosity about whether the Cowboys can generate a consistent pass rush post-Parsons, but Dallas coaches would point out that they had already begun building their defense without him in training camp, as he didn’t participate. The Cowboys believe their defense is in a good place in terms of learning the scheme. There’s skepticism around the league, but I don’t think anyone is writing them off completely. When Prescott has been healthy, they’ve generally been a playoff team.

Fowler: People inside the league are not as down on Dallas as fans and media seem to be right now. The loss of Parsons hurts, but the Cowboys have been a sneaky good drafting team over the past decade and have three former Day 2 edge rusher picks — Sam Williams, Marshawn Kneeland and Donovan Ezeiruaku — ready to go. The roster has talent. And the Pickens addition received attention around the league. Evaluators know how good he can be in 2025 in a contract year with a proven quarterback. Despite all that, Philadelphia and Washington are considered a cut above in the division, which seems right.

Graziano: And that’s fair. But it has been 21 years since a team repeated as NFC East champion, so that takes Philly out of the mix! And if Washington takes a step back, who knows? This could be one of those NFC East seasons where you don’t need 12 or 13 wins to take the title, which sets up well for the Cowboys.

play

2:16

Why Stephen A. is still baffled Jerry Jones let Micah Parsons leave

Stephen A. Smith details why the Micah Parsons trade was an egregious deal.

Fowler: Dallas’ schedule is manageable, too. If the Cowboys can somehow get past Philly on Thursday night, winnable games await in Weeks 2 and 3 (Giants at home, Bears on the road). Then it’s the Packers at home for the Parsons reunion.

Who’s your pick for an under-the-radar team that will make the playoffs?

Fowler: New England Patriots. Mike Vrabel’s presence has already paid off. Quarterback Drake Maye is poised for a Year 2 jump. The defensive tackle duo of Christian Barmore and Milton Williams has a chance to be special. Two of their AFC East rivals (Dolphins and Jets) appear to be in transition. Running back TreVeyon Henderson has the explosiveness to break off big runs. And Josh McDaniels is a proven playcaller.

Offensive line and wide receiver remain concerns, but New England has made efforts to address both spots. The Patriots haven’t produced a 1,000-yard receiver since Julian Edelman in 2019. For this to work, someone — paging Stefon Diggs — needs to break that streak. A wild-card spot feels attainable.

Graziano: Arizona Cardinals. The NFC West teams could finish the season in any order and it wouldn’t surprise me. Arizona is in Year 3 with Jonathan Gannon as head coach and Drew Petzing as offensive coordinator, and the fact that they didn’t change any offensive personnel in the offseason indicates they believe they’re on track there. Quarterback Kyler Murray is another year removed from his knee injury and has one more offseason working in Petzing’s system. So if it doesn’t hum this season, you must wonder how long ownership will stick with the plan.

Defensively, they made some aggressive additions, signing away edge rusher Josh Sweat from the Super Bowl champs, using a second-round pick on cornerback Will Johnson (who slipped in the draft because of injury concerns) and bringing back the ageless Calais Campbell. It’s time for Arizona to show it can move beyond being a team that hovers around .500 and fades in December.

Which player is going to come out of nowhere in Week 1 — and make an impact all season?

Graziano: It could be Jaguars running back Bhayshul Tuten. I don’t know how the Jaguars’ running back room will shake out, and I’m not sure they do yet, either. Travis Etienne Jr. and Tank Bigsby are the incumbents, but the Jags drafted Tuten in the fourth round and LeQuint Allen Jr., who profiles as a third-down back, in the seventh. The veterans might get the first shot, but the new front office and coaching staff drafted Tuten and Allen and have plans for them.

Tuten is the most explosive of the group — a “home run hitter” in the Jaguars’ eyes. If he’s able to pick up the offense and acclimate to the NFL quickly, that explosiveness could lead to greater opportunities sooner rather than later.

Editor’s Picks

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Fowler: Great pick. I’ll go with 49ers wide receiver Ricky Pearsall. The 49ers’ receiver room has been decimated by injury, with Brandon Aiyuk still recovering from last season’s knee injury and Jauan Jennings (calf) potentially needing time to ramp up after recently returning to the lineup. And word out of San Francisco is that Pearsall is poised for a Year 2 jump. The 49ers have been a top-five passing offense during Brock Purdy’s two full seasons as starting quarterback, so chances at chunk yardage will be there. Kyle Shanahan will make it so.

