The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Seahawks flying high as they visit unpredicta­ble Browns

- By BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer

The Seahawks were supposed to be continuing their retool this year, one season after their remake helped get them back into the playoffs. Instead, they have one of the NFL’s best records.

The Browns were pegged (hyped?) to be a budding powerhouse with all of the improvemen­ts in talent, plus the predicted maturity of Baker Mayfield in his second pro season. Instead, they are perhaps the most inconsiste­nt team in the league, with Mayfield struggling.

Seattle (4-1) is at Cleveland (2-3) in a most intriguing matchup Sunday.

A Seahawks victory, combined with a 49ers loss to the Rams, would put Seattle on top of the tough NFC West. But it’s difficult to figure out which Browns squad they will face: Will it be the team that won in Baltimore, or the team that was blown out last Monday night in San Francisco?

“I don’t think it was my best assignment as a teacher,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said of telling his players to watch Browns-49ers. “The game didn’t work out. I was hoping it was going to be a real battle. The game kind of got lopsided, so it wasn’t as beneficial. It’s still really good to see the guys. You hear the stories about the players and the background­s. The guys will come in here today are much more familiar with them because of that. In that regard, it’s always helpful. Too bad it wasn’t a better game.”

Will it be a better performanc­e by the Browns on Sunday?

“We have done it before,” running back Nick Chubb said. “After every loss we have, we came back harder. That is what I expect this team to do every time. Hopefully, we can stack some wins, but I know when we do face adversity, we bounce back harder.”

Week 6 began with the New England Patriots’ 3514 victory over the New York Giants. Rookie quarterbac­k Daniel Jones and the Giants (2-4) kept it close, trailing by a touchdown midway through the fourth quarter, but a forced fumble by Jamie Collins led to a TD that gave the Patriots a cushion. New England forced four turnovers, and Tom Brady had two touchdown runs and moved ahead of Peyton Manning for second place on the NFL’s all-time passing yards list. The reigning Super Bowl champions are 6-0 for the first time since 2015.

Off this week are Buffalo (4-1), Chicago (3-2), Oakland (3-2) and Indianapol­is (3-2).

San Francisco (4-0) at Los Angeles Rams (3-2)

The other two contenders out west; isn’t that delightful for this long rivalry?

The Rams have lost two in a row as their defense has sprung holes. The Niners came off their bye and routed Cleveland.

San Francisco is off to its first 4-0 start since 1990. The only 5-0 starts for the franchise since joining the NFL are 1990, 1984, 1952. The 49ers won the NFL championsh­ip in the 1984 season.

A key for the Rams’ defense is stopping the 49ers early in the second half; they have scored a touchdown on the first possession in all four games this season. Slowing down the running game would help: San Francisco ran for 275 yards vs. Cleveland and lead the NFL with 200 yards rushing per game.

For LA, the most efficient offense has come through the air. The Rams are the only team with three receivers with 325 yards receiving: Cooper Kupp, Brandin Cooks and Robert Woods. Kupp is second in the NFL with 41 catches and ranks fourth with 505 yards and four TDs.

Houston (3-2) at Kansas City (4-1)

The scoreboard might blow up from all the points these two could produce.

Houston scored the second-most points (53) in franchise history last week against Atlanta. Deshaun Watson, possibly the secondmost exciting quarterbac­k in the league behind KC’s Patrick Mahomes, has perhaps the most thrilling receiver in DeAndre Hopkins.

No slouches on defense, the Texans have forced a turnover in 18 straight games, the longest active streak in the NFL.

But Mahomes has thrown 202 consecutiv­e passes without an intercepti­on. Alex Smith has the franchise record of 312.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid needs one win to reach 200 regular-season victories. He has 211 overall.

Carolina (3-2) vs. Tampa Bay (2-3) at London

An early riser (9:30 a.m. EDT) in their second matchup of the season. The Bucs won in Carolina.

This is the first overseas regular-season match for the Panthers. If British fans were looking forward to seeing Cam Newton, Kyle Allen has been a superb replacemen­t. Allen has won all four career starts, three this season, with seven TDs, no intercepti­ons, making him the first quarterbac­k in the Super Bowl era to win his first four starts with no INTs. And the Bucs allowed more than 300 yards passing in each of the past four weeks.

Panthers RB Christian McCaffrey’s 866 yards from scrimmage are the second most through five games in NFL history to Jim Brown’s 988 in 1963. Pretty good company there.

Philadelph­ia (3-2) at Minnesota (3-2)

Not quite the same as the Eagles’ previous trip to Minnesota, when they beat the Patriots for their first Super Bowl title on Feb. 4, 2018.

Main matchup here is the NFL’s No. 3 rushing offense, led by No. 2 rusher Dalvin Cook, against the best run defense. Cook trails only McCaffrey.

Last week against the lowly Jets, Philly became the first team in NFL history with 10 sacks and two defensive TDs in a single game.

New Orleans (4-1) at Jacksonvil­le (2-3)

They are not chanting “Drew Who?” in the Big Easy. At least not yet.

But Teddy Bridgewate­r has stepped in for Drew Brees (thumb surgery) and quarterbac­ked the Saints to three straight victories. Two were against 2018 playoff teams, the Cowboys and the hated Rams, who, helped by a major officiatin­g gaffe, beat New Orleans to get to the Super Bowl. He has a passer rating or 100 or higher in two of his past three road starts.

It helps to have the most productive receiver, Michael Thomas, with 45 catches and 543 receiving yards.

Jacksonvil­le also is missing its veteran starter, Nick Foles. Rookie Gardner Minshew is one of three QBs in the Super Bowl era with a 100-plus rating and no intercepti­ons through his first four career starts. RB Leonard Fournette seeks his third consecutiv­e 100-yard performanc­e. He had runs of 48, 81 and 69 yards the past three weeks.

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