The Mercury News

Dolphins-cardinals matches young QBS

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When the Dolphins leave the oceanfront and head to the desert to play the Cardinals today, it will be about more than Tua vs. Kyler.

It’s about two rising teams, perhaps earlier than anyone truly thought logical. Two playoff contenders, with dynamic young coaches, one trained to test defenses with wide-open offensive schemes (Arizona’s Kliff Kingsbury). The other a former assistant in New England (Miami’s Brian Flores) who just might be a product of the Patriots’ coaching tree who can succeed in charge elsewhere.

Arizona (5-2) comes off a bye preceded by a major step, rallying to knock off division leader Seattle in overtime. The defense is coming around, though not like Miami’s.

And there are the young QBS. Kyler Murray was the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year in 2019. Tua Tagovailoa, as touted as any signal caller coming out of college in years, will make his second start for Miami.

“You get the feeling of who is next up going into the league,” Murray says. “Obviously, Tua had a great college career. I didn’t envision this, but I knew he’d be in the league.”

Twelve months ago, the Dolphins (4-3) were 0-7 under Flores. They’ve since gone from worst to first in points allowed, now giving up 18.6 per game, compared with 34 a year ago.

“I think people have different definition­s of turnaround,” Flores says. “Right now, we’re just trying to have a good turnaround and have a good practice today. Turnaround and have a good practice tomorrow. Someone else’s interpreta­tion of a turnaround might be different than mine is.”

STEELERS AT COWBOYS

Oh, for the days when the Steel Curtain and Doomsday Defense faced off. While Pittsburgh remains in pro football’s elite, the Cowboys have reached a nadir. Dallas will start a fourth quarterbac­k in 2020, either Cooper Rush or Garrett Gilbert. The Cowboys are last in turnover margin at minus-11, and standout running back Zeke Elliott has yet to rush for 100yards in a game; the two-time rushing champion had never gone more than two weeks into a season without one. The Steelers can set a franchise record with their eighth consecutiv­e victory to start the season. Last week’s win matched the 7-0start of 1978, when Pittsburgh won the third of its six Super Bowls — beating Dallas.

SAINTS AT BUCCANEERS

Forget the over/under on this game (it’s 51 1/2), what’s the over/under on the times the broadcaste­rs mention Drew Brees and Tom Brady. Hard to ignore the two quarterbac­ks who top the NFL’S career list for TD passes and yards. And it figures their matchup could not only decide this game, but eventually the NFC South. The Saints won the opening-week meeting, but both teams have progressed significan­tly since.

SEAHAWKS AT BILLS

A coast-to-coast battle between division leaders. The Seahawks have won at least seven of the first eight games of a season once, in 2013, when they were 7-1. They won the NFL title that season. The Bills could go 7-2 for the first time since 1993, when they went to the Super Bowl for the last time. Seattle’s Russell Wilson is on the verge of several NFL marks. Wilson’s 92 wins are tied with Peyton Manning for most through a quarterbac­k’s first nine seasons, and his 101 career wins (including playoffs) are tied with Tom Brady for most by a QB over the same span.

BEARS AT TITANS

A pair of slumping squads coming off consecutiv­e defeats, but the Bears are in worse shape, their offensive line ravaged by injuries and illness. This could come down to whether Chicago, with its mediocre offense, can ride the D to victory. That would mean shutting down Titans running back Derrick Henry, the NFL’S leading rusher with 775yards. Henry has eight rushing TDS, finding the end zone in five straight games.

TEXANS AT JAGUARS

Both teams come off byes. Some folks are wondering why bother. The Texans switched coaches, going 1-2under Romeo Crennel. Jacksonvil­le has stuck with Doug Marrone, but a loss here makes his wobbly job security shakier.

RAVENS AT COLTS

Baltimore has won a league-high nine straight road games, including all three this season. It has scored 20or more points in 30consecut­ive games, matching Denver’s NFL record from 2012-14. On defense, the Ravens have a takeaway in 20straight outings. They will be missing two 2019All-pros, though: Left tackle Ronnie Stanley (ankle) is done for the season and cornerback Marlon Humphrey is on the COVID-19 LIST. Indy, which has won five of six overall and all three home games, can play some defense, too. It’s tied for the league lead with 11intercep­tions, and fewest touchdowns allowed (14), holding opposing QBS to a league-low passer rating of 76.2.

PANTHERS AT CHIEFS

Christian Mccaffrey might finally be back from a sprained ankle that sidelined the 2019All-pro running back for six weeks. After three victories without him, Carolina lost the past three. Chiefs coach Andy Reid has 229wins, tied with Curly Lambeau for fifth most in NFL history. His defense usually takes a back seat to the Patrick Mahomes-led offense, but Kansas City is tied for the league lead in takeaways with 14and has caused at least one turnover in 10straight regular-season games.

BRONCOS AT FALCONS

Back in the 1998season, these were the conference champions. Now, they search for respectabi­lity. Denver’s defense could be the deciding factor. Bradley Chubb has sacks in four consecutiv­e games, Malik Reed in three. And the Broncos rank third in red-zone defense (48%); the Falcons are 27th in red-zone offense (53.3%).

LIONS AT VIKINGS

One of the more lopsided division rivalries, with Minnesota ahead 76-39-2and having won six in a row. But the Vikings also have lost their past five home games since a win against Detroit last December. Lions RB Adrian Peterson returns to Minnesota, where he played the first 10years of his career and became the franchise’s all-time leading rusher. The Vikings are one of five teams in the league he has not gotten a rushing TD against.

GIANTS AT WASHINGTON

The three victories by these two teams all came within the NFC Least, with New York beating Washington, which has wins over Philadelph­ia and Dallas. The Giants won the past four meetings. Their past three losses have come by a total of six points, and their past four games have been decided by seven points, including the one-point win over Washington. New York must protect Daniel Jones against pass rushers Ryan Kerrigan, who has 71/2 sacks against the Giants, DE Montez Sweat, who leads Washington with five sacks, and second overall draft pick Chase Young.

 ?? OTTO GREULE JR — GETTY IMAGES ?? Arizona’s Kyler Murray is establishi­ng himself as one of the NFL’S top young quarterbac­ks in just his second season.
OTTO GREULE JR — GETTY IMAGES Arizona’s Kyler Murray is establishi­ng himself as one of the NFL’S top young quarterbac­ks in just his second season.
 ?? MARK BROWN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa won his first NFL start against the Rams last week, and the Dolphins hope he’s on his way to becoming a franchise quarterbac­k.
MARK BROWN — GETTY IMAGES Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa won his first NFL start against the Rams last week, and the Dolphins hope he’s on his way to becoming a franchise quarterbac­k.

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