Another player to watch is rookie Commanders running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt. He might be Washington’s RB4 right now, but every time I asked somebody there about their backfield plans, Croskey-Merritt was mentioned early and often. The Commanders are very high on him.

Graziano: I’m also curious to see what the Browns have planned for third-round rookie tight end Harold Fannin Jr. A ludicrously productive tight end in college, Fannin was used in a variety of ways at Bowling Green and the Browns say they believe they can deploy him all over the formation. He’s likely to team with David Njoku in the two-TE formations coach Kevin Stefanski loves to use. Fannin probably will stay on the field if he shows he can handle blocking responsibilities. And if he can consistently get open, that probably will earn him more targets from Joe Flacco or whomever else ends up playing QB for the Browns this season.

Fowler: Here’s a deep-cut sleeper for you … Cardinals edge rusher Jordan Burch. His name came up a few times when I’ve asked scouts for Rookie of the Year candidates, so don’t be surprised if the third-round pick makes an early impact. Arizona has some sneaky-good talent, so it’s up to some of the recent draft picks to flash greatness.

Which head coach most needs a strong start in September?

Fowler: The Giants’ Brian Daboll. Any coach with a 19-33-1 record through three seasons could use early momentum. Ownership has been patient with the Giants’ rebuild, and this was Daboll’s first offseason with a high-pedigree rookie quarterback to develop. The early returns on Jaxson Dart are very good, so I’m not labeling September some sort of win-this-month-or-else scenario.

But the schedule is tough. The first four opponents — Commanders, Cowboys, Chiefs and Chargers — won a combined 45 games last season. Setting a tone against that gauntlet would be useful. The Giants’ roster has improved, and the team has a defensive line good enough to dictate terms of victory.

Graziano: Hot-seat talk in early September is dicey, so I’ll start with the disclaimer that I have no inside information to make me think these guys are in any immediate trouble. But given the Bengals’ aspirations and their history of poor September starts under Zac Taylor, he could use a strong start if only for his own sanity.

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Fowler: For sure, a fast start would take the pressure off in Cincy. I’d also argue that Colts coach Shane Steichen fits the mold. Picking Daniel Jones over Anthony Richardson Sr. at quarterback was a bold move, considering the franchise’s investment in Richardson as the No. 4 pick in 2023. But Steichen believes Jones gives the Colts the best chance to win. Proving that to be correct early would ease tension.

Graziano: One more. This team gives coaches a lot of runway, but the Cowboys’ hiring of Brian Schottenheimer was widely criticized outside of the building. It was well-received inside the building, where Schottenheimer is well-liked and respected. People are excited to see him get his chance. But to the extent that the Cowboys care about outside opinions, a Thursday night upset in Philadelphia and a fast start would go a long way toward making the Schottenheimer move look good.

What is one thing you heard this preseason that could help fantasy managers win their leagues?

Graziano: I’m drafting Buccaneers rookie wide receiver Emeka Egbuka everywhere I can. The Bucs loved him before picking in the first round in April, and they’ve grown to covet him even more since. They believe he can play any of the wide receiver positions in their offense, which is a good thing because Chris Godwin Jr. still isn’t back from last year’s gruesome season-ending injury and Jalen McMillan is out for a while because of a neck injury.

Expect the Bucs to use Egbuka in the slot and on the outside as needed. Given how mature and polished a player they already believe him to be, he could get a ton of targets in one of the league’s top offenses and hold onto a starting role even when Tampa’s receiver corps is back to full strength.

play

1:13

Will Emeka Egbuka be a top-25 fantasy WR this season?

Daniel Dopp breaks down Emeka Egbuka’s chances of becoming a top-25 fantasy WR.

Fowler: Rookie wide receiver Matthew Golden should get a lot of targets, too. The Packers’ first-round pick has greatly impressed coaches so far. “Phenomenal,” one Packers source told me of Golden’s presence. “Makes a wow play every day.” Golden is listed as a starter already and the Packers aren’t hiding their affection for him. It’s not like one of those situations where you hear, “Oh, he’s a rookie, he’s coming along.” It’s, “No, this guy can play.” The Packers will utilize two-TE sets often and Romeo Doubs is still a prime option, but Golden’s talent looks undeniable.

