Albuquerque Journal

Ex-Sooner QBs to have duel in Cleveland

High-octane clubs to meet in Baltimore

- BY BARRY WILNER

Boomer Sooner! Sort of. Good buddies Kyler Murray and Baker Mayfield, who each won the Heisman Trophy while quarterbac­king at Oklahoma, get together in Cleveland on Sunday. Murray brings the league’s last undefeated team, the 5-0 Cardinals, who have shown as much balance as anyone in the NFC. Mayfield’s Browns (3-2) are the only team to rank in the top five in total defense and total offense.

The QB angle is so juicy, particular­ly with Murray leading the NFL in completing 75.2% of his passes, showing a maturity in his game that Mayfield struggles at times to master.

“We were surrounded by great teammates, great scheme and obviously good coaching down there at Oklahoma,” Mayfield says. “Kyler, it was pretty fun to have him in the same quarterbac­k room. That is obviously a tremendous player. For him to be patient while I took the extra year and did my senior lap year, it was just fun. We had a great room and a great team, and there was a high expectatio­n for us.”

As there will be Sunday. The action began with Tampa Bay-Philadelph­ia. Tom Brady threw two touchdown passes, Leonard Fournette ran for two scores and the Buccaneers beat the Eagles 28-22 on Thursday night.

Off this week in the first series of byes are the Jets (1-4), Falcons (2-3), Saints (3-2) and 49ers (2-3).

LOS ANGELES CHARGERS (4-1) at BALTIMORE (4-1):A showdown between two spectacula­r offenses led by young stud quarterbac­ks, and two teams with a penchant for pulling out late victories.

In his second pro season, Justin Herbert has been even more sensationa­l than he was as the Offensive Rookie of the Year for 2020. Herbert has thrown for a league-best 11 touchdowns with no intercepti­ons over the past three games. He has 11 300-yard games in 20 starts, the most by a player in his first two seasons.

Lamar Jackson, the 2019 NFL MVP, comes off a stunning comeback victory and the Ravens rank first in overall offense despite being plagued by injuries.

GREEN BAY (4-1) at CHICAGO (3-2): The NFL’s oldest rivalry hits number 203. Green Bay leads 101-95-6.

While the Bears have a chance to tie the Packers for the NFC North lead with a victory, beating Aaron Rodgers has been a real task. The Packers have won 19 of the past 22 meetings, including playoffs, and are 21-5 in games Rodgers has started. In one of the losses, he left with an injury after the opening series.

“Little Green Bay was getting beat up for a long time by our foes to the South,” Rodgers says, “and then Favrey (Brett Favre) showed up and we closed the gap, and then we’ve overtaken them. It’s nice.”

CINCINNATI (3-2) at DETROIT (0-5): Will the Lions ever get a break? Detroit has lost nine straight, going back to last season, and they are getting particular­ly excruciati­ng as opponents kick field goals at the end for victories. Its best player, center Frank Ragnow, is out after season-ending toe surgery.

Cincinnati has won the past six matchups and has won 75% overall for its best winning percentage against an opponent. The Lions’ most recent win in the series was in 1992.

LOS ANGELES RAMS (4-1) at NEW YORK GIANTS (1-4): This one could get ugly, particular­ly with the Giants having quarterbac­k Daniel Jones (concussion), running back Saquon Barkley (ankle), and wideout Kenny Golladay (knee) getting hurt last weekend.

LA is a balanced team that likes the road: 25-11 away from Los Angeles during coach Sean McVay’s four-plus seasons in charge. The Giants’ defense is ranked 29th overall.

KANSAS CITY (2-3) at WASHINGTON (2-3): Washington was supposed to have a solid defense, Kansas City not so much. Yet neither club has had success stopping people. The Chiefs rank 32nd in scoring defense, with Washington one spot ahead.

KC has dominated this series, winning the past seven meetings. Washington’s last victory against the Chiefs came in 1983, before current coach Ron Rivera made his NFL debut as a player.

Kansas City has won nine of 10 road games going back to the start of last season.

DALLAS (4-1) at NEW ENGLAND (2-3): A series of streaks. Dallas won the first seven, has lost the past six to New England dating to 1996.

The Cowboys have the playmakers on offense with Dak Prescott, Zeke Elliott and a deep group of receivers, and now on defense as well. With two takeaways, the Cowboys will tie the franchise record of 10 consecutiv­e games of forcing multiple turnovers. In cornerback Trevon Diggs they have the NFL leader with six intercepti­ons, at least one in all five games. The second-year player can tie the league record of six straight games with at least one pick to start a season and, get this, among those with the record is the late Tom Landry, who coached the Cowboys for their first 29 seasons.

New England needed to rally to beat weak Houston last Sunday, but it did tighten up its run defense, a key against Dallas.

SEATTLE (2-3) at PITTSBURGH (2-3): Here’s how different things are in Seattle: Russell Wilson (finger surgery) won’t quarterbac­k the Seahawks after he started 165 consecutiv­e games, regular season and playoffs combined. And the defense is atrocious, allowing 450 yards or more in each of the past four games, tying an NFL record.

Pittsburgh lost top wideout JuJu Smith-Schuster for the season with a shoulder injury, but still has enough playmakers to test that struggling defense.

MINNESOTA (2-3) at CAROLINA (3-2): This one could be all about the sacks.

Carolina has a strong pass rush led by Haason Reddick. The edge rusher has 6½ sacks through five games, 14 in his past nine games going back to his time in Arizona. But the Panthers’ Sam Darnold has been sacked eight times and hit 19 in the past two games. The Vikings have 17 quarterbac­k sacks this season, second most in the NFL, and DE Everson Griffen has four sacks in the past three games.

MIAMI (1-4) vs. JACKSONVIL­LE (0-5) at London: Folks in the United Kingdom must be wondering what the NFL is doing: All four of the teams playing in London this season have had one victory or less. Not exactly the best selling point for American football.

Jacksonvil­le has lost 20 in a row, the second-longest skid in NFL history to expansion Tampa Bay’s 26 set in 1977. Jacksonvil­le is playing its league-high eighth game in London. The Dolphins are playing a fifth in London, the second most.

HOUSTON (1-4) at INDIANAPOL­IS (1-4): While the Texans were expected to struggle, and they are, the Colts are among the NFL’s most disappoint­ing teams. But this is a chance for Indy, coming off blowing a 16-point fourth-quarter lead at Baltimore, to rekindle the fires.

Indy has dominated this series with a winning rate of 61.2%.

BUFFALO (4-1) at TENNESSEE (3-2), Monday night: The Bills have looked elite and lead the league in several categories on both sides of the ball. They are scoring the most points per game with 34.4 and allowing the fewest with 12.8 a game; are tops with 15 takeaways and with a plus-11 turnover margin.

Tennessee must establish the running game early. Derrick Henry leads the NFL with 640 yards rushing and seven TD runs. He has the most yards on the ground through five games since DeMarco Murray (670) in 2014 with Dallas.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Cleveland’s Baker Mayfield, left, and Arizona’s Kyler Murray, who are former teammates at Oklahoma and both Heisman Trophy winners, will vie against each other Sunday.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Cleveland’s Baker Mayfield, left, and Arizona’s Kyler Murray, who are former teammates at Oklahoma and both Heisman Trophy winners, will vie against each other Sunday.

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