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Tag: Trevor Lawrence

  • Broncos-Chiefs scouting report: No Patrick Mahomes. No Gardner Minshew. Hello, Chris Oladokun.

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    Broncos (12-3) at Chiefs (6-9)

    When: 6:15 p.m. Thursday

    Where: GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Mo.

    TV/radio: Prime Video, 850 AM/94.1 FM

    Broncos-Chiefs series: Both Denver and Kansas City know this well. The Broncos are still down all-time to the Chiefs, at 57-73-0 in 130 total matchups in the franchises’ history. But Denver has the recent upper hand, with two straight regular-season wins and a nail-biting 22-19 win over Kansas City on Nov. 16. The Broncos’ defense hasn’t been the same since that win and subsequent bye, though.

    In the spotlight: Who the Kel(ce) is Chiefs starting quarterback Chris Oladokun?

    How the mighty have fallen.

    On Christmas, the Broncos will take a short flight up to Kansas City to witness the death throes of a franchise that only has a couple of games left on the throne. The Chiefs will not win the AFC West for the first time in a decade, and they’ll finish with a losing record for the first time since the 2-14 days of Romeo Crennel in 2012. This may well be the last time that Denver sees 36-year-old future Hall of Fame tight end Travis Kelce, who will make a retirement decision after the season. They won’t see quarterback Patrick Mahomes — and might not next year, either — after Mahomes tore his ACL and LCL in Dec. 14’s 16-13 loss to the Chargers.

    To make matters worse, Kansas City’s QB stopgap Gardner Minshew hurt his knee in Sunday’s loss to the Titans. That leaves this Kansas City dynasty, for a primetime affair with the country watching on Christmas evening, turning to … Chris Oladokun.

    Who?

    Here’s what’s known on the 28-year-old Oladokun, from a national perspective. He played two seasons of FBS football as a backup at USF, from 2017-18. He transferred to FCS program Samford for a couple of years. He started at South Dakota State for one year after that, and played well enough (3,164 yards, 25 TDs) to warrant a seventh-round pick by the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2022’s draft. Oladokun was waived during roster cuts that fall, signed to Kansas City’s practice squad a few days later, and has stuck there pretty much ever since.

    Now, after being promoted to the active roster after Mahomes’ injury and filling in for an injured Minshew mid-game against Tennessee — 11-for-16, 111 yards — Oladokun will make the first start of his NFL career against the current No. 1 seed in the AFC.

    “It’s something I don’t take lightly,” Oladokun told Kansas City reporters Tuesday. “These opportunities don’t come around often, and so when you get ‘em, you gotta take that and run with it. So, this is not only a big game for our team, but me personally a big game, in terms of letting the league know what I can do and letting these coaches know what I can do.”

    So what can he do? Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said this week that Oladokun has had an “easy transition” because of his knowledge of Kansas City’s offensive verbiage, but that they’d naturally ease back on specific formations without Mahomes. One obvious similarity: just 8% of Mahomes’ attempts this season have come from under center, in Kansas City’s shotgun-heavy offense. Just one of Oladokun’s 16 attempts against the Titans came from under center, too. That doesn’t seem destined to change.

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    Luca Evans

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  • How many coverage breakdowns have Broncos had recently? ‘Too many,’ Sean Payton says.

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    The first sign of trouble came with a not-so-heated discussion, before the floodgates truly opened. A simple 9-yard out from Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence hit to Brian Thomas Jr. to further set up an end-of-half field goal, and he fell out of bounds, easy. Too easy. Broncos cornerback Pat Surtain II came over to discuss with safety P.J. Locke. Surtain’s hands splayed out. Something was amiss.

    The second sign of trouble came with a punch to the mouth, with Denver already on the ropes. Jaguars wideout Parker Washington took another quick out in the third quarter, made Riley Moss miss, made Talanoa Hufanga miss, and strolled 63 yards down Mile High Lane. A touchdown later, and defensive end John Franklin-Myers trudged past a sideline of slouched shoulders, tugging off his helmet and going to chuck it. He thought better of it.

