The Saline Courier Weekend

Mahomes vs. Brady spices up Thanksgivi­ng holiday week

- By Barry Wilner AP Writer

Andy Reid knows quarterbac­ks. So does Jon Gruden. And Sean Payton.

For years, these elite NFL coaches have praised the performanc­es of Tom Brady, Mr. Six Rings. And they do the same now with Patrick Mahomes, the NFL’S biggest playmaker.

On Sunday, in a matchup that fits prime time but wasn’t one CBS was about to let get away from its afternoon lineup, Mahomes and the Chiefs visit Brady and Tampa Bay.

They come into the showdown on different paths. Mahomes was heroic — again — in bringing Kansas City (9-1) back at Las Vegas, avenging its only defeat this season.

Buccaneers coach Bruce Arians, who also knows a few things about quarterbac­ks, has called Mahomes’ college workout at Texas Tech “amazing.” A good word for Mahomes in the pros, too.

“The day I worked out Patrick, I think the wind was blowing about 35-40 miles per hour and it didn’t affect his ball at all,” he says. “It was amazing down in Lubbock that day.”

Arians, whose Bucs (7-4) have a bye next week (at last), saw his team and Brady struggle in a loss to the Rams on Monday night.

“We’ve got to get ready to play a great football team coming up,” Brady said. “Nothing has been great to this point. We’ve had some good wins, had some tough losses. Everything is about one week here in the NFL. We’re going to have to go play really, really well against a great football team next week.”

Baltimore (6-4) at Pittsburgh (10-0), Tuesday night

One of the NFL’S best and most physical rivalries, but the Ravens are struggling and lost their past two games, while, clearly, the Steelers are

surging.

The Steelers are the 17th team since 1970 to start a season 10-0. Their 10-game winning streak is the secondlong­est single-season string in franchise history: The 1975 team won 11 straight on its way to the team’s second straight Super Bowl title. The Steelers can clinch a playoff berth with a win and losses by the Raiders and the Dolphins.

This game was moved from Thursday night to Sunday and then to Tuesday night because of the Ravens’ coronaviru­s issues. Baltimore apparently will be without several key players, including quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson, running backs J.K. Dobbins and Mark Ingram, along with defensive tackle Brandon Williams and both centers, all of whom are on reserve/ COVID-19 list.

Tennessee (7-3) at Indianapol­is (7-3)

Both of these AFC South leaders won in overtime with comebacks last week. The Colts already won at Tennessee this month.

Tennessee has its best record after 10 games since going 10-0 in 2008, in part because the Titans have a league-low five turnovers. Derrick Henrybecam­e the first player in league history with multiple overtime rushing touchdowns in a single season and leads the NFL with 1,079 yards.

“That’s just what they do,” Colts defensive coordinato­r Matt Eberflus says of Tennessee’s run game. “They are just going to stay com

mitted to it, and we have to stay — we feel like we’re in good shape in terms of our perseveran­ce, in terms of our discipline and we will want to take that in the game and being able to finish.”

The Colts have won four of their past five overall and four of the past five in this series. QB Philip Rivers (right big toe) hopes to make his 235th consecutiv­e start, which would break a tie with Eli Manning for the 10th-most starts in league history.

Chicago (5-5) at Green Bay (7-3)

Neither side comes into this renewal of the league’s longest rivalry playing their best. Indeed, Chicago has dropped four in a row as its offense has disappeare­d. Green Bay is 3-3 after a 4-0 start.

The Packers have won their past four home matchups with the Bears. Green

Bay has gone 19-5 against Chicago when Aaron Rodgers is the starting quarterbac­k.

Seattle (7-3) at Philadelph­ia (3-6-1), Monday night

Clearly, the way the Eagles have played has made their NFC East lead a mirage. And they’re in the midst of the toughest part of their schedule.

The Seahawks, meanwhile, are in the easiest portion, home meetings with both New York teams and a trip to Washington upcoming before finishing with divisional affairs with the Rams and 49ers. If Seattle’s defense that finally showed up in last week’s vic

tory against Arizona is for real, Pete Carroll’s crew should be in good shape.

New York Giants (3-7) at Cincinnati (2-7-1)

A huge break for the Giants, who actually are playing the best among the dregs of the NFC East. They won’t have to face rookie sensation Joe Burrow after the quarterbac­k and top overall draft choice tore knee ligaments in a loss at Washington.

Cleveland (7-3) at Jacksonvil­le (1-9)

Like the Ravens and Bengals in their division, the Browns have had some COVID-19 issues and will be without their best player, edge rusher Myles Garrett, for the second consecutiv­e week. Cleveland has built its record by beating whoever it should, and certainly the Jaguars, losers of nine in a row, fit that category.

Miami (6-4) at New York Jets (0-10)

Had the Dolphins not stumbled in Denver, this could be considered a trap game. Instead, look for a determined bunch from Miami, which figures to shut down the inept Jets with its strong defense.

Los Angeles Chargers (3-7) at Buffalo (7-3)

No major QB decisions ahead for these teams. Buffalo took Josh Allen four spots after Darnold went in 2018 and has no reason to regret it. The Chargers grabbed Justin Herbert with the sixth overall spot in April and are thrilled with him.

The Chargers finally overcame their late folds in beat

ing the Jets last week, while the Bills had a bye. Watch the performanc­es of outstandin­g wideoutske­enan Allen of LA and Stefon Diggs of Buffalo.

Arizona (6-4) at New England (4-6)

It’s been stunning to see the Patriots flop against mediocre or worse teams, with losses to injury-wrecked San Francisco, inconsiste­nt Denver, and awful Houston last week. They seem to have little direction on offense, and the last time we could say that was 20 years ago.

Arizona is right in the playoff mix in the NFC West and the conference, with two games against the divisionle­ading Rams remaining. Cardinals quarterbac­k Kyler Murray has to know that New England neutralize­d the similar style of Lamar Jackson two weeks ago.

San Francisco (4-6) at Los Angeles Rams (7-3)

At least the 49ers had a week off to get somewhat healthier, but this is a shell of the conference championsh­ip squad. Its reward upon returning is perhaps the NFC’S most balanced squad.

The Rams don’t particular­ly run the ball well, but their dynamic passing attack makes up for that — and more.

They won at Tampa Bay on Monday night even though Aaron Donald wasn’t quite the force he usually is. Keep an eye on No. 99 in this one

New Orleans (8-2) at Denver (4-6)

As Taysom Hill stepped in so admirably for the sidelined Drew Brees, the Saints seized

the top spot in the NFC. It’s Hill’s show for now, and the New Orleans defense appears ready to keep things rolling. Considerin­g the only remaining opponent with a winning record, albeit a formidable one, is Kansas City, the rest of the schedule could be, well, a Big Easy.

Denver, as up and down as anyone, ran all over Miami’s tough D last week. So the Broncos are no pushover.

Las Vegas (6-4) at Atlanta (3-7)

Lack of defense could be decisive here. The Raiders have 11 sacks in the first 10 games, ranking 31st in the league. They allowed Kansas City to score touchdowns on two drives of at last 90 yards last week after giving up none in the first nine games. And they lost that game for just the third time in the past seven seasons when scoring at least 30 points.

The Falcons have 17 sacks to rank 24th in the league.

And they are vulnerable in protection: Matt Ryan was sacked eight times by the Saints last Sunday.

Carolina (4-7) at Minnesota (4-6)

The Vikings truly blew an opportunit­y by losing at home to Dallas and are 1-4 at home. The Panthers had their first shutout in 82 games when they manhandled Detroit as Brian Burns had a careerhigh two sacks. He leads all defensive ends in total tackles with 42.

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