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Sunday, October 31, 2021

World Series score: Astros stay alive vs. Braves, rally in Game 5 after allowing first-inning grand slam - CBS sports.com

The Houston Astros fended off elimination on Sunday night and denied the Atlanta Braves the chance to win the 2021 World Series at their home ballpark. The Astros defeated the Atlanta Braves in Game 5 of the World Series by a 9-5 final (box score) to force Game 6 and a return trip to Houston. The Astros still trail in the best-of-seven series by a 3-2 margin, and Atlanta remains one win away from its first championship since 1995.

The Astros fell behind early on Sunday, with Atlanta center fielder Adam Duvall hitting the ninth first-inning grand slam in postseason history. Nevertheless, the Astros were able to rally and tie the game at 4-4 in the third inning. Freddie Freeman then put the Braves back up with a solo home run. The Astros weren't done, though, as Houston received contributions from unlikely sources against Atlanta's usually reliable bullpen.

Catcher Martin Maldonado drove in three runs on the night, and Marwin Gonzalez plated a pair with a pinch-hit single. (We'd be remiss if we didn't mention that Zack Greinke -- yes, the pitcher -- also recorded an historic pinch-hit single.)

Historically, MLB teams who lead a series by a 3-2 margin have gone on to win said series 69 percent of the time. That bodes well for the Braves, who will now have two more chances to win another contest -- and, thereby, the championship. 

Now for takeaways from Game 5.

Duvall powered up early

Adam Duvall has been yet another post-Ronald Acuña Jr. revelation for the Braves this season, in terms of both his power and his stabilizing glove in center. Early in Game 5, it was the bat that made the difference, as Duvall authored just the third first-inning grand slam in World Series history: 

And here's this: 

That's not only elevating for power against one of the most extreme ground-ballers in the game today, it's also doing so with two outs. For Duvall, that upped the "clutch factor" of the moment. When Duvall stepped to the plate in the first, the Braves had a 57.1 percent chance of winning Game 5. After he touched the plate to give the Braves a 4-0 lead, the Braves had an 84.3 percent chance of prevailing. That's a huge jump, to say the least. Unfortunately for Atlanta, the club couldn't capitalize. 

Houston was relentless at the plate all night

That 4-0 lead the Braves barged to in the first didn't cause the Astros to give up. In the second, the theretofore struggling Alex Bregman cracked an RBI double, and then Martin Maldonado cut the Atlanta lead with a sac fly. In the third, Carlos Correa made it 4-3 when his double plated Jose Altuve, who had earlier reached on a Dansby Swanson error. Then Michael Brantley hustled home on a Yuli Gurriel ground out to tie the score. 

The Braves retook the lead in the bottom of the third on a massive, 460-foot solo home run from Freddie Freeman, and that held until the fifth. At that point, the Astros pieced together their biggest inning of the night. Braves manager Brian Snitker opted to intentionally walk Alex Bregman and load the bases for Maldonado with two outs. Maldonado, crowding the plate and showing almost no willingness to swing, drew a five-pitch walk to tie the game again. Then pinch-hitter Marwin Gonzalez dumped a single to left that drove in two more and gave Houston a 7-5 lead. 

In the seventh, the Astros added an insurance run -- again with two outs -- as Maldonado drove in his third run of the night with a line drive single that brought Kyle Tucker home. Carlos Correa tacked on another, yes, two-out run in the eighth with a single that brought Altuve in to score. That was all more than enough to send the series back to Houston. 

Zack Greinke achieved a rare feat

Game 4 starting pitcher Zack Greinke, thanks in part to the Astros' diminished bench, garnered a pinch-hitting appearance in Game 5, and he made the most of it: 

That sharp, line drive single to the opposite field left the bat at 105.9 mph, which made it Houston's hardest-hit ball of Game 5. So that was no cheapie. As for rare feat noted above, here we go: 

However, the Astros weren't able to cash in on Greinke's plate-work, as Jose Altuve flew out and Michael Brantley struck out to end the frame. 

The Houston bullpen dominated

All five of the Braves' runs were charged to Astros starter Framber Valdez, who lasted just 2 2/3 innings. After Valdez was lifted, five Astros relievers combined for 6 1/3 shutout innings. Along the way, they gave up just four hits and struck out six with no walks. Particularly key were Phil Maton and Kendall Graveman, who each worked two innings. For the series, the Houston bullpen now boasts an ERA of 1.75, which is more than a full run lower than Atlanta's mark of 2.76. 

The Braves still have the edge, but it's been diminished

That's an obvious thing to say, given that Atlanta still leads the best-of-seven series by a count of three games to two. Teams up 3-2 who opened the series on the road have -- across the history of MLB best-of-seven postseason series -- won the series 61.8 percent of the time. That's a high figure, but consider that teams up 3-1 who opened up on the road have gone on to win the series more than 80 percent of the time. That's what the Braves squandered by blowing that 4-0 lead in Game 5. 

Need more concerning news, Braves fans? Teams up 3-2 have won Game 6 just 28.6 percent of the time. In other words, history suggests we have a strong chance of this going the full seven games. 

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World Series score: Astros stay alive vs. Braves, rally in Game 5 after allowing first-inning grand slam - CBS sports.com
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Cooper Rush subs for Dak Prescott and becomes Cowboys legend in win over Vikings - Yahoo Sports

They'll remember Cooper Rush's name in Dallas for a long, long time. 

The Dallas Cowboys gambled and won big on Sunday night. They sat Dak Prescott, who has a calf injury, playing it safe with their best player. They probably didn't figure on Rush leading a win, but they'll take it. 

After the Vikings took a late 16-13 lead, Rush led an impressive drive downfield. Ezekiel Elliott had a remarkable effort on a third down, breaking tackles to get a first down to the 5-yard line. A fantastic pass-and-catch from Rush to Amari Cooper was the go-ahead touchdown with 51 seconds left. The Cowboys defense got a final stop and Dallas held on to an unlikely 20-16 win. Rush had 325 yards and two touchdowns. 

Before Sunday, Rush had only three career passing attempts. After Sunday, he'll have a Clint Longley-esque place in Cowboys lore. 

Cooper Rush had a big game in the Cowboys' win. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)
Cooper Rush had a big game in the Cowboys' win. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

Cowboys were without Dak Prescott

Prescott had a chance to play. He worked out before the game. The Cowboys decided to play it safe and give their quarterback another week. 

Rush played well. He threw for more than 300 yards. Rush made one huge throw to keep the Cowboys in the game as the offense was struggling to score, reading that the safeties had vacated the middle of the field and hitting Cedrick Wilson over the middle for a 73-yard touchdown. That tied the game 10-10. 

While the Cowboys offensive issues early in the game were predictable, the Vikings shouldn't have struggled so much to move the ball. Dallas played well on defense, rarely allowing any Vikings ballcarrier any space. Minnesota had a great first drive, going 75 yards and getting Adam Thielen in the end zone. But the Vikings did almost nothing after that. 

Then penalties got a Vikings drive going. There was a bad roughing-the-passer penalty and then two more penalties on Cowboys defensive end Randy Gregory. The penalties helped a stagnant offense get a field goal and a 16-13 lead. 

Rush, however, came up big on the next drive. 

Cowboys put together a late drive

With the Cowboys trailing 16-13, Rush calmly led a drive. He hit Amari Cooper for 33 and 18 yards. The Cowboys quickly got into field-goal range. A holding penalty on guard Connor Williams moved the Cowboys back. A weird delay-of-game penalty, when the Vikings tried calling two straight timeouts, helped get the Cowboys closer, then Elliott made a tremendous play to break through two tackles and get a first down. That set up a touchdown on a perfectly placed pass in the end zone to Cooper, who made a great grab and got down in bounds. 

There was still time for the Vikings. The Vikings couldn't get much going and the game ended on a Cousins incompletion as time ran out. 

For the Vikings, it was a horrible loss at home to fall to 3-4. For the Cowboys, they're 6-1 and should feel like they stole a win, thanks to a backup who'd never done anything in the NFL before his moment in the prime-time spotlight. 

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Cooper Rush subs for Dak Prescott and becomes Cowboys legend in win over Vikings - Yahoo Sports
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Astros fight back from early Braves grand slam, force Game 6 - Fox News

The Houston Astros stayed alive.

Martin Maldonado finished 1-for-2 with three RBI and Carlos Correa added two RBI in the team’s comeback victory over the Atlanta Braves in Game 5, 9-5.

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The Astros needed to dig deep to get back into the game. Braves outfielder Adam Duvall hit a first-inning home run could have put the nail into the coffin for any team, but not the Astros. 

Atlanta Braves' Adam Duvall celebrates his grand slam home run during the first inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta.

Atlanta Braves' Adam Duvall celebrates his grand slam home run during the first inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

Houston scored two runs in the second inning thanks to a Maldonado sac fly and an Alex Bregman RBI double. The Astros would tie the game up again in the third inning thanks to a Correa double that scored Michael Brantley and a Yuli Gurriel ground out scored Jose Altuve. The game was tied at that point 4-4.

Houston Astros catcher Martin Maldonado catches a bunt by Atlanta Braves' A.J. Minter during the fourth inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta.

Houston Astros catcher Martin Maldonado catches a bunt by Atlanta Braves' A.J. Minter during the fourth inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Freddie Freeman would wake up in the bottom of the third inning with a 460-foot solo shot to put Atlanta back up one run. But that would be the last run scored for the Braves.

BRAVES' ADAM DUVALL LAUNCHES HIMSELF INTO WORLD SERIES HISTORY BOOKS WITH GRAND SLAM

A two-run single from Marwin Gonzalez and a Maldonado walk with the bases loaded put the Astros up two runs. Maldonado would strike again in the seventh and Correa in the eighth to go up four runs.

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - OCTOBER 31:  Martin Maldonado #15 of the Houston Astros hits an RBI sacrifice fly ball against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning in Game Five of the World Series at Truist Park on October 31, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia.

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - OCTOBER 31:  Martin Maldonado #15 of the Houston Astros hits an RBI sacrifice fly ball against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning in Game Five of the World Series at Truist Park on October 31, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Elsa/Getty Images)

Houston’s bullpen came up strong against the Braves in the latter part of the game.

Yimi Garcia got the Astros out of the third inning as Framber Valdez was getting shelled, Jose Urquidy pitched an inning, Phil Maton went two innings and struck out three, Ryan Stanek held Astros hitless and Kendall Graveman bounced back after allowing a hit. He would close out the game for Houston.

Atlanta Braves relief pitcher A.J. Minter wipes his face after giving up a 2-RBI double to Houston Astros' Marwin Gonzalez during the fifth inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta.

Atlanta Braves relief pitcher A.J. Minter wipes his face after giving up a 2-RBI double to Houston Astros' Marwin Gonzalez during the fifth inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

The Braves started Tucker Davidson for Game 5. He went two inning and allowed four runs, two earned, on two hits. A.J. Minter would be hit up for three runs on three hits while Drew Smyly went three innings and let up two more runs on five hits.

Atlanta had eight hits in the game but failed to push more runs across the board when they needed it. Austin Riley was 3-for-4 and Travis d’Arnaud was 2-for-4.

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Game 6 is set for Tuesday night back in Houston.

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Astros fight back from early Braves grand slam, force Game 6 - Fox News
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NFL Week 8 grades: Jets and Cowboys both get an 'A' for wild wins with their backup quarterbacks - CBS Sports

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In a Halloween upset that no one saw coming, the New York Jets didn't just put a scare into the Bengals, they took them to the graveyard and buried them. 

With Zach Wilson out, the Jets were a popular pick to get blown out this week -- the oddsmakers had them pegged as a double-digit underdog -- but backup quarterback Mike White had other ideas. In one of the most impressive performances ever by a QB making his first start, White threw for 405 yards and three touchdowns as the Jets stunned the Bengals 34-31. 

White has been in the NFL since 2018, but he didn't make his first start until Sunday and he definitely made the most of it. The Jets quarterback had the Bengals' defense on its heels all day as he completed his first 11 passes. White showed off uncanny accuracy -- he completed 82.2% of his passes -- and the only two mistakes he made weren't his fault as both his interceptions bounced off the receiver he was targeting. 

The backup quarterback showed off a toughness that the Jets haven't really shown this season. After leaving the game to enter concussion protocol in the third quarter, he ended up returning to the game and he might have been even better: He completed 11 of his final 13 passes for for 146 yards and two touchdowns. 

White's biggest throw, which ended up being the game-winner, was emblematic of his day: He stayed patient in the pocket and waited for his receiver to break open. The receiver in this case ended up being tight end Tyler Kroft, who caught a 13-yard touchdown to give the Jets the lead for good. 

White capped off the TD by CATCHING the two-point conversion on a throw from Jamison Crowder

Basically, there was nothing White didn't do against the Bengals. Besides throwing and catching passes, he also made a great defensive play that might have saved the game for the Jets. After throwing an interception to Bengals safety Jessie Bates in the first quarter, it looked like Bates might return it for a TD, but as you can see below, White ran him down and forced the play back inside, which allowed Elijah Moore (the No. 8 referenced in the tweet below) to make the tackle at the Jets' 1-yard line. 

That ended up being a huge tackle because the Bengals ended up coming away with zero points on the drive because the Jets' defense would make a goal-line stand at the 1-yard line. 

Overall, White's 405-yard day makes him the first QB in NFL history to hit the 400-yard mark while also throwing at least three touchdowns in his first start. He's also just the second quarterback since 1985 to win a game in his first start after trailing by double digits with less than five minutes left to play (Steve Young is the other). 

One other thing that made White's debut so impressive was that he did it against a Bengals defense that was surrendering just 251.3 yards per game over the past four weeks. 

The Jets might not be headed for the playoffs this year, but they've proven that you absolutely can't afford to overlook them. With wins over the Bengals and Titans this season, it won't be surprising if we see the Jets pull off a few more upsets before the end of the year.  

Alright, let's get to the grades for every game from Week 8. If you're looking for a deeper dive on Green Bay's wild 24-21 win over the Cardinals that was played on Thursday, be sure to click here

N.Y. Jets 34-31 over Cincinnati

L.A. Rams 38-22 over Houston

Buffalo 26-11 over Miami

Carolina 19-13 over Atlanta

Pittsburgh 15-10 over Cleveland

Steelers-Browns grades by Bryan DeArdo (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

San Francisco 33-22 over Chicago

49ers-Bears grades by Cody Benjamin (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Philadelphia 44-6 over Detroit

Eagles-Lions grades by Jeff Kerr (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Tennessee 34-31 (OT) over Indianapolis 

Titans-Colts grades by Jordan Dajani (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Seattle 31-7 over Jacksonville

Denver 17-10 over Washington

New England 27-24 over L.A. Chargers

Patriots-Chargers grades by Tyler Sullivan (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

New Orleans 36-27 over Tampa Bay

Buccaneers-Saints grades by Jeff Kerr (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Dallas 20-16 over Minnesota

Cowboys-Vikings grades by Jared Dubin (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

2021 NFL Salute to Service Gear revealed

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NFL Week 8 grades: Jets and Cowboys both get an 'A' for wild wins with their backup quarterbacks - CBS Sports
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World Series: Astros' Zack Greinke records historic pinch-hit single in Game 5 - CBS Sports

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Houston Astros right-hander Zack Greinke became the first pitcher to record a pinch hit in the World Series since 1923 as part of Sunday night's Game 5 (follow here for live updates). Greinke was asked by manager Dusty Baker to pinch-hit for Yimi Garcia during the fourth inning of the must-win game for the Astros. 

He answered the call by lacing a single to right field off Atlanta Braves reliever Jesse Chavez. It wasn't a cheapie, either. According to Statcast, Greinke's hit had an exit velocity of 105.9 mph, making it the hardest hit ball of the night for the Astros to that point in the game.

Here's a look:

Earlier on Sunday, our Mike Axisa laid out why Game 5 could be the final game in baseball history without a designated hitter:

Game 5 could very well be the last game without the designated hitter in baseball history. The collective bargaining agreement expires Dec. 1 and the next agreement is widely expected to implement the universal DH. MLB used the universal DH during the shortened pandemic season in 2020. The wheels are now in motion to make it permanent.

If that's the case then Greinke, who had previously notched a single as part of his Game 4 start, represents a fitting face to the end of pitchers hitting. As Axisa noted, Greinke is "arguably the best hitting pitcher of the last 10 years or so (he's a .239/.280/.345 hitter since 2013)."

For those wondering, the last pitcher to record a pinch hit during the World Series was Jack Bentley in 1923, per Jayson Stark of The Athletic. Bentley actually recorded a pair of pinch hits as a member of the New York Giants. (The Giants would lose the series in six games to the New York Yankees.)

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World Series: Astros' Zack Greinke records historic pinch-hit single in Game 5 - CBS Sports
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With Jameis Winston likely done for the year, Drew Brees says he’s not coming back - NBC Sports

Dallas Cowboys v Tampa Bay Buccaneers
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Go ahead and start the speculation that Drew Brees will return to the quarterback-needy Saints. And then end it.

During halftime of Sunday night’s Cowboys-Vikings game on NBC, Brees said that he won’t be emerging from retirement to join the Saints, if (as expected) Winston will miss the rest of the season.

The Saints apparently will stick with Trevor Siemian and Taysom Hill. As reportedly during Football Night in America, Hill is expected to be cleared to play this week after suffering a concussion in Week Five.

The 5-2 Saints host the 3-4 Falcons on Sunday.

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With Jameis Winston likely done for the year, Drew Brees says he’s not coming back - NBC Sports
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AFC a glorious mess as 2021 NFL season nears halfway point - NFL.com

The AFC is a glorious mess, a paragon of parity that is possible largely because the Kansas City Chiefs' struggles have swung wide open the door to the conference they have mostly lorded over for the last three seasons. The Chiefs play at home Monday night against the Giants, and they are trying to -- it feels like this has to be a mistake -- get out of the AFC West basement. For now, the Titans, Ravens, Raiders and Bills are atop their divisions by themselves. Write that in pencil, though.