    The third sign of trouble came with the finishing blow. Moss had Washington contained on a third-down grab in the fourth quarter, until he didn’t.  Washington spun away again for a 24-yard gain. Moss lingered on his knees for a beat. Then took his palm and smacked the ground in front of him.

    Keeler: Broncos Country, don’t blame NFL referees for loss to Jaguars. Blame tackling.

    How many passing-game breakdowns have there been in recent weeks, for these Broncos?

    “Too many,” head coach Sean Payton said, postgame.

    Defensive players largely shrugged this off, after the Broncos’ three-month win streak was snapped Sunday night in a 34-20 loss to the Jaguars. Because what else is them for there to do? Denver’s still a 12-win team, as linebacker Alex Singleton pointed out postgame

    “I’m not going to sit here and let you guys (expletive) on our parade,” Singleton chuckled. He grinned. His eyes didn’t really grin. “We have two games to go to be the number-one seed in the AFC.”

    There’s no mistaking it, though: these Broncos have issues on the back-end to fix across those next two games and beyond, to play as deep as they’d like to. Lawrence picked defensive coordinator’s Vance Joseph scheme apart for four quarters, often sniffing out third-down blitzes and smoothly depositing the ball to his playmakers in a 23-of-36, 279-yard, three-touchdown performance. Payton said postgame that such a porous defensive performance “better be” an anomaly, and there’s plenty of reason to believe so.

    Broncos’ 11-game winning streak snapped by Jaguars, AFC playoff race tightens

    Look deeper, though, and Sunday was not as much an anomaly as an eruption of bubbling issues. In the last four weeks, quarterbacks have combined for an 89.7 rating against Denver’s defense. The Commanders’ Marcus Mariota freewheeled his way on some zone-read concepts against the Broncos a few weeks back. The Packers’ Jordan Love dinked and dunked with abandon in the first half in Week 15. Lawrence blew the top off on Sunday.

    They’ve all exploited the same nagging issues that haunted Joseph’s unit down the stretch of 2024 — as teams have targeted Bronco linebackers and safeties in advantageous matchups for a solid month. Here’s a quick roundup of tight-end performances against Denver’s defense in the last five weeks:

    — Chiefs’ Travis Kelce in Week 11: 9 catches, 91 yards, touchdown.

    — Commanders’ Zach Ertz in Week 13: 10 catches, 106 yards.

    — Raiders’ Brock Bowers in Week 14: 4 catches, 46 yards, touchdown.

    — Packers’ Luke Musgrave in Week 15: 4 catches, 52 yards.

    Another matchup-problem gadget weapon reared his head Sunday, as the Jaguars’ Brenton Strange went for five catches for 39 yards. He ran away from Broncos linebacker Dre Greenlaw for a 23-yard gain midway through the second quarter. A few plays later, he boxed out Locke — with a bit of an obvious push-off — for a short touchdown.

    “They scheme up plays pretty nicely,” Locke said, asked about problems containing tight ends and running backs in the passing game. “That’s it.

    “I don’t think it’s problems. I don’t think it’s problems. That’s stuff we just gotta handle.”

    Jacksonville head coach Liam Coen, though, repeatedly and obviously aimed at Bronco holes in coverage Sunday with a variety of targets. Greenlaw has been a step slow on a couple routes in recent weeks. Locke was effective against the run in his first start of the season at safety, but was picked on on a late-first-half field-goal drive by Jacksonville. Communication errors abounded, too, as Jacksonville went eight-of-15 on third downs.

    Renck: Broncos find out hard way that reaching their goals will not be easy. Can they handle prosperity?

    On a short week before travelling to Kansas City for a Christmas Day game, the defense will gather to watch film Monday, Singleton said. They have overcome some early-season missed handoffs in match coverage before. And Singleton, for one, wants his unit to feel it, as he said.

