The Hamilton Spectator

Six weeks of teams riding the roller-coaster

- BARRY WILNER

So many things send NFL coaches into a tizzy. Most of them get addressed immediatel­y.

The one item they can’t get done quickly, and often not at all, is finding consistenc­y.

Rarely have the first six weeks of a season provided so many up-and-down performanc­es, from weaklings to world beaters, from turnover machines to takeaway monsters.

Consider that there are seven teams with 3-3 records, and another one, Green Bay, at 3-2-1 after its last minute, come-frombehind win over San Francisco. There also are eight other clubs within a half-game or full game of the break-even mark.

Had the Panthers and Redskins, both 3-2, and Lions (2-3) not had byes, they might well be .500 clubs now.

Those with a positive approach will call it competitiv­e balance. We’ll stick with mediocrity.

And, most maddeningl­y, inconsiste­ncy.

“Yes, it always hurts more when you know you beat yourself, but that’s part of the game,” Carolina wide receiver Torrey Smith said after a 23-17 defeat at Washington in which the Panthers lost the turnover battle 3-0. “Sometimes you overcome it, sometimes you don’t. There’s no one particular person at fault. We know it’s us as a team.”

What so many NFL teams do is dominate one week, deliver a dud the next. In Week 6, we had:

— Chicago (3-2), so powerful in its previous game before a bye, blowing a big lead at Miami (4-2), which was coming off messing up a 17-0 edge at Cincinnati in Week 5.

— Dallas (3-3), inept offensivel­y in a prime-time failure at Houston, turning around and pummeling Jacksonvil­le 40-7. The Jaguars seemed like a special group after a 3-1 start that included beating New England. They are now 3-3 with two poor showings in a row.

— Tennessee (3-3), which has followed three successive victories with two awful displays of invisible offence, including falling at Cleveland (2-3-1), a team that was hammered Sunday by the Chargers. Indeed, the Titans, Jaguars and Texans, who lost their opening three before winning the next three games, are tied atop the AFC South. At .500.

— Seattle (3-3), where Pete Carroll is doing one of the best coaching jobs of his career in keeping a retooling — say rebuilding in the Emerald City and you will be thrown into Puget Sound — club competitiv­e. But still inconsiste­nt, despite a 27-3 thrashing of the hapless Raiders.

— Pittsburgh (3-2-1), which once again stole a win at Cincinnati, a regular occurrence over nearly the last two decades. The Steelers have so many issues on and off the field that keeping them from sinking the season is paramount now compared to finding any steadiness.

Don’t expect much of this to change as we move deep into autumn and then into winter. While there are a few teams that are quite good and a bunch that are very bad, the truth about the NFL these days is that the majority of clubs are so-so.

Some can’t find a consistent offence to balance a solid defence, including the three AFC South leaders.

“I also know that we’re not going to be able to be where we want to be unless we figure this thing out on offence,” Houston coach Bill O’Brien said Sunday.

Others can move the ball, put up some points, but not regularly stop anybody. The Steelers and Vikings, two teams with a history of strong defence, won’t remind you of the Steel Curtain or the Purple People Eaters right now.

Even some of the true contenders, such as Kansas City and New England, have great offences and sieve-like Ds.

Injuries always are a plague in the search for consistenc­y. The schedule, especially when weather becomes an issue, can be, too.

Still, league officials won’t bemoan ordinarine­ss when it means those teams will be carrying the playoff races down to the end of the schedule. And fans of those teams will be thrilled that, even at 9-7 or 8-8, their guys are in the thick of things.

 ?? WADE PAYNE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tennessee Titans quarterbac­k Marcus Mariota is sacked, again, by Baltimore Ravens linebacker Patrick Onwuasor in last Sunday’s loss.
WADE PAYNE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tennessee Titans quarterbac­k Marcus Mariota is sacked, again, by Baltimore Ravens linebacker Patrick Onwuasor in last Sunday’s loss.
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