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Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Saudi Arabia vs Mexico summary: Mexico out, score, goals, highlights 1-2 | Qatar World Cup 2022 - AS USA

FULL TIME!

FT: Saudi Arabia    1-2   ​​​​​​​Mexico

​​​​​​​Match report and reaction coming up...

So, it was not to be for Mexico, who showed the spirit and attacking talent that they so lacked in previous games this tournament. The intent was there from the first whistle, and they made Saudi Arabia look practically non-existent all game. The Asian side had no control and tried their best to hold back the Mexican relentlessness but had no other choice but to suffer it.

Martin was excellent all game, as was Chávez, who would be my player of the match. Hirving Lozano provided constant threat, but I can't help but think that sometimes he could have used his teammates more than he did. 

A comment about Ochoa and the defence is basically useless, as they hardly participated all game. Sánchez at right back did well in support in the first half before Chucky moved to the left and Pineda linked up excellently with both of them. 

But, in the end, the two poor results - especially the lacklustre performance against Poland - is where the problems lie for Mexico, and Tata Martino will have to answer serious questions about why he didn't bring along the young, upcoming, attacking talent that Mexico has. 

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Saudi Arabia vs Mexico summary: Mexico out, score, goals, highlights 1-2 | Qatar World Cup 2022 - AS USA
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Matt Ryan will remain Colts’ starting quarterback - NBC Sports

NFL: NOV 28 Steelers at Colts
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The Colts announced on Oct. 24 that Sam Ehlinger would start at quarterback the rest of the season. After Jeff Saturday replaced Frank Reich on Nov. 7, Saturday said Ehlinger remained the starter.

Ehlinger was replaced six days later and hasn’t seen the field since.

Even though the Colts, at 4-7-1, realistically have nothing left to play for, they are sticking with veteran Matt Ryan.

“Matt’s going to continue being the guy,” Saturday said after Monday night’s loss to the Steelers.

Between the two quarterbacks, the Colts have 11 touchdown passes in 12 games.

Ryan, 37, has a passer rating of 86.3. The only season he had a worse rating was his second season (2009) when he had an 80.9. He has 11 touchdowns and 10 interceptions.

In two starts, Ehlinger had no touchdowns and an interception.

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Matt Ryan will remain Colts’ starting quarterback - NBC Sports
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One thing we learned about each NFL team in Week 12: Chiefs' major weakness unveiled; Broncos star CB in slump - CBS Sports

NFL: Houston Texans at Kansas City Chiefs
USATSI

The NFL certainly had an interesting Week 12 slate of games, including a record number of comebacks. Sunday was the first time in NFL history that four teams won after trailing by seven-plus points in the final two minutes of regulation. In all, five games were decided by a game-winning score in the final two minutes of regulation or in overtime this week.

The Jacksonville Jaguars and Los Angeles Chargers scored the game-winning points on a two-point conversion in the final 15 seconds of the fourth quarter, the first time in NFL history this has occurred on the same day (and just the third and fourth time overall). The league has seen the most comebacks through 12 weeks in history. 

As the league switches into December, here's one thing we learned about each team in Week 12  with the playoff races heating up. 

Kyler Murray finally has DeAndre Hopkins and Marquise Brown in the lineup: It only took the Cardinals until the last week of November to finally have their top two receivers in the lineup. Hopkins and Brown combined for 10 catches (on 14 targets) for 133 yards and a touchdown in the loss to the Chargers. 

Even with both of his top receivers in the lineup, Murray averaged just 6.6 yards per attempt (slightly above his season average of 6.4). The Cardinals also went three-and-out on their last three possessions, targeting Brown and Hopkins only once. That's unacceptable. 

Arizona has added weapons in its offense, yet the results remain the same. 

Tackling remains an issue on a tired defense: The Commanders made sure the Falcons defense was on the field for the majority of the second half in Sunday's loss. The Commanders held the ball for 19:42 in the second half, exposing tackling woes that have plagued the Falcons the majority of the year. 