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    Luca Evans

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  • NFL trade deadline winners and losers: Eagles, Ravens make sensible moves while Colts, Cowboys take big swings

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    The NFL’s trade deadline has come and gone. Many teams attempted to improve their rosters via trade market, some bad teams went for the addition-by-subtraction approach, some teams just stood pat, and two team truly took an enormous swing.

    Time will tell if these decisions were the right ones for the respective teams, but here’s a look at our winners and losers from the deadline moves:

    Winners 🍾🍾🍾

    Philadelphia Eagles: Although they really could’ve used a no-doubt-about-it cornerback opposite Quinyon Mitchell, the right market didn’t surface for them. Did they panic? No. They strengthened their pass rush with a no-brainer addition of Jaelan Phillips for a third-rounder and added two defensive backs (Michael Carter II, Jaire Alexander) at low cost for depth and optionality. If all else fails at corner, they can move Cooper DeJean outside and play Carter at nickelback. Either way, the defense is in better shape now than before the deadline.

    Baltimore Ravens: With improved health in the secondary, the Ravens needed help in the pass rush to make up for the loss of Pro Bowl iDL Nnamdi Madubuike (neck) for the season. The trade for Titans OLB Dre’Mont Jones is the perfect addition to a defense that has just 11 sacks and has relied too much on blitzing.

    New York Jets: They got two first-round picks from the Colts for CB Sauce Gardner, who made All-Pro in his first two seasons but has since regressed some, and another from Dallas for DT Quinnen Williams along with a second-rounder from Dallas. The Jets need a future quarterback, and new GM Darren Mougey now has plenty of ammo to move up in the draft for one – five first-round picks over the next two seasons – and rebuild the roster. It’s risky to give up on proven talent for assets, but the Jets need as many chips as possible to find their future QB.

    Seattle Seahawks: Sam Darnold is on fire, and the Seahawks needed to capitalize on it by giving him more firepower. With his blazing speed, former Saints WR Rashid Shaheed will be an ideal deep-threat complement to emerging star WR Jaxson Smith-Njigba, who can do damage at all levels of the field. Shaheed already knows the offense, as Seahawks OC Klint Kubiak held the same position last season for New Orleans. Shaheed could push the Seahawks ahead in the tight NFC West race. A fourth- and fifth-round pick wasn’t too much for what Shaheed brings.

    Los Angeles Rams: You might’ve forgotten they acquired CB Roger McCreary from the Titans last week, or you might not have even known who McCary is. It’s not a splashy move but McCreary can play the slot, which lets the Rams use emerging star DB Quintin Lake in a hybrid playmaking role on the back end. The Rams play exotic coverages that blend well with their young, imposing defensive front. Having McCreary and Lake patrol the defensive backfield alleviates some of their issues at outside corner.

    Losers 🤯🤯🤯

    Dallas Cowboys: Decided to “upgrade” the NFL’s second-worst defense by trading for a linebacker who couldn’t even get on the field for the NFL’s worst defense. You can’t make this up. Maybe LB Logan Wilson wasn’t the best scheme fit for Al Golden’s defense in Cincinnati but it’s hard to see him as the savior for a Cowboys defense that has holes everywhere, especially the secondary. Then they traded a first-round and second-round pick along with DT Mazi Smith for DT Quinnen Williams, a Pro Bowl lineman who surely helps their defensive front but is also on his second contract. How many more good years will they get from Williams compared to what a first-round pick could give them? Giving up multiple high picks is the kind of move a team makes if the player being acquired is the difference-maker for a Super Bowl run. Dallas isn’t one or two moves from Super Bowl contention. The Cowboys should’ve saved their assets.