Also, Panthers receiver Xavier Legette, a first-rounder from 2024, will be a factor in Carolina. Teammate Jaycee Horn told me Legette reminds him of A.J. Brown with his combination of physicality and speed.

What else are you hearing this week?

Graziano’s notes:

  • Based on everything I’ve been told this week, I would be shocked if Parsons doesn’t play in some fashion for the Packers against the Lions on Sunday. It’s too soon for Parsons to know the entire defense, and he probably isn’t in football shape yet since he didn’t practice in training camp. But the Packers should be able to draw up a play package that maximizes Parsons’ impact as an edge rusher in key situations, then continue ramping him up during the early weeks of the season.

  • The Chiefs are very excited by how rookie left tackle Josh Simmons has performed this summer. One person I spoke to mentioned Simmons’ ability to recover mid-play when he’s beaten off the snap. Coaches say he doesn’t make the same mistake twice, and though some growing pains should be expected, the Chiefs have a high degree of trust in their first-round pick’s ability to protect Patrick Mahomes’ blind side. With 2024 second-round pick Kingsley Suamataia moving inside to left guard, the Chiefs consider themselves more solid on the offensive line than they were last season, when they ended up having to play veteran guard Joe Thuney at left tackle during the postseason and were exposed against the Eagles in the Super Bowl.

  • One unresolved under-the-radar contract situation to watch is that of Steelers veteran defensive lineman Cameron Heyward. Heyward adjusted his contract last year, and as a result his 2025 salary of $13.25 million is about half of what the top defensive tackles in the league earn. He has been practicing but also made it clear he wants a raise. This could get resolved before Sunday’s opener, and the relationship between the team and their 14-year veteran mainstay is strong enough that it’s hard to imagine him sitting out the game. But as with any player, his leverage only increases if he forces the team to confront life without him — especially with rookie first-rounder Derrick Harmon set to sit out Sunday’s game because of an injury. The Steelers probably could resolve this by adding some cash and reachable incentives. Until then, it’s worth keeping an eye on.

play

1:05

J.J. Watt to McAfee: Anticipation is building around Steelers

J.J. Watt tells Pat McAfee there’s growing anticipation around the Steelers’ offense and Aaron Rodgers.

  • If both offensive coordinators have their way, the Steelers-Jets game could be over in less than 2½ hours. Both teams want to run the ball and keep the other team’s offense off the field. The Steelers are putting an offense together around a young line and a 41-year-old quarterback in Aaron Rodgers who signed in June. It could take some time for it to come together. Offensive coordinator Arthur Smith probably will design a conservative game plan against the tough Jets defense to put Rodgers in do-no-harm situations in an attempt to steal a road win.

  • As for the Jets, my understanding is that the offense plans to employ a run-heavy, keep-away style leaning on running backs Breece Hall, Braelon Allen and Isaiah Davis, along with quarterback Justin Fields’ running ability. The Jets hope to get early leads and lean on their strengths. At some point, Fields will have to make plays from the pocket in big third-down spots. If his ability to do that surpasses expectations, the Jets could maybe expand their offense from there. But in the meantime, expect them to run, run and run some more.

  • We mentioned above that the Cardinals’ offense remains mostly intact from what it was entering last season. The one new guy is right guard Isaiah Adams, who started the final five games of last season. But there was one key departure that people around the league noticed — offensive line coach Klayton Adams, who was hired as the Cowboys’ offensive coordinator. Adams had a significant role in the design and implementation of the Cardinals’ run game the past two seasons; only the Ravens and Eagles have rushed for more yards in that span than Arizona. It also thinks highly of new offensive line coach Justin Frye, who held the same role for Ohio State last season, but this is Frye’s first NFL job after 18 years as a college assistant. The Cardinals did retain assistant offensive line coach Chris Cook, who came in with Gannon and Petzing in 2023, so there’s some continuity. But working with Jeff Saturday for the past half-decade or so has drilled into my mind the importance of the offensive line coach, so I have half an eye on this situation.

  • With no sense of when Joe Mixon might return from his injury, the Texans are piecing things together at running back. They kept five backs — Nick Chubb, Dameon Pierce, Dare Ogunbowale, British Brooks and fourth-round rookie Woody Marks. Chubb seems to be the starter for now, but he hasn’t shown the same explosiveness post-injury that he had earlier in his career, which could open the door for Pierce or Marks to take on a larger role. It’ll be interesting to see how many of these guys are active on game days, since Brooks and Pierce are too valuable on special teams to be inactive. But until someone steps up and shows more than they have so far, expect the Texans to use the run game to set up a passing game they believe will be more dynamic in C.J. Stroud’s third year than it was in a disappointing 2024 that led to the firing of offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik.

