USA TODAY US Edition

NFL power rankings

Saints still No. 1, Patriots fall and Redskins rise

- Nate Davis

NFL power rankings, post-Week 10 edition:

1. Saints (Previous: 1): Hopefully for him, Brandon Marshall makes as strong an impression on his new teammates as Dez Bryant did. Marshall’s seventh team should be lucky for him given he never played a postseason game for any of his other six NFL employers.

2. Chiefs (4): Upcoming game against Rams shaping up as matchup of season, even though it won’t have an internatio­nal flair after the NFL moved the game from Mexico City to Los Angeles due to poor field conditions.

3. Rams (2): O-line unfairly overshadow­ed amid pyrotechni­cs. Let’s hope LT Andrew Whitworth’s donation to Borderline Bar and Grill victims gets just due. 4. Steelers (6): Big Ben and Co. are scoring almost at will and basically masking resurgent defense ceding fewer than 255 yards per week over last month.

5. Chargers (5): This Sunday will mark their first game at home in six weeks, but they’ve bolted to six wins in a row nonetheles­s. However, injury bug returned to claim LB Denzel Perryman.

6. Patriots (3): Good news — remainder of regular-season schedule offers no showdowns with Eric Mangini, Romeo Crennel or even pushover Bill O’Brien.

7. Vikings (8): Better be rested out of bye because they have only two home games before Christmas. First stop: at Chicago in battle for NFC North lead.

8. Bears (12): As my colleague Nancy Armour would tell you, Mitch Trubisky could become first Chicago quarterbac­k to pass for 4,000 yards and/or 30 TDs in a season. Crazy. 9. Redskins (14): If slow and steady wins the race, Washington is — ever methodical­ly — building cushion that might be too much for Eagles or Cowboys to pop.

10. Panthers (7): Beating they took in Pittsburgh fresh reminder they haven’t won big road games under Cam Newton. And now starting to lose sight of Saints in NFC South. 11. Titans (19): Only person who loves facing Patriots more than Mike Vrabel is WR Corey Davis, who’s collected three of four career TDs vs. New England.

12. Texans (13): Tennessee, which beat Houston in Week 2, suddenly looms as clear and present danger in battle for AFC South supremacy. Rematch in Week 12.

13. Packers (15): They’re back at .500 but now head to their personal house of horrors, CenturyLin­k Field, a place where the Pack haven’t won in a decade.

14. Bengals (10): On pace to smash record for yards allowed in a season (more than 2,100 surrendere­d last four weeks), hence Teryl Austin’s dismissal.

15. Seahawks (17): It’s a formality

anyway, but after being swept by Rams, Seattle could set up “MNF” clinching opportunit­y for L.A. by losing to Green Bay.

16. Cowboys (20): Maybe they won on trade front with Amari Cooper getting further involved in attack and field seeming to open up for Ezekiel Elliott.

17. Eagles (9): Maybe they lost on trade front with WR Golden Tate making little impact in his debut and obvious holes remaining at running back and in secondary. 18. Browns (24): With Baker Mayfield “feeling real dangerous,” Cleveland ensures it won’t lose more than a dozen games for first time since 2014. Progress. 19. Falcons (11): Julio Jones became fastest to 10,000 receiving yards — in Cleveland, where he never would have attained mark had Browns drafted him.

20. Ravens (16): Welp. If Lamar Jackson must be pressed into service, at least he’d get to make starting debut against league’s worst (ever?) defense — Cincinnati.

21. Colts (27): Dearest mother — Andrew Luck hasn’t come under enemy fire once (sacked) in Indy’s last four engagement­s. The men truly love their commander.

22. Dolphins (18): So no literal victory coming out of Green Bay, but at least Miami got a moral one given nobody on defense quit this week. Yay.

23. Buccaneers (23): Stats lie. We call into evidence Exhibit A — Tampa Bay’s offense, which is ranked No. 1 in the NFL. Sound and fury, signifying nothing. 24. Jaguars (21): Three months ago, we were really looking forward to them drawing the hated Steelers in Jacksonvil­le. Now, no one cares. Especially NBC.

25. Bills (31): Maybe they once had dreams of landing Southern California’s Sam Darnold but are perhaps now better off with ex-Trojans QB Matt Barkley. LOLOLOL. 26. Jets (25): As horrendous as Sunday was, this will be fairly attractive job to some coach not named Todd Bowles. Young quarterbac­k, talent on defense,

loads of cap space.

27. Broncos (26): First order of business coming out of bye? Putting C Matt Paradis, one of league’s most underrated performers, on injured reserve. That kind of year.

28. Lions (22): It ain’t exactly the Curse of Bobby Layne, but Detroit has looked pretty lifeless since shipping former No. 1 receiver Golden Tate to Philly.

29. Giants (30): For one night, at least, their stars — Eli, Odell, Saquon — aligned to provide a glimpse of the team New York had hoped to be in 2018.

30. Cardinals (28): Who would be your all-time three-receiver set? Lots of interestin­g options and combos, but we’ll take Rice, Moss and Fitz in the slot.

31. 49ers (29): Not a very good reflection of your defense when it manages to sack Eli Manning only once and doesn’t get much pressure beyond that.

32. Raiders (32): Best offensive option is swift P Johnny Townsend. Let’s run more fakes, Coach Gruden, especially given Derek Carr’s fourth-down, uh, issues.

 ??  ?? The Redskins have won six times, and each time Adrian Peterson was their top rusher.
The Redskins have won six times, and each time Adrian Peterson was their top rusher.

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