    Indianapolis Colts: Giving up two first-round picks and a top-55 pick in WR Adonai Mitchell for CB Sauce Gardner only works if a) Gardner regains All-Pro form, and b) if the Colts are committed to QB Daniel Jones for the future. What happens if Jones, who just struggled against the Steelers, regresses in the second half? If Jones isn’t the long-term answer, the Colts have no ammo to get another quarterback. Also, Gardner’s base salary balloons to more than $20 million annually for the next three seasons, so Gardner needs to play like a top-five corner for this to work out. I appreciate the big swing from GM Chris Ballard, but it could be a swing from his ankles. 

    Green Bay Packers: Despite losing star TE Tucker Kraft for the season, Green Bay sat still and didn’t try to help an offense that’s sporadic or a defense that could’ve used some assistance in the secondary. Browns TE David N’Joku would’ve been a solid add, especially with as many two-tight end formations that the Packers like to employ. After making a titanic splash to compete for a Super Bowl by trading for Micah Parsons, Green Bay’s quiet trade deadline is disappointing. The Packers are still good, but they missed an opportunity to become elite.

    Jacksonville Jaguars: The Jags at 5-3 aren’t serious contenders. They just barely beat the Raiders and recently lost Travis Hunter to injured reserve from a knee injury he suffered at practice. Spencer Rattler, Geno Smith, Carson Wentz and Bryce Young all have higher passer ratings than Trevor Lawrence (71.5). The new GM should be pawning off RB Travis Etienne and other pieces to stockpile draft picks. Instead, the Jags surrendered two picks for WR Jakobi Meyers, a seventh-year slot receiver who has had one 1,000-yard season for a bad Raiders team. Even worse, Meyers will be a free agent after the season. That’s a dubious overpay for two months of a slot receiver.

    Kansas City Chiefs: Patrick Mahomes is a few yards away from being their second-leading rusher and one rushing touchdown from sharing the team lead. Isiah Pacheco is hurt again and can’t be relied on to stay healthy. The Chiefs couldn’t find a way to do better here? There’s a bunch of ball carriers out there who could’ve helped – Jerome Ford, Tony Pollard, maybe even Breece Hall. They missed an opportunity to ease the burden on Mahomes.


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    Geoff Mosher

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  • NFL Week 3: Jaguars 17, Lions 10 — Four Winners, Four Losers

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    Well, here we are. We are the biggest Houston Texans crisis point of the DeMeco Ryans Era, after a 17-10 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars at EverBank Stadium on Sunday afternoon. It was a game that felt like neither team wanted to win. The Jaguars continually muffed easy catches on Trevor Lawrence passes, while the Texans continued to, well, just play offense the way they’ve been playing all season. The offense was an abject disaster. Again.

    We will dole out the blame momentarily, but know this — one team has started 0-3 and made the playoffs this century. It happens to be the 2018 Houston Texans, coached by Bill O’Brien. This team is now at a crossroads. They can man up, and play competent football, or proceed to slide into the abyss, and author one of the most disappointing seasons in Texans history.

    If indeed this season goes sideways, it will be fascinating to see how the team, form ownership down, handles it. Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that. On to winners and losers:

    WINNERS

    4. Liam Coen
    Make no mistake, and don’t let the win on Sunday or their 2-1 record fool you — the Jacksonville Jaguars are still a bad football team. Trevor Lawrence has accuracy issues, his receivers had the yips all afternoon, and they get exactly zero bonus points defensively for shutting down the Texans. However, the vibes with Coen seem to be good, and for a guy installing a new system with new players, his offense at least looks like it belongs in the NFL, unlike Casey’s offense, which belongs in a dumpster.

    3. Nico Collins fantasy owners
    I’d like to make Collins himself a winner in this game, because he was the only bright spot offensively, but that fumble late in the fourth quarter, in Jags territory, was a massive swing in this game. Instead, I will acknowledge Collins’ eight catches for 104 yards, and his 50 yard touchdown, by making fantasy owners of Collins (like myself) a winner in this game.

    2. People looking for cheap NFL tickets
    I don’t know how to put lipstick on the pig that is Week 4’s matchup between the 0-3 Texans and the 0-3 Tennessee Titans. The vitriol between ownership of the two franchises is legendary, but when both teams are 0-3, it’s like watching the two fattest kids in gym class fighting with each other. Nobody wins so I’ll say this — if you’ve ever wanted to go to an NFL regular season game, tickets can be had.

    1. Kevin Durant
    The Houston Astros are on the cusp of missing the playoffs for the first time since 2016. The Houston Texans look closer to a team getting a top five pick in the draft, than someone defending a division crown. The Houston Rockets begin their training camp in a week. Who knew that the hero that Houston sports fans needed so much is Kevin Durant.

    LOSERS

    4. Lovers of streaks
    Two of my favorite streaks in the history of the Houston Texans died on Sunday afternoon. The first one is a seven game road winning streak against the Jaguars. Believe it or not, the last time the Jags beat the Texans at home was in 2017, the same season the Jags made a run to the AFC title game. The other streak that is now over is the Texans’ eleven game wining streak on the road, inside the division. I loved that streak, because it included the only three wins of Lovie Smith’s Texans coaching career. Oh well, it’s over now.

    3. DeMeco Ryans press conference viewers
    DeMeco Ryans’ press conference after the game was quite the display. Ryans reiterated that same song and dance that he performed throughout the week leading up to the game, in which he insisted that the Texans are “close” to breaking out, and playing good offensive football. My counterpoint to this utterly absurd assertion is that they’ve been IN the Red Zone FOUR TIMES ALL SEASON. The red zone is the part of the field closest to the end zone, which is where touchdowns are scored. I mean, they literally have not been close to the end zone for virtually the whole season. Oh, and they’ve scored ZERO times when getting into the red zone.

    2. C.J. Stroud’s hat choice
    Several weeks ago, Stroud wore a Seattle Mariners ball cap to the stadium, when the Texans played the Panthers in the preseason. That got Houston fans upset. On Sunday, for some reason, Stroud went next level with his hat choice, sporting a New York Yankees lid, which he also wore to the postgame press conference:

    One indicator of how awful the Texans have been offensively is that I got exactly ZERO calls on the Texans postgame show about that Yankees hat. Everyone was too pissed about the offense to care.

    1. Nick Caley
    Three games in, this offense looks worse than Bobby Slowik’s offense last season. Firing Slowik to hire Caley now feels like breaking up with a meth head to date a crack addict, metaphorically speaking, of course. Caley’s offense is poorly designed, has very few answers for Stroud, and left rookie left tackle Aireontae Ersery on an island all day long blocking Josh Hines-Allen, which ultimately cost the Texans a chance to tie the game, when Hines-Allen tipped the ball that turned into the game clinching interception. They could fire Caley this week, and I’d be totally cool with it.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • NFL Week 4: Texans 24, Jaguars 20 — Four Winners, Four Losers

    NFL Week 4: Texans 24, Jaguars 20 — Four Winners, Four Losers

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    The last time that Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence played a good, winning game of American football was in Week 12 of last season. That day, he engineered a 24-21 win over the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium, a win that drove the Jaguars record to a rock solid 8-3 at that time. As we all know by now, the Texans would eventually catch and surpass the Jags last season, winning the AFC South with a 10-7 record.

    As for Lawrence, other than signing a $275 million contract in the offseason, his football life has been a nightmare since then, going 0-8 as a starter, coughing up a divisional lead in the standings in an historic choke, and regressing as a passer. The Houston Texans knew on Sunday that they could NOT allow NRG Stadium to be a safe haven for Lawrence, and allow him to get well as a QB.

    Ultimately, the final result on the scoreboard indicated Texans success toward that endeavor, as the Texans defeated the Jaguars 24-20, thanks to a last minute TD drive by C.J. Stroud. The win, though, like the other three Texans games this season, had some disturbing layers to it, especially considering the Buffalo Bills are coming to town next weekend.