Fowler’s notes:

  • Week 1 can create urgency for contract extensions that teams or players slow-played over the past four months. That happened in Tampa Bay on Tuesday, when the Bucs reached agreement on a four-year, $90 million extension with right tackle Luke Goedeke. The Bucs identified Goedeke as a player they’d like to keep long term, and a recent comp — the Packers’ Zach Tom at four years, $88 million — informed the right tackle market. With Goedeke extended, here are a handful of candidates I’m keeping my eye on: Lions edge rusher Aidan Hutchinson, Cowboys guard Tyler Smith, Saints cornerback Alontae Taylor, Rams safety Quentin Lake and Raiders wide receiver Jakobi Meyers.

    Hutchinson will capitalize on the ballooning pass-rush market, and the Lions have begun discussions with him. Dallas wants to allocate some of the money saved by the Parsons trade for Smith, arguably the league’s best guard. Taylor and Lake are ascending defensive backs their teams value beyond this season. There’s a chance Las Vegas and Meyers, the Raiders’ de facto No. 1 receiver coming off a 1,000-yard season despite uneven quarterback play, could come to an agreement despite Meyers recently asking for a trade. And while cornerback Trent McDuffie and the Chiefs won’t reach a new deal by Week 1, via our Nate Taylor, McDuffie is the type of cornerstone player Kansas City would like to keep. This one has challenges — McDuffie is considered small as an outside corner — but many league evaluators consider him a top-five cornerback, and players of that caliber usually get paid.

Breaking News from Adam Schefter

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  • The Anthony Richardson situation is one I will watch closely throughout the season. Richardson’s agent, Deiric Jackson — who publicly questioned trust in the Colts to our Stephen Holder after Richardson lost the QB battle to Jones — met in person last week with Colts general manager Chris Ballard to clear the air. Jackson called the meeting “very constructive,” and just a chance for sides to “let feelings be known.” Though a trade was not requested, the topic was broached in this meeting. Ballard reinforced that Indy has no plans to trade Richardson and still believes in the quarterback.

    Richardson isn’t making any waves — he will remain professional, backing up Jones and maintaining his readiness. But part of his camp’s frustration is that all parties acknowledge patience would be required when Richardson was drafted. He entered the league with one year as a full-time high school starter and one year as a starter at Florida. He has admitted publicly that his leadership and maturity were not up to par in 2024, which contributed to his in-season benching. But despite that, Richardson is 8-7 as an NFL starter, including two fourth-quarter comebacks late last season. He also worked on improving his regimen, leadership, mechanics, diet and ability to layer short-to-intermediate throws, resulting in improvement in camp that ultimately wasn’t enough to win the job. But the Colts know Richardson has a chance to play this season. This situation feels far from settled — and raises questions about how franchises fail young quarterbacks along the way.

  • A few notes from the Parsons fallout. One team that inquired about Parsons’ availability but ultimately didn’t pursue aggressively was Carolina. The Panthers made a call but did not formally offer a trade package to Dallas. Carolina would have made sense because the Cowboys were looking for a premier defensive tackle, which Carolina has in Derrick Brown. … In our reporting, multiple team execs believed that Parsons was intrigued by several teams in the process, including the Ravens and Chiefs. This was moot — the Cowboys were focused on getting the best deal they could. And the Chiefs were never in it. But it’s noteworthy nonetheless. … Also, don’t be surprised if Green Bay eventually moves former first-round pick Lukas Van Ness inside in certain packages as Parsons gets acclimated. Van Ness’ frame (6-foot-5, 272 pounds) gives him some positional flexibility.

  • Chargers running back Najee Harris (eye) has jumped right back into the fray upon returning from his injury. He has practiced fully since returning to the lineup and was cleared for contact this past Friday. The Chargers have been pleased with his progress and the Chiefs have prepared with the assumption Harris will be in the lineup Friday. Rookie Omarion Hampton has impressed this camp, and I’m expecting enough carries to go around for both in Greg Roman’s offense.

  • Regarding the Chiefs, don’t be surprised if familiar faces Isiah Pacheco and JuJu Smith-Schuster are factors in Brazil. Pacheco looks healthy and is running hard. And with Rashee Rice suspended for six games, the Chiefs trust Smith-Schuster in their three-receiver sets. Not sure how many targets he’ll get, but he’ll be a factor. And Mahomes looks ready to fire off some explosive plays. He is coming off one of his better camps, playing “fast, fun and free” as one team source said, and getting back to creatively trying difficult plays that only he can make. Perhaps that’s an experimental practice thing, but Kansas City believes Mahomes is close to hitting those explosive plays on a regular basis again.

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  • Now that we’re past the preseason, watch for the Bears to flash some creativity to maximize quarterback Caleb Williams. My sense from people in Chicago is that while head coach Ben Johnson would coach Williams relentlessly on the basics throughout camp, they would eventually play to Williams’ strengths, utilizing his mobility and off-platform throwing as an off-script playmaker. Bears fans could see more of that in the regular season.

  • Expect the Bengals’ offense to be ultra-aggressive to start Sunday’s game against the Browns. Despite a maligned defense, Taylor has challenged his offense to get off to faster starts so that the defense can aggressively pursue the quarterback while holding a lead. Quarterback Joe Burrow has taken to that sentiment, setting the tone with one of his best — and healthiest — training camps. Cincinnati also believes its defense will be better than fans and media do. The Bengals have worked on shoring up tackling issues and playing more as a unit.



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September 5, 2025 0 comments
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NFL 2025 Kickoff Game: How to Watch Cowboys vs. Eagles Tonight
Gaming Gear

NFL 2025 Kickoff Game: How to Watch Cowboys vs. Eagles Tonight

by admin September 4, 2025


The Philadelphia Eagles begin their Super Bowl title defense at home against their NFC East rivals, the Dallas Cowboys. The Eagles return with many of the stars from last year’s championship team, including quarterback Jalen Hurts, running back Saquon Barkley and wide receivers A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith. The Cowboys just traded away their best defensive player in Micah Parsons but should be able to score plenty of points this season with an offense led by Dak Prescott and George Pickens joining CeeDee Lamb at receiver.

The Cowboys and Eagles kick off tonight at 8:20 p.m. ET (5:20 p.m. PT). The game is available to watch nationally on NBC or stream on Peacock.

Jalen Hurts and the Philadelphia Eagles host the Dallas Cowboys tonight in the first game of the 2025 NFL season.

Cooper Neill/Getty Images

How to watch Cowboys vs. Eagles

You can watch this game on your local NBC station with a cable or satellite TV subscription or with an over-the-air antenna. Most live TV streaming services such as YouTube TV and Hulu Plus Live TV also carry your local NBC station (see below). 

If you don’t subscribe to a TV service with NBC and want to watch the game tonight, you can sign up for Peacock Premium for $11 per month. In addition to tonight’s game to kick off the 2025 season, NBC and Peacock will show the NFL’s Sunday Night Football broadcasts as they have in the past.

You can also subscribe to NFL Plus, the NFL’s streaming service at $7 per month, but streams are limited to just watching on a phone or tablet (not a TV).

Peacock/CNET

With Peacock’s $11-per-month Premium plan, you can watch tonight’s Cowboys-Eagles game and every Sunday Night Football game this season. Read our Peacock review.

Sling/CNET Sarah Tew/CNET

YouTube TV costs $83 a month and includes NBC and the rest of the channels you need to watch NFL games week in and week out. Right now, the first two months are discounted to $50 a month, and there is a free 21-day trial. Plug in your ZIP code on YouTube TV’s welcome page to see which local networks are available in your area. Read our YouTube TV review.

Sarah Tew/CNET

Hulu Plus Live TV costs $83 a month and includes NBC in most markets. On its live news page, you can enter your ZIP code under the “Can I watch local news in my area?” question at the bottom of the page to see which local channels you get. Read our Hulu Plus Live TV review.

Fubo/CNET

Fubo’s Essential plan costs $85 a month and includes NBC. Click here to see which local channels you get. 

Fubo recently introduced a $56-per-month skinny bundle for sports fans that includes the other channels that show NFL games — ABC, CBS, Fox and ESPN — but it does not include NBC. Read our Fubo review.

DirecTV Stream/CNET

All the live TV streaming services above allow you to cancel anytime and require a solid internet connection. Looking for more information? Check out our live TV streaming services guide.



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September 4, 2025 0 comments
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