Atlanta missed seven tackles against the run, and part of that was a result of being on the field for 60 plays as the Commanders won the time of possession battle in the second half. Atlanta hasn't stopped the run all year (21st in the league) and part of the issue is the missed tackles in run-stop situations. 

The Falcons allow 27.9% of first downs via the rush, the third-highest rate in the league. Not good. 

Red zone issues part of another late-game collapses: This collapse can absolutely be blamed on the defense, but let's not miss the fact Baltimore went 2 of 5 in the red zone in Sunday's loss to the Jaguars. In goal-to-go situations, Baltimore was 1 of 3 -- as Lamar Jackson was only 1 for 4 for 5 yards in those situations. 

The Ravens are 24th in the NFL in red zone offense (51.7%) and 20th in goal-to-go situations (66.7%). Jackson completed just 46.4% of his passes in the red zone, although he has 13 touchdown passes -- but only six since Week 4. 

If the Ravens score more touchdowns in the red zone, perhaps the two-score collapses will be less frequent. That was part of the case this week. 

Welcome back, Tre'Davious White: In his first game this season, White played 15 of the Bills' 67 defensive snaps in the Thanksgiving win over Detroit. The Bills have been waiting for their superstar cornerback to return from his ACL tear, and it finally happened.

In his first game back, White wasn't even targeted in his seven coverage snaps. He already earned the respect form the Lions offense, even in a game where he was the most vulnerable. 

White's snaps will increase during the stretch run, and the Bills pass defense could use him for the playoffs. Buffalo's 19th in pass yards per game allowed and 13th in passing touchdowns allowed, so White is a more-than-welcome addition. 

Brian Burns is one of the elite pass rushers: Plenty in Carolina know how good Burts is, but is play isn't nearly talked about enough amongst the elite pass rushers in the game. Burns finished with eight pressures, three quarterback hits, and two sacks to lead a Carolina defense that held the Broncos to just three points in the first  57 minutes.

Burns has been terrorizing quarterbacks all season, as the Pro Bowler now has 10 sacks on the year. He also has 53 pressures, 17 quarterback hits, and a 14.8% pressure rate. Burns is fourth in the NFL in pressures and tied for fifth in sacks. He's one of the elite pass rushers in a game.

Perhaps Carolina not winning is why he isn't discussed enough amongst the best at his position. 

Offense has to get Chase Claypool going: Claypool had his best game in his short time with the Bears, finishing with two catches for 51 yards in a game where Justin Fields didn't play. With Darnell Mooney out for an extended period of time (perhaps the rest of the year), it's time for Claypool to step up. 

The 51 receiving yards amassed his output through his first three games. Claypool only had just 5 catches for 32 yards in his first three games with the Bears (7 catches for 83 yards overall). If the Bears are going to thrive when Fields gets back, they need to focus on Claypool more and get him acclimated to the offense. 

There are two No. 1 wide receivers on this roster: It didn't take much to convince most people Tee Higgins would step up in the absence of Ja'Marr Chase, but Higgins put up No. 1 wide receiver numbers in the four games Chase missed. Higgins had 26 catches for 371 yards and two touchdowns over the last four games, averaging 14.3 yards per catch. 

He had 16 catches for 262 yards and a touchdown over the last two games (16.4 yards per catch), Chase-like numbers. The Bengals are going to be even more dangerous when Chase returns, knowing opposing defenses will have to stop Higgins too. 

Good luck. 

Jacoby Brissett gives Browns a shot in 2022 with Deshaun Watson returning: A 4-7 start may still be too much to overcome for the Browns to make the playoffs, but their playoff hopes would have been smashed with a loss to the Buccaneers. Brissett wasn't great in Sunday's win (23 of 37, 216 yards, touchdown and interception), but he was 8 of 14 for 116 yards with a touchdown in the fourth quarter and overtime (108.0 rating). 