    Let’s look at Sunday’s winners and losers:

    WINNERS

    4. Eric Murray
    Hey, it’s not very often that Murray cracks this article, on either side, winners or losers. People sometimes forget Murray is even on the team, but he is now amazingly in Year 5 as a Texan. He’s been here for every head coach since Bill O’Brien in 2020, which probably says something about his professionalism. On Sunday, he showed up huge twice, the first time with a big sack on third down of Jacksonville’s first drive of the second half, and then a pass breakup on third down of the Jags’ final possession to get the ball back for the Texans’ final, game winning drive.

    click to enlarge

    Dare Ogunbowale, when experience counted.

    Photo by Sean Thomas

    3. Dare Ogunbowale
    The Texans came into Sunday super-depleted at running back, with Dameon Pierce out again with a hamstring, and Joe Mixon not quite ready to return from an ankle injury. Cam Akers got the lion’s share of the carries, but when the team needed a reliable vet on the field at the end of the game, it was Ogunbowale they chose. Earlier in the game, Ogunbowale had a huge 3rd and 18 conversion, but it was his touchdown on 3rd and goal, with 18 seconds remaining that gave the Texans their winning margin.

    click to enlarge

    Not even all those Texans penalties could defeat him.

    Photo by Sean Thomas

    2. C.J. Stroud
    Sunday’s game was one of those games where you ask yourself afterward “Where the hell would this team be without C.J. Stroud?” So many times, he bailed the team out of awful, self-inflicted poor down and distance situations. Up until the game winning drive, Stroud and the offense had gone dry in the second half, and yet when he got the ball at his own 31 yard line with three minutes remaining, most Texans fans were probably confident that he would engineer a game winning drive. Stroud is ridiculously elite.

    click to enlarge

    Target man: Nico Collins

    Photo by Sean Thomas

    1. Nico Collins
    Speaking of elite, Nico Collins is, in my mind, an early favorite for Offensive Player of the Year, which is essentially the non-QB MVP award. No Houston Texans wide receiver in team history has put up more receiving yards in the first four weeks of a season. Keep in mind, Andre Johnson played a decade for the Texans. DeAndre Hopkins played seven seasons here. Neither had more than Collins’ 489 yards through four games. On Sunday, Collins was the whole offense, at times, with 12 catches for 151 yards. Collins’ $24 million per year extension this offseason looks absurdly cheap right now.

    LOSERS

    4. Texans’ pass rush
    Through three games, the edge rusher tandem of Will Anderson and Danielle Hunter had been, for the most part, exactly what Nick Caserio and DeMeco Ryans ordered, as the pair were first and second in the league in pressures, coming into Sunday. However. against the Jaguars, the pass rush had a tough time getting home, and only hit Lawrence three times all game long. The only sack came on a corner blitz from Murray. They will need to be more disruptive to beat Josh Allen next weekend.

    3. Laremy Tunsil
    I’m not sure what DeMeco Ryans and OC Bobby Slowik are supposed to do at this point. For all the good things that come with a specimen like Tunsil, mostly in pass protection, the penalty epidemic is ridiculous right now. Whereas last weekend, Tusnil picked up five pre-snap procedural penalties, on Sunday, he picked up two crippling holding penalties on fourth quarter drives that ended in punts two plays later. Tunsil’s lack of discipline is a major hindrance to this offense coming anywhere close to its potential right now.

    2. Bobby Slowik
    Leading up to this game on Sunday, Slowik was as under siege as he’s been anytime in his tenure with the Texans. People are tired of the offensive inconsistency, the stubborn play calling of play-burning runs, and the complete lack of a run game the team can lean on in the second half of games. On Sunday, the running backs ran for 78 yards in 22 carries. Granted, the Texans’ top two backs were both out of this game injured, but the insistence on pounding a subpar running game, on a day where Stroud was clearly dialed in, had fans infuriated.

    1. Steven Sims
    You want to know how to get cut from an NFL team? Have a job where you’re only asked to do ONE thing, like say, return kicks, and then muff a punt doing that one thing you’re asked to do, allowing the opposition to score a two-yard touchdown a couple plays later. Finally, when given a second chance to do your job, pick up a 15 yard penalty for jawing at the opponents. If you do those things, you two can be Steven Sims on Sunday. Brutal, and honestly, Sims is worth making an example out of. Send him packing. That was ridiculous.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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  • Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

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    Onion Sports shares its expert analysis on the teams that will come away with victory in the NFL’s Divisional Round.

    Jaguars at Chiefs

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    Jaguars: Expect Chiefs coach Andy Reid to have something special up his sleeve for this game. Unfortunately, that will just be a dozen hot dogs.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

    Offensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

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    Zay Jones: The Jags wide receiver has the field awareness needed to witness numerous Trevor Lawrence interceptions.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

    Defensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

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    Josh Allen: This could be a perfect opportunity for the pass rusher to pick up a loose quarterback on the ground and return it for a touchdown.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

    Offensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

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    Patrick Mahomes: Kansas City’s star QB is expected to have his best State Farm commercial yet.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

    Defensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

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    Chris Jones: Expect the massive defensive tackle to struggle to make it out of the Jaguars’ backfield.

    Giants at Eagles

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    Eagles: Jalen Hurts and the Eagles have what it takes to bring a small dollop of joy to Philadelphia citizens’ otherwise bleak, empty lives.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Giants

    Offensive Player To Watch: Giants

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    Daniel Jones: The quarterback has a bright future with his next team.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Giants

    Defensive Player To Watch: Giants

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    Dexter Lawrence: The Giants colossal nose tackle will rely on his flexibility and athleticism, which allow him to change direction at least once per game.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Eagles

    Offensive Player To Watch: Eagles

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    Jason Kelce: The Eagles’ Pro Bowl center is reportedly practicing a knuckleball hike

    Defensive Player To Watch: Eagles

    Defensive Player To Watch: Eagles

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    Ndamukong Suh: Though playing as a backup, the veteran Suh is hoping he still has a few more dirty plays left in him.

    Bengals at Bills

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    Bengals: After Week 17’s suspended matchup, Cincinnati will be eager to get revenge on Damar Hamlin.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Bengals

    Offensive Player To Watch: Bengals

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    Joe Burrow: Pretty much just needs to go out there and not throw 20 picks to go down as the best quarterback in Bengals history.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bengals

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bengals

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    Eli Apple: The feisty cornerback will do whatever it takes to be dragged into the end zone while clinging to Josh Allen’s back.

    Offensive Player to Watch: Bills

    Offensive Player to Watch: Bills

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    Stefon Diggs: Buffalo’s wideout has shown the ability to make seemingly impossible catches, rending the delicate fabric of our so-called “reality” and plunging NFL fans into a horrid abyss of unfathomable madness.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bills

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bills

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    Tremaine Edmunds: The middle linebacker is the heart and soul and lower intestine and trachea and stapes bone of the Bills defense.

    Cowboys at 49ers

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    49ers: San Francisco has better defenders, a more explosive offense, and it’s just really gratifying to see Jerry Jones absolutely fucking miserable.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

    Offensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

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    Dak Prescott: He has the kind of arm that can ruin the hopes and dreams of any Cowboys fan.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

    Defensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

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    Micah Parsons: Keep a close eye on the Dallas linebacker, who is a dual threat as a pass rusher and a player who can turn completely invisible for multiple quarters.

    Offensive Player To Watch: 49ers

    Offensive Player To Watch: 49ers

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    Brock Purdy: Luckily for San Francisco, Brock Purdy has zero professional experience with losing and barely comprehends the concept of defeat.

    Defensive Player To Watch: 49ers

    Defensive Player To Watch: 49ers

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    Nick Bosa: Expect Bosa to come out strong on every play in order to sack Dak Prescott before he has the chance to throw a pick.

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