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Titans widen division lead

The Tennessee Titans, who beat the Indianapolis Colts in overtime Sunday to go to 6-2, are virtually assured of winning the AFC South, with a three-game lead and a season sweep of their only functional division rival. They are the AFC's top seed, but a loss to the Jets earlier this season proves they are far from indominable, as does the fact that the Colts held Derrick Henry to just 68 rushing yards. After the game, Titans Coach Mike Vrabel said Henry, who has already carried the ball 219 times this season and who looked to lack his usual burst on Sunday, needs some rest and recovery. Unfortunately, the Titans still have four games -- including next week's against the Rams on Sunday Night Football -- until their bye. Still, this was an impressive victory on the road, with the Titans coming back from an early 14-point deficit with Ryan Tannehill connecting with A.J. Brown for 155 yards and the Titans' defense forcing two hideous interceptions of Carson Wentz, who entered the game having thrown just one this season.

"Just enjoy the victory and the heart of this football team," Vrabel said.

The loss puts the division even further out of reach for the Colts and their path to even a wild-card spot (they are currently the 12th seed) has to pass through the Bills, Bucs, Patriots, Cardinals and Raiders in the second half of the season. Coach Frank Reich was asked if the team's playoff hopes are slipping away, and he said he is not wired to think that way. The Colts play the Jets on Thursday night and that brings us to the AFC's current giant-killer.

Jets stun Bengals

The Cincinnati Bengals were understandably flat after their emotional victory over the Ravens last week. But this? The fifth-ranked scoring defense, a unit that was the only one in the league to hold every opponent to 25 or fewer points, allowed the Jets -- who were humiliated by the Patriots last week -- to score 34 points in an offensive explosion helmed by backup quarterback Mike White, who became the first Jets quarterback to throw for 400 yards since Vinny Testaverde did it 21 years ago. The Bengals lost an 11-point, fourth-quarter lead in the stunning upset, and the 34-31 loss not only handed the Jets the possibility of a delightfully weird quarterback controversy but raised all kinds of questions about the Bengals' ability to build off their strong start to make a run to the postseason. The offense was shaky early, but it was the defense that was most concerning.

"Defensively, the tackling was as bad as it's been in a long time," Zac Taylor said.

He wasn't wrong. The Bengals had invested in rebuilding the defense to superb results until Sunday. This clunker dropped the Bengals from first in the AFC into the deep pool of teams competing for a wild-card spot. The more immediate issue, though, is righting their defense for an important division game against the Browns next weekend before the Bengals have a bye. Good teams have bad days, but a performance like this means the Bengals will have to prove all over again that they should be considered not just a good team, but a playoff team.

Steelers rising, Browns falling

Just behind the Bengals in the AFC North and in the AFC standings are the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Steelers started the season 1-3, but, after beating the Browns 15-10, have now won three in a row, with Chicago and Detroit up next. And they won this one without a place kicker, but with a defense that held the Browns' top-flight running game to fewer than 100 yards rushing, and produced a late defensive stand that forced the Browns to turn the ball over on downs.

"Whew man, AFC North football," coach Mike Tomlin said.

The Steelers aren't pretty but they are resilient, and that has them in the wild-card mix. In fact, three of the four AFC North teams would be in the playoffs if they started right now. The odd team out? The Browns, who entered the season with Super Bowl aspirations, but have lost three of their last four games. The passing game is a mess, with Baker Mayfield battling a torn labrum in his left arm and Odell Beckham a complete non-factor, and the offense couldn't stay on the field (3 of 10 on third down, 0 of 2 on fourth down).

"It is always out of sync when you go three-and-out," coach Kevin Stefanski said. "That is just how it is. We have to get to the bottom of it."

Pats finally notch impressive win

No team is more inscrutable than the New England Patriots, who are 4-4, but finally got an impressive victory Sunday over the Los Angeles Chargers, who have now lost two in a row (they lost to the Ravens before their bye) and suddenly have to be worried about the offense, although coach Brandon Staley was pleased with the progress of the previously-porous run defense, a hopeful sign for the remainder of the season.

Until Sunday, the Patriots' three wins had come against the Jets (twice) and Texans. But their victory over the Chargers, punctuated by a pick-six of Justin Herbert, was further confirmation that the Patriots steadily improved throughout October and that Bill Belichick still knows how to tie young quarterbacks in knots. There are still big games to come for the Patriots -- two against Buffalo and one against Tennessee (in Foxborough) -- but those are the only games remaining against opponents with winning records. The Patriots are just outside the playoff bracket at the eighth seed right now, just behind the Chargers, who are in what would be the third wild-card slot, and just ahead of the Browns. It's too early to rule out a run at the division title for the Patriots. The Bills are 5-2 and lead the AFC East after an unexpectedly difficult victory over the Dolphins, but those December games against the Patriots loom large. In addition to games against the Saints and the Bucs, the Bills also have two games remaining against the team that has done more to scramble the AFC landscape than any other -- in Weeks 10 and 18, the Bills have to play the Jets.

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Saints' Jameis Winston suffers reported ACL injury vs. Bucs, Sean Payton calls it 'significant' - CBS Sports

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Jameis Winston was helped off of the field after sustaining a knee injury during the second quarter of the Saints' Week 8 home game against the Buccaneers. Winston was ruled out for the remainder of the game after initially being questionable to return. 

Winston left the game after he was tackled by Buccaneers linebacker Devin White on a running play. White was penalized on the play for making a horse-collar tackle. Winston tried to leave the field under his own power before falling on the turf. He was carted off of the field after spending time in the team's medical tent. 

Following the game, Saints coach Sean Payton described the injury as "significant," and NFL Network's Jane Slater reported that the injury was to Winston's ACL. 

With Taysom Hill (concussion) inactive, Winston was replaced by backup Trevor Siemian, a seven-year veteran who had not previously attempted a pass since the 2019 season. A seventh-round pick in the 2015 draft, Siemian made 24 starts for the Broncos during the 2016 and '17 seasons. He has a 13-12 record as a starter with 30 touchdowns and 24 interceptions. Siemian entered Sunday's game with a 59.2% career completion percentage. 