Brissett held down the fort while Watson was suspended, compiling an 89.1 passer rating in the 11 games he played. With the Browns three games out of a playoff spot and six to play, it may be too late. At least Brissett went out a winner and gave them an outside chance. 

The tight ends are more dangerous than they let on: Dalton Schultz looks back to his 2021 self after catching two touchdown passes against the Giants on Thanksgiving. Schultz had his third touchdown in the last three weeks, while having 13 catches for 107 yards in that span. 

Peyton Hendershot also scored a touchdown on a jet sweep, making him a red zone threat if the Cowboys want to go to two tight end sets. This also includes the dangerous running back tandem of Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard to account for. 

The Cowboys have plenty of dangerous red zone targets, but now defenses have to account for the tight ends. Expect them to be utilized more in the coming weeks. 

Patrick Surtain is in a slump: Surtain is one of the best coverage corners in the game, but his last two games have been far from elite. In Sunday's loss, Surtain was targeted five times and allowed three catches for 77 yards and a touchdown (104.2 rating when targeted). That touchdown was the five-yard pass to Moore. 

The week prior, Surtain allowed five catches for 106 yards and two touchdowns (118.8 rating). These were the only two games Surtain has allowed over an 80 passer rating all year. Surtain has allowed three touchdowns passes the last two weeks (zero the previous eight). 

Surtain is a great cornerback, but he's struggled of late. 

The Lions have a significant guard problem: Injuries derailed the Lions at guard on Thanksgiving. Detroit had 71 snaps each from Kayode Awosika and Dan Skipper (along with four more from Logan Stenberg). Awosika and Skipper combined to allow four pressures and two sacks, as Jared Goff faced pressure up the middle throughout the game. 

The Bills also had seven tackles for loss and 10 quarterback hits. The Lions were held to 3.4 yards per carry, but that's expected when the No. 5 and No. 6 guards are starting. Halapoulivaati Vaitai is likely done for the year and Tommy Kraemer has been out since Week 7. Evan Brown (ankle) and Jonah Jackson (concussion) may be back this week, which will help.

Detroit has a good offensive line, but it needs Brown and Jackson back to get back on the winning track. 

Two-minute defense still isn't good: The Packers have been abysmal on defense in the final two minutes of the first half this season, allowing 60 points in the 12 games played. That's five points per game. 

The two-minute defense reared its ugly heading Sunday's loss to the Eagles, as Philadelphia got the ball with 2:16 left and drove nine plays for 66 yards and a touchdown -- picking apart Green Bay's defense in the process. 

Green Bay had the Eagles facing second-and-10 from the Packers' 30-yard line with 19 seconds left, but Jalen Hurts threw a ball on the money to Quez Watkins -- who made a spectacular catch for the touchdown. Hurts was 5 of 6 for 73 yards on the drive and he was sacked twice. 

The Packers just don't make plays to end the first half -- and they ended up losing by four on Sunday. 

Dameon Pierce has hit the rookie wall: The Texans are already the worst team in the NFL, and their offense is nonexistent when Pierce can't get going. Pierce has 15 carries for 16 yards over the last two games, and the Texans have averaged just 4.5 points over the first three quarters in that stretch. 

Pierce is still a front-runner to win rookie of the year, but opposing defenses know they have to stop him to shut down the Texans. He has 788 rushing yards and four touchdowns, but the yards per carry average slipped to 4.4.

The Texans have to get more creative to free up Pierce in the final six games. Teams are just loading the box now. 

Run defense had another off night: After allowing 141 rushing yards to the Eagles, conventional wisdom suggested the Colts run defense would bounce back against the Steelers. All Pittsburgh did was rush for 172 yards and average 4.8 yards per carry against Indianapolis -- a team that had allowed just 3.9 yards per carry on the year. 

Benny Snell didn't have a carry all year, yet had 12 carries for 62 yards and a touchdown. The Colts held Najee Harris to 35 yards, but still let the Steelers offensive line bully them on the ground. Kenny Pickett generating 32 yards didn't help matters. 

Quarterbacks that can run definitely hurt the Colts. Dak Prescott may want to make a note of that this week. 

Jacksonville Jaguars

Trevor Lawrence had his best fourth-quarter performance: Lawrence showcased why he's the franchise quarterback the Jaguars envisioned he was when they took him No. 1 overall. In the fourth quarter against one of the most aggressive defenses in football, Lawrence went 15 of 19 for 173 yards with two touchdowns to zero interceptions and a 139.7 passer rating 

Sunday was just the second time in Jaguars history they won a game when trailing by seven-plus points in the final two minutes of regulation (first since 1996), all thanks to how Lawrence played. He has completed 66.5% of his passes for 2,655 yards with 16 touchdowns and six interceptions (93.6 rating) -- all significant improvements over his disastrous rookie year. 

Over the last three games, Lawrence has completed 28 of 36 passes for 272 yards and three touchdowns in the fourth quarter (125.9 rating). The Jaguars quarterback is figuring out how to perform late in games, an excellent sign.

Special teams is the lone weakness: The Chiefs are last in the league in hidden points at a -9.3 (per Football Outsiders), a sign their special teams is getting taken advantage of by opposing field goals, kickoff distance, and punt distance. Kansas City is at a huge disadvantage here, which is probably why the Rams tried a fake punt against Kansas City in Sunday's game -- and converted. 

Teams have tried to take away possessions from Kansas City to keep Patrick Mahomes and the offense off the field. Special teams could cost the Chiefs a Super Bowl appearance. 

Josh Jacobs bails Josh McDaniels out: McDaniels had a questionable decision in overtime to kick a field goal in fourth-and-2 from the Seahawks' 38-yard line -- and Daniel Carlson missed the 56-yard kick. He's fortunate to get the ball back after Seattle was held to a three-and-out, which set the stage for Jacobs and his 86-yard winning touchdown. 

With how Jacobs played (313 yards of total offense), giving him the ball in a short-yardage situation seemed like a no-brainer. Not for McDaniels, even though a field goal wasn't winning that game. McDaniels also passed on challenging a Seattle run defense that can't stop anyone -- with arguably the best running back in the league this year. 

How many wins would this team have without Jacobs? 

Los Angeles Chargers

Justin Herbert finally got going running the football: Due to Herbert's rib cartilage injury, the Chargers quarterback hasn't been as mobile as he's been in previous seasons. Herbert rushed for a season-high 38 yards on four carries (9.5 yards per carry), including a 23-yard run that helped set up a final quarter where he finished 13 of 17 for 84 yards and a touchdown -- including a two-point conversion that set the Chargers up for a crucial win. 

Herbert had 536 rushing yards and eight touchdowns in his first two seasons, averaging 4.5 yards per carry. This season, he has just 128 yards and no rushing touchdowns (3.6 yards per carry). What makes Herbert dangerous throwing the football is his ability to extend the pocket and make plays, along with taking off in open space.

Herbert may be getting back to his 2021 version with his rib injury improving by the week. 

Tutu Atwell needs to play more: The Rams already have more injuries at wide receiver than they can handle, but it shouldn't have taken them this long to give Atwell a shot. Atwell had just two catches for 23 yards Sunday, but caught both his targets. 

Atwell isn't a one-trick pony and isn't getting the targets he should be getting. With Allen Robinson and Cooper Kupp out, it's time to give Atwell a fair shot in the passing game -- even with that being limited. The Rams are thinking about 2023 anyway, and Atwell could be a valuable piece in that offense. 

Terron Armstead is the key to this offense: Forget how well Tua Tagovailoa is playing, how dominant Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle are, or how efficient the run game is. This offense doesn't function as efficiently without Armstead -- whose addition arguably was the Dolphins' best offseason move. 

Armstead suffered a pectoral injury late in the first half and didn't return, significantly altering the pass offense. Tagovailoa was sacked four times in a span of nine plays, but was 2 of 2 for 21 yards in the second half. The Dolphins were wise to pull Tagovailoa when they did, but Armstead is going to be out for a bit. 

The Dolphins will have to survive without their Pro Bowl left tackle, and keep Tagovailoa upright in the process. This offense doesn't function consistently if QB1 is pressured. 

Kirk Cousins can perform in prime time after all: The Vikings really shut down the "Kirk Cousins can't play in prime time" narrative, as the quarterback went 30 of 37 for 299 yards with three touchdowns and one interception (116.5 rating) in a win over a Patriots defense that is one of the best in the league. 

Cousins is just 11-18 as a starter in night games in his career, but he avenged the three-interception performance in a Week 2 loss to the Eagles (which was a night game). He still only has an 81.4 passer rating with four touchdowns and four interceptions in two night games this season, but Cousins got rid of some prime time demons in Week 12. 

Uncharacteristic mistakes from a Bill Belichick team: The Patriots' two-minute drill in the first half had a few mental lapses, starting with Hunter Henry failing to get out of bounds off a 22-yard catch, forcing Belichick to use a timeout. The next mistake happened later in the drive, as Mac Jones slid on a run rather than force an incomplete pass. 

Belichick was fired up having to use another time out and forcing Nick Folk to convert a field goal on third down. Four points may have been taken off the board in a game New England lost by seven. 

Belichick coached teams just don't make those mental lapses. Very odd to see that from the Patriots. 

The offense may prevent them from winning another game the rest of the year: As if Sunday's shutout loss to the 49ers wasn't bad enough, where do the Saints have another win in them? The offense has averaged just 253 yards per game and 12.5 points per game over the last four weeks, numbers no where near good enough to win games in the NFL. 

Sure, three of the Saints' last six games are against the NFC South -- but can anyone really expect New Orleans to compete with these teams knowing how inconsistent the offense is? Alvin Kamara can't get going and there aren't many available options at wide receiver outside of Chris Olave. Andy Dalton hasn't been good either. 

Pete Carmichael's future may be in doubt if this play keeps up. 

'21 personnel' needed to help Saquon Barkley: It's no coincidence Barkley's slump is coinciding with the Giants' first losing streak of the year. Barkley has just 26 carries for 61 yards over his last two games, as defenses have certainly zeroed in on stopping him -- and the Giants offense in the process.

The Giants are trying to use '21 personnel' -- or a two-back system -- to combat this. Gary Brightwell was the back paired with Barkley in this set, having five carries for 31 yards late in the game. New York has to get more creative on offense to get Barkley going, which hasn't been a problem until the last few weeks. 

Perhaps more '21 personnel' will do the trick. 

Mike White got Elijah Moore going: The key benefit to Mike White starting over Zach Wilson was that the Jets wide receivers could actually play to their talent level. Just ask Elijah Moore, who finished with two catches for 64 yards and a touchdown in Sunday's win over Chicago. 

Moore's had a rough season in New York, but Sunday was his highest yardage output of the year. Not a coincidence when White was starting. Prior to last week, Moore had just three catches for 28 yards since Week 5 and had a public disagreement with the franchise. 

Maybe having a quarterback that can get the ball to his receivers will get Moore back to being the player he was in his rookie year. 

Reed Blankenship may be good enough to start: Blankenship was the man the Eagles called upon when C.J. Gardner-Johnson had to leave Sunday's game with a lacerated kidney, getting the nod over K'Von Wallace in the role. Blankenship picked off Aaron Rodgers, who had a 0.0 passer rating when targeting him (that was Rodgers' only target his way). 

Blankenship was going 100 miles per hour at skill position players looking to make plays, a different approach than how most defenders play skill position players in the league. His play may be a breath of fresh air for a defense that could use a hard hitter over the next few weeks. 

The Eagles will need to see more of Blankenship, but he proved he's good enough to start the next week. There aren't many other options on the roster, at least until Avonte Maddox comes back (if Philadelphia wants to move him out of the slot). 

Kenny Pickett continues to thrive against the blitz: Pickett has a 71.7% completion rate against the blitz, which is the highest among all NFL quarterbacks. In Monday's win over the Colts, Pickett went 7 of 9 for 69 yards with a 98.6 passer rating, playing mistake free football when defenses send an extra rusher to challenge him. 

Pickett has a 106.9 rating against the blitz without an interception. Not bad for a rookie quarterback with a poor offensive line. The Steelers quarterback has had his struggles, but facing the blitz is not one of them. 

Defense is on another level: Since allowing 44 points to the Chiefs in Week 7, the 49ers defense has allowed 40 points combined. Part of that is players getting healthy, as this unit is scary good. The 49ers allowed just 258.8 yards per game over the last four contests, including just 59.3 rushing yards per game. 

The 49ers rank first in points allowed, yards allowed, passing touchdowns allowed, rushing yards allowed, yards per carry allowed and points per possession. This unit seems to get better by the week too. 

No wonder the 49ers are on a four-game win streak. They'll be challenged by Miami, but the Dolphins won't have Terron Armstead

The defensive success in midseason was fools gold: Seattle's defense was torched by the Raiders offense, as Las Vegas amassed 576 yards against the unit (293 passing, 283 rushing). The Seahawks have allowed 497.5 yards per game over the last two games -- both losses -- and an astonishing 22 rushing yards per game. 

The defense that allowed 282.8 yards per game in the four contests prior to Munich is long gone. Seattle has been gashed on the ground and the defense can't get off the field on third down (29th in NFL). Seattle won't make the playoffs if this defense can't make stops. 

Tom Brady needs to throw to Chris Godwin and Rachaad White more: Brady was a putrid 9 of 22 when he was throwing to pass catchers that weren't named White or Godwin -- and that includes Mike Evans. While caught all nine of his targets for 45 yards while Godwin caught 12 passes (on 13 targets) for 110 yards and a touchdown.

Brady had a 111.2 rating targeting White and Godwin, two players who are producing more in the offense by the week. If the Buccaneers aren't going to go deep and use a lot of air yards on Brady's throws, the slot and underneath route to White and Godwin are the ticket.

Get the yards after the catch. 

Shocking red zone performance: The Titans were the No. 2 team in the red zone going into Sunday, but didn't score a touchdown on any of their three red zone trips in the loss to the Bengals. The Titans have to settle for three field goals, but only got six points (Caleb Shudak missed a field goal). 

In a four-point loss, the failure to convert in the red zone definitely hurt. Derrick Henry had just three carries for seven yards in the red zone, but most importantly -- no touchdowns scored. The Titans will have to get this corrected this week against the Eagles, as 16 points won't be enough to beat a potent offense. 

Based on how the red zone offense has performed, Tennessee should get back on track. 

The stout run defense hits a snag: Washington's run defense has been excellent over the last several weeks, allowing just 68.8 rushing yards per game over the last five games -- a huge reason the Commanders won 4 of 5 heading into Sunday. 

The Falcons are one of the best running teams in the NFL, finishing with 167 yards against a Commanders run defense that allowed just 171 yards total in the three games prior. Washington's run defense will face Saquon Barkley and the Giants for the next two games, so there's a cause for concern against one of the top running backs in the league. 

The run defense will be tested over the next two games. 

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One thing we learned about each NFL team in Week 12: Chiefs' major weakness unveiled; Broncos star CB in slump - CBS Sports
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Tuesday, November 29, 2022

College Football Playoff Rankings reactions: LSU overrated, Tennessee underrated in penultimate top 25 - CBS Sports

Tennessee v Vanderