The Commercial Appeal

Good, bad, ugly of 2020 in NFL

- Jarrett Bell

A look back at some of the highs and lows of 2020 in the NFL ...

Best comeback trilogy: In winning Super Bowl 54, the Kansas City Chiefs rallied from a 10-point deficit that illustrate­d another level of brilliance from Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes and marked their third consecutiv­e game overcoming double-digit deficits during a remarkable postseason run.

Worst road trip: After Santa Clara County officials placed restrictio­ns on contact sports, banning games and practices alike, the 49ers relocated to Arizona in early December. They holed up at a hotel in walking distance to State Farm Stadium, practicing on outdoor fields the Cardinals use for training camp in addition to playing their final two home games (and a road game against the Cardinals) at the stadium. The trying, injury-ravaged season became doubly difficult with the separation from families during the holidays. And all without a playoff berth. At the time, the COVID-19 statistics were worse in Maricopa County (Arizona) than in Santa Clara.

Best messaging: After the death of George Floyd, several NFL players, including Mahomes, Saints receiver Michael Thomas and Vikings linebacker Eric Kendricks participat­ed in a video that spoke to the social issues that ignited “Black Lives Matter” protests across the nation. The video also inspired a response from NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell with a pledge to better support the concerns of players and AfricanAme­ricans at large.

Best finish: Lamar Jackson's legendary Dec. 14 performanc­e to rally the Ravens to a dramatic win at Cleveland on a “Monday Night Football” stage was an NFL version of Willis Reed's classic NBA Finals moment from the ‘70s. Jackson left the game early in the fourth quarter to get treatment for cramps and watched on TV from the locker room as his team squandered a 14-point lead. After backup quarterbac­k Trace Mcsorley suffered a knee injury at the 2-minute warning, Jackson trotted out of the locker room and back into action. He threw a 44-yard TD pass to Marquis Brown on his first snap, then used his arm – not legs – to set up the game-sealing field goal.

Worst finish: The Falcons giftwrappe­d Dallas' huge comeback victory in Week 2 by bungling the Cowboys' desperate onside kick in the final seconds. At least three Falcons hovered around the football, apparently waiting, like the Cowboys, for the football to travel 10 yards. Did these guys know the rules? Dallas knew to pounce on the ball (after 10 yards), which was just what was needed to start a short, quick drive that ended with the game-winning field goal.

Best bang for Buc: Tampa Bay lured Tom Brady with a two-year, $50 million free-agent deal that instantly made the Buccaneers relevant . Although the pandemic kept the team from playing before a packed stadium, the marketing impact came ASAP. And then there was the on-the-field product. Brady led the Bucs to their first playoff berth in 13 years.

Worst transition: Brady 1, Belichick 0. The post-tb12 era for the Patriots began with the franchise's first losing season since 2000. The genius of Bill Belichick could go only so far with Brady gone, the defense thinned by free-agent departures and COVID-19 opt-outs. Cam Newton, trying to revitalize his career after getting dumped by the Panthers, heads into Week 17 with five TD passes – for the season!

Best ballot measure: Patrick Mahomes and fellow Chiefs star Tyrann Mathieu led the effort to utilize Arrowhead Stadium as a polling site on Election Day -- which included the purchase of new voting machines that can be used for years. One of the first people in line to vote? Chiefs coach Andy Reid.

Worst rookie moves: Seahawks undrafted rookie cornerback Kemah Siverand was cut after being caught trying to sneak a woman into the team's hotel during training camp, a clear violation of COVID-19 protocols. Titans first-round pick Isaiah Wilson was placed on the COVID-19 reserve list on two occasions and arrested on DUI charges in September. Wilson attended a party near Tennessee State University, a violation of the pandemic protocols.

Worst compliance: Ravens strength and conditioni­ng coach Steve Saunders was suspended by the team for his apparent role in the outbreak that resulted in more than 20 players and staff contractin­g COVID-19. Saunders failed to report symptoms, routinely didn't wear a mask and removed his tracking device. Stunning that such behavior would come from a member of John Harbaugh's coaching staff, who theoretica­lly would set the proper example within the team's culture. That Saunders returned from his suspension in late December – rather than being fired – is a bit of a surprise, given all of the efforts in the NFL to mitigate risk in battling the virus.

Best performanc­e on a Tuesday night: Given pandemic-induced adjustment­s (and the holiday calendar), the NFL staged games on every day of the week this season for the first time in league history. This included a monster game by the Titans on “Tuesday Night Football” as they returned from a 17-day gap between games caused by the league's first COVID-19 outbreak. Tennessee had 24 cases of COVID-19 among players, coaches and staff, yet answered the question of how it would respond from the lengthy layoff in resounding fashion. It crushed Buffalo, 42-16, in a matchup of unbeatens.

Worst defiance: Broncos quarterbac­ks Drew Lock, Brett Rypien and Blake Bortles wound up on the COVID-19 list and ineligible for a Week 12 game against New Orleans – forcing Denver to play with emergency quarterbac­k Kendall Hinton, a receiver elevated from the practice squad – after defying the pandemic protocols and meeting at the team's headquarte­rs while not wearing masks. Hinton managed one completion in nine attempts for 13 yards in what will be remembered as one of the most bizarre losses in franchise history.

Best sub: Ryan Fitzpatric­k. Miami coach Brian Flores knew exactly what button to push when his team needed a rally during a must-win challenge at Las Vegas in Week 16. He summoned “Fitzmagic” to move the offense that was sputtering with Tua Tagovailoa. The veteran journeyman quarterbac­k completed a 34-yard pass to Mack Hollins as his helmet was yanked sideways – a “nolook” pass that drew a facemask flag – that set up a game-winning field goal.

 ?? TIM FULLER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady drops back to pass against the Lions on Dec. 26 in Detroit.
TIM FULLER/USA TODAY SPORTS Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady drops back to pass against the Lions on Dec. 26 in Detroit.
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