Winston won his position battle over Hill after sitting behind Drew Brees during his first season in New Orleans. Through six games, Winston had completed nearly 59% of his throws with 13 touchdowns and three interceptions. Winton's play helped the Saints get out to a 4-2 start. 

Despite the loss of Winston, the Buccaneers Saints held on to defeat the defending champions, 36-27. If Winston has to miss time, Hill would presumably step into the lineup as the starter, though Siemian could get a chance if Hill is unable to return from his concussion just yet. 

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Saints' Jameis Winston suffers reported ACL injury vs. Bucs, Sean Payton calls it 'significant' - CBS Sports
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Dak Prescott inactive for Cowboys' game vs. Vikings, Cooper Rush to start at QB - USA TODAY

Brian Snitker discusses starting Tucker Davidson in Game 5 - Talking Chop

The Atlanta Braves are one win away from securing their first World Series crown since 1995. The players understand the magnitude of the moment but they are still taking a one game at a time approach. The Houston Astros now have their backs against the wall but won’t go away quietly. Sunday’s start would have gone to Charlie Morton before he suffered a fractured fibula in Game 1. Instead, it will be rookie left-hander Tucker Davidson who made just four starts at the major league level before suffering a forearm injury that essentially wiped out the remainder of the regular season.

The Braves went with an opener in Game 4, but Brian Snitker said that Davidson would start Game 5 and that they will go with him as long as they can.

“He’s going to start the game, and we’ll just go with him as long as he’ll let us take him,” Snitker said when asked about Davidson’s role for Sunday. “It’s pretty much like Kyle, just progress he had made in Gwinnett. He’d had some outings, was throwing the ball well, feels good, got stretched out. Like I say, very similar to the discussions we had about Kyle.”

Wright came up big for the Braves in Game 4 allowing one run over 4 2/3 innings despite pitching in and out of trouble. He gave the team a chance to win and they are looking for something similar from Davidson.

Snitker said that he called Davidson Sunday morning to tell him he was starting.

“Honestly, I called him this morning,” Snitker said. “Again, these young guys that are going through this for the first time, for their benefit, like I said with Dylan yesterday, and I know their phones have been blowing up and would be and processing a lot. I called Tucker, and he said,”let’s do it.”

“He’s ready. He’s another one that he’s been through all the levels of all our organization, and we really liked what we saw out of him early in the year before he had his problems.”

Davidson made a rehab start at Gwinnett the final weekend of the season and continued to work at the alternate training site throughout the postseason just in case he was needed. His call came when Morton was lost to injury. It is a huge spot for a rookie to find himself in, but his teammates think he will do just fine.

“He’s kind of loose right now,” Will Smith said when asked about Davidson. “He actually walked in and said good morning, and we’re like, Tucker, it’s 3:15, so good afternoon. He’s the way he is. We’ve got a loose group. Nobody is going to put a ton of pressure on themselves. We know what we have to do. It’s as simple as that.


Lost in the heroics of the back-to-back home runs by Dansby Swanson and Jorge Soler in Game 4, was an unbelievable catch by Eddie Rosario at the wall on a deep drive by Jose Altuve. Luke Jackson was on the mound when Rosario made that catch and he was asked for his reaction.

“I mean, at first I thought like, okay, fly ball to left — because I saw him reach out a little bit for it,” Jackson said. “Then he kept getting closer to the wall, closer to the wall and I don’t have good eyesight in general, so I have no idea even if he caught the ball or not. But I saw him jump up. I saw Dansby put his hands up. I was like, yeah, third in line on the reaction.

You know, he’s a good hitter. I tip my cap. What a play by Rosario. I think that’s why he’s got the nickname Super Rosario right now.”

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NFL Week 8 scores, highlights, updates, schedule: Patriots' Adrian Phillips grabs 2nd INT, returns it for a TD - CBS Sports

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It's the eighth Sunday of the 2021 NFL season and we're keeping you updated on all the action and biggest storylines throughout the day. The Week 8 slate has some fantastic matchups and storylines, and we're here to help you watch it unfold. Check back often to find out everything you need to know.

Schedule

Thursday

Packers 24, Cardinals 21 (Recap)

Sunday 

Panthers 19, Falcons 13 (Recap)
Eagles 44, Lions 6 (Takeaways)
Rams 38, Texans 22 (Recap)
Jets 34, Bengals 31 (Recap)
Bills 26, Dolphins 11 (Recap)
Steelers 15, Browns 10 (Takeaways)
49ers 33, Bears 22 (Takeaways)
Titans 34, Colts 31 (OT) (Takeaways)
Jaguars at Seahawks, (GameTracker)
Patriots at Chargers, (GameTracker)
Buccaneers at Saints, (GameTracker)
Washington at Broncos, (GameTracker)
Cowboys at Vikings, 8:20 p.m. ET (Preview)

Monday

Giants at Chiefs, 8:15 p.m. ET (Preview)

Pick-six puts Pats ahead

Justin Herbert has been outstanding over his first season and a half in the NFL, but he'll definitely want his fourth-quarter throw against the Patriots back. With Jared Cook head still upfield, Herbert's pass fell into the hands of a diving Adrian Phillips, who quickly got up and returned his second interception of the day 26 yards for the touchdown. A subsequent two-point conversion gave New England a 24-17 lead.

Heinicke drops a dime

Washington has finally found the end zone, and it came on a beautiful throw from Taylor Heinicke to DeAndre Carter from 20 yards out. All tied up in Denver!

Fullback TD

I can say with confidence that Trevor Siemian to Alex Armah will be the unlikeliest touchdown connection in Week 8. The 1-yard score, which gave the Saints a 16-7 lead, marked Siemian's first touchdown pass since 2017 and Armah's first-ever receiving score and first overall score since 2019.

Gordon dives for game's first TD

Denver and Washington went without a touchdown for almost 29 minutes before Melvin Gordon caught a pass out of the backfield. beat a defender to the sideline, cut up the field and dived into the end zone. 

Saints strip Brady

Despite Jameis Winston being carted off the field with a knee injury, the Saints have still hung tough against the Buccaneers on both sides of the ball. With Tampa Bay threatening to go ahead, Cameron Jordan not only stripped Brady but recovered the fumble. Then backup quarterback Trevor Siemian led the offense on a 10-play, 58-yard drive that ended with a short go-ahead field goal.

Broncos block FG

They should start calling Chris Blewitt "Chris Blockedit" because out of his three field goals since signing with Washington's active roster Oct. 21, he's had two of his attempts blocked. Shelby Harris got his hand on this one to keep Washington off the board.

DK snags TD

Geno Smith threw a laser toward the front-right pylon, and DK Metcalf, with a defender draped all over him, picked it out of the air and got both feet in bounds for the 16-yard touchdown. Great coverage, but a better throw and an even better catch.

Game-winning FG! 

The Titans took a huge step toward winning the AFC South with a 34-31 win over the Colts in overtime. Randy Bullock was the hero, as his 44-yard field goal gave Tennessee the win and a three-game lead in the division.

Just because Russell Wilson is sidelined doesn't mean Tyler Lockett stops making beautiful over-the-shoulder grabs. His latest came via Geno Smith for a 27-yard gain that set up the Seahawks' first touchdown.

Jets lead! 

All hope looked lost for the Jets down, 31-20, in the fourth quarter, but after a touchdown, interception from defensive end Carl Lawson, and another touchdown, and a Mike White catch for the two-point conversion, New York took a three-point lead with just under four minutes to play. The Jets held on to win, 34-31, as White threw for 405 yards.

Magical TD scramble

There was nothing, and I mean nothing, there for Justin Fields on fourth-and-one from the 49ers' 22-yard line. But Fields is no ordinary quarterback, capable of making defenders look silly, and that's what he did, avoiding several 49ers on his way to the end zone for by far the biggest highlight of his young NFL career.

Darnold takes massive hit

Sam Darnold has had tremendous success running the ball against the Falcons (team-high eight carries for 66 yards), but sometimes it's just better to slide. Darnold tried to run through the Atlanta defense on his way to the end zone. Instead, he took a massive hit that nearly took his helmet off and resulted in him leaving the game.

Burrow, Higgins connect deep

We know Tee Higgins can make the most contested of catches, so the wide-open ones are almost automatic for the Clemson product. He got behind the defense late in the third quarter, and Burrow found him in stride for a massive pickup.

Scoop and score!

The Eagles deserve all the candy for how they're playing, albeit against the winless Lions. Philadelphia tacked on yet another touchdown thanks to the defense, as Darius Slay picked up a fumble and waltzed across the goal line from 33 yards out.

Josh Allen has been discarding Dolphins defenders all afternoon, but through the majority of three quarters, he and the Bills have managed just a single field goal. That changed on first-and-goal from the eight, when Allen shed a face mask before looping a pass to a wide open Gabriel Davis.

3rd-and-20 = 83-yard gain?!

Facing 3rd-and-20 from their own 16-yard line, the 49ers were probably thinking, "Let's just get this ball out to Deebo Samuel behind the line of scrimmage and let him help out our punter." But Samuel is no ordinary receiver, so when he caught the ball, he stepped out of one tackle, weaved through the Chicago defense and was off to the races, bringing the ball down to the 1-yard line before finally being knocked out of bounce. San Francisco scored a few plays later to pull within a point.

Jets WRs making tough catches 

Despite three first-half turnovers, the Jets only trail by three at halftime against the Bengals. That's because of this sweet Braxton Berrios touchdown grab, which came moments after Keelan Cole's catch of the year candidate was overturned.

The Colts should have had the ball in plus territory after an interception. Instead, Tyquan Lewis fumbled, the Titans recovered, and on the next play, A.J. Brown tied up the game with a 57-yard catch and run into the end zone.

Insane grab!

I don't know how Tee Higgins came down with this pass down the right sideline in the second quarter against the Jets. Watch for yourself as Higgins set up the go-ahead score.

Eagles trickery 

The Eagles dug into their bag of tricks in the second quarter against the Lions, as Kenneth Gainwell took the pitch and then threw back to Jalen Hurts, who hit a tightly covered Dallas Goedert for a sizable gain. It wasn't pretty, but it was effective, and it led to Philadelphia's second touchdown of the game to go ahead 17-0.

He's here, he's there, he's everywhere. No it's not Roy Kent; it's Falcons weapon Cordarrelle Patterson, who's been hurting defenses in a variety of ways this season. He scored his seventh touchdown of the year Sunday, catching a short pass from Matt Ryan and doing the rest for a 15-yard score.

Fields fires pretty TD

Bears rookie Justin Fields is making up for his miserable performance against the Buccaneers last week. He's completed seven of his first eight passes for 72 yards and this smooth touchdown throw on the run to put Chicago ahead.

Wentz + Pittman = Titans' nightmare

The Titans cruised against the Chiefs last week, but they're in trouble early against their division rivals. A Ryan Tannehill interception set up the Colts inside the 10-yard line, and on the next play, Carson Wentz hit Michael Pittman Jr. for the duo's second touchdown connection of the day. 

Jets lead! 

Hardly anyone gave the Jets a chance to hang with the Bengals after both teams' performances last week, but New York came out firing in front of their home crowd this afternoon. Ten plays, 75 yards and rookie Michael Carter's eight-yard touchdown has New York in front.

4th-down TD

The Colts know field goals will not be enough to beat the Titans, so on fourth-and-goal from the two-yard line, they kept their offense on the field. Their aggressiveness was rewarded, as Carson Wentz found Michael Pittman in the middle of the end zone for a score on the opening drive.

First-play fumble!

The Panthers are looking to get back into the win column after three straight defeats, but their Week 8 game against the Falcons started about as bad as it could have. Chuba Hubbard fumbled on the first play from scrimmage, allowing the Falcons to take over just outside of the red zone. They couldn't do anything offensively but took the early lead on a field goal.

Saints, Colts look to close in on division leaders

The eye test casts the New Orleans Saints as an underwhelming team, but despite their offensive struggles (fourth-worst in the NFL in total offense), they sit just a game and a half behind the reigning Super Bowl champion Buccaneers with a chance to pull even closer this afternoon in front of their home crowd (4:25 p.m. ET on Fox, stream on fuboTV, try for free).

The Colts, who lost four of their first five games, have their own golden opportunity against the AFC South-leading Titans, coming off the most-impressive back-to-back wins (vs. Bills and Chiefs) of any team this year. With a healthy Carson Wentz and a nearly unstoppable Jonathan Taylor (5.5 yards per carry in 2021), Indianapolis will look to get back to .500 and climb within a game of Tennessee while splitting the season series (1 p.m. ET on CBS, stream on Paramount+).

The final crucial division battle comes in the AFC North, though neither team is vying for the top spot as their campaigns reach the midway point. A win for either the Cleveland Browns or Pittsburgh Steelers would allow them to stay within striking distance of the Ravens and Bengals, while a loss would cement their last-place standing, making it more and more likely that their playoff hopes would be tied to making the wild card. Expect a physical, low-scoring affair at the Dawg Pound at 1 p.m. ET on CBS (stream on Paramount+).

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NFL Week 8 scores, highlights, updates, schedule: Patriots' Adrian Phillips grabs 2nd INT, returns it for a TD - CBS Sports
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New Orleans Saints QB Jameis Winston carted off with injured knee after horse-collar tackle - ESPN

NEW ORLEANS -- New Orleans Saints quarterback Jameis Winston was carted back to the locker room with a knee injury during the second quarter of Sunday's game against his former team, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

He was officially ruled out after halftime.

Winston was injured during a horse-collar tackle by Buccaneers linebacker Devin White -- who was flagged 15 yards for pulling Winston down by the shoulder area of his jersey, forcing Winston to land awkwardly. Winston's left leg got pinned behind him as he hit the turf.

Trainers and medical staff looked at him on the field before helping him limp slowly to the sideline and into the medical tent. He was later assisted onto a cart and driven back to the locker room. Several teammates hugged Winston on his way off the field, including injured receiver Michael Thomas, who was watching the game on the sideline in street clothes.

Winston was replaced by veteran backup Trevor Siemian -- the only other QB available for the Saints. Backup Taysom Hill has been sidelined with a concussion since Week 5, and rookie Ian Book was a healthy inactive.

Winston completed 6 of 10 passes for 56 yards and a touchdown and scrambled four times for 40 yards before leaving the game with the score tied 7-7.

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Saints' Jameis Winston looking for a win, not revenge vs Buccaneers - Fox News

New Orleans Saints quarterback Jameis Winston is certainly looking forward to Sunday’s game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but for him, it's not about revenge. 

Winston was drafted by the Bucs with the No. 1 overall pick in 2015 and instantly became the team’s starting quarterback. After a solid rookie season, with several franchise records, Winston slowly began to decline. 

DREW BREES SEES POTENTIAL IN JAMEIS WINSTON AS THE FUTURE OF THE SAINTS: ‘HE’S A TREMENDOUS TALENT’ 

In his final season with the Bucs, he threw an astounding 30 interceptions and was eventually released to make room for Tom Brady, who led Tampa Bay to a Super Bowl that same season. 

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston looks to pass during the first half against the Tennessee Titans in Tampa, Florida, on Sept. 13, 2015.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston looks to pass during the first half against the Tennessee Titans in Tampa, Florida, on Sept. 13, 2015. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, File)

Both sides will face off on Sunday evening for the first time since Winston took over as starter but he told reporters this week that it’s not about revenge. 

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"I’m trying to go out there and beat everybody that we play no matter who it is," he said, via WWL Radio. "I think that’s the most important thing … that I’ve learned in this league. It’s about winning games. And any way that I can do that, win games, I’m up for that."

New Orleans Saints quarterback Jameis Winston throws a pass in the first half against the Washington Football Team, Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021, in Landover, Maryland.

New Orleans Saints quarterback Jameis Winston throws a pass in the first half against the Washington Football Team, Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021, in Landover, Maryland. ((AP Photo/Julio Cortez))

Winston played just four games behind Drew Brees last season but has led the team to a 4-2 record, just second in the NFC South behind the Bucs. 

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​​"I’ve always been an emotional football player. I think that’s something that I’m trying to work on, being present instead of being stuck in my feelings," Winston continued. "As a quarterback, we have to be present at all times and aware of everything that’s going on. Sometimes too much emotion can lead us to places that we don’t want to go. I come from a level of gratitude and optimism."

Jameis Winston of the New Orleans Saints looks on against the Seattle Seahawks during the fourth quarter at Lumen Field on Oct. 25, 2021, in Seattle, Washington.

Jameis Winston of the New Orleans Saints looks on against the Seattle Seahawks during the fourth quarter at Lumen Field on Oct. 25, 2021, in Seattle, Washington. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Winston has thrown 1,114 yards for 13 touchdowns and 3 interceptions and has 11 sacks this season.

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Week 8: Colts vs Titans, Open Thread - Stampede Blue

The Tennessee Titans come to Lucas Oil Sunday for a huge divisional matchup against the Indianapolis Colts.

Currently sitting at 3-4, a win would boost the Colts’ chances at making the playoffs. A loss, on the other hand, would put the Titans ahead by two games within the division and makes a playoff push much more difficult.

Unlike in their Week 3 matchup, things are much different this time around. Quarterback Carson Wentz is completely healthy and has been playing some of the best football of his career over the last month. The same goes for Indianapolis’ offensive line, who’ll have all five starters playing in a game for the first time all season.

On the other side, Titans’ running back Derrick Henry has been tough to stifle in each of his meetings with the Colts. In his last six starts against Indy, Henry has rushed for nearly 120 yards. It won’t be easy slowing the NFL’s leading rusher down Sunday, but the Colts can’t let Henry take over the game.

There’s a lot at stake for both teams, but the Colts desperately need to find a way to win on their home turf Sunday in order to keep pace for the AFC South title this season.

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AP Top 25 poll: Michigan State jumps Ohio State for No. 5 in new college football rankings - CBS Sports

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Michigan State's thrilling 37-33 win against Michigan was one of the best games of the week and the AP Top 25 poll voters took note of the Spartans' stock, moving them up to No. 5 in the new college football rankings. 

Georgia remains the unanimous No. 1 after rolling Florida in its rivalry game, followed by Cincinnati at No. 2, Alabama at No. 3 and Oklahoma at No. 4. Michigan State's move to No. 5 bumps Ohio State down one spot to No. 6 after its win against Penn State, while Michigan fell just three spots to No. 9. 

Wake Forest also moved up three spots to No. 10, its highest-ranking ever. Wake Forest had been the only team in a Power Five conference that had never been ranked in the top 10.

Losses by the likes of Iowa, Ole Miss and Kentucky -- ranked No. 9, No. 10 and No. 12, respectively, in last week's poll -- freed up plenty of room for upward momentum for teams who notched big wins in Week 9. Notre Dame moved up to No. 8 after beating North Carolina and Auburn moved up six spots to No. 12 after its impressive SEC West win against Ole Miss. 

Further down in the rankings there was a soft landing for Ole Miss at No. 15, Kentucky at No. 18 and Iowa at No. 19 after Week 9 losses while Pitt, San Diego State and Iowa State  fell all the way out of the top 25. Those results allowed Houston, Louisiana and Fresno State, which handed San Diego State its first loss of the season, to break into the rankings. 

Check out the full AP Top 25 below: 

  1. Georgia (63 first-place votes)
  2. Cincinnati
  3. Alabama
  4. Oklahoma
  5. Michigan State 
  6. Ohio State 
  7. Oregon 
  8. Notre Dame
  9. Michigan 
  10. Wake Forest 
  11. Oklahoma State 
  12. Auburn
  13. Texas A&M
  14. Baylor
  15. Ole Miss
  16. UTSA
  17. BYU
  18. Kentucky 
  19. Iowa 
  20. Houston
  21. Coastal Carolina 
  22. Penn State
  23. SMU
  24. Louisiana 
  25. Fresno State 

Others Receiving Votes: Pittsburgh 117, North Carolina State 104, Wisconsin 91, Mississippi State 79, Arkansas 72, Minnesota 51, San Diego State 50, Appalachian State 23, Utah 11, Iowa State 9, Nevada 2

Dropped out: No. 17 Pitt, No. 21 San Diego State, No. 22 Iowa State

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NFL Week Eight early inactives: Jadeveon Clowney, Odell Beckham will play for Browns - NBC Sports - NFL

Denver Broncos v Cleveland Browns
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Every week we bring you all the inactives from the 1 p.m. ET games in one post, constantly updated with the latest information.

The Browns won’t have to take on the Steelers without wide receiver Odell Beckham or defensive end Jadeveon Clowney. Both players were listed as questionable on Friday, but will be in the lineup in Cleveland on Sunday afternoon.

Cleveland is also getting quarterback Baker Mayfield and running back Nick Chubb back in the lineup. Mayfield missed last week’s win over the Broncos with a left shoulder injury and Chubb has missed the last two games with a calf injury.

Steelers at Browns

Steelers: TE Eric Ebron, LB Melvin Ingram, QB Dwayne Haskins, CB Ahkello Witherspoon, LB Buddy Johnson, OL Zach Banner

Browns: WR Donovan Peoples-Jones, CB Denzel Ward, CB A.J. Green, S Richard LeCounte, DE Takkarist McKinley, G Hjalte Froholdt, DT Tommy Togiai

Dolphins at Bills

Dolphins: CB Noah Igbinoghene, OL Greg Little, WR Preston Williams, DB Trill Williams, TE Hunter Long, DL John Jenkins, LB Jerome Baker, S Sheldrick Redwine

Bills: TE Dawson Knox, T Spencer Brown, DE Boogie Basham, RB Matt Breida, DT Justin Zimmer, DE Efe Obada

49ers at Bears

49ers: DT Maurice Hurst, DE Dee Ford, S Jaquiski Tartt, OL Aaron Banks, LB Azeez Al-Shaair, DB Deommodore Lenoir, CB Ambry Thomas, WR Travis Benjamin

Bears: LB Khalil Mack, QB Nick Foles, CB Artie Burns, WR Breshad Perriman, LB Caleb Johnson

Rams at Texans

Rams: WR DeSean Jackson, T Andrew Whitworth, DT Sebastian Joseph-Day, QB Bryce Perkins, LB Chris Garrett, OL Tremayne Anchrum, TE Brycen Hopkins

Texans: QB Deshaun Watson, DB Cre’von Leblanc, DB Jimmy Moreland, DB Desmond King, WR Davion Davis, TE Pharoah Brown, DL Jaleel Johnson

Eagles at Lions

Eagles: CB Zech McPhearson, QB Reid Sinnett, S Anthony Harris, CB Mac McCain, LB Eric Wilson, OL Jack Anderson, OL Sua Opeta

Lions: RB Jamaal Williams, CB AJ Parker, TE Darren Fells, WR Geronimo Allison, LB Jessie Lemonier, WR Jashon Cornell

Bengals at Jets

Bengals: RB Chris Evans, WR Auden Tate, CB Nick McCloud, DE Darius Hodge, DE Wyatt Ray, DT Tyler Shelvin

Jets: QB Zach Wilson, WR Corey Davis, RB Tevin Coleman, DE Bryce Huff, TE Trevon Wesco, QB Joe Flacco, DL Jonathan Marshall

Titans at Colts

Titans: WR Julio Jones, FB Khari Blasingame, DB Brady Breeze, LB Rashaan Evans, LB John Simon, T Kendall Lamm, DT Teair Tart

Colts: CB Thakarius Keyes, QB Sam Ehlinger, WR Mike Strachan, DL Ben Banogu, OL Julien Davenport, OL Will Fries, DL Isaac Rochell

Panthers at Falcons

Panthers: WR Terrace Marshall, CB CJ Henderson, LB Kamal Martin, DT Phil Hoskins,

Falcons: WR Calvin Ridley, RB Wayne Gallman, LB Dorian Etheridge, DL John Cominsky, OL Josh Andrews, DL Ta'Quon Graham

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NFL Week Eight early inactives: Jadeveon Clowney, Odell Beckham will play for Browns - NBC Sports - NFL
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Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes on Lamar Jackson: He’s the MVP for a reason - Arrowhead Pride

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes is no stranger to high-profile matchups. Mahomes will face his biggest one of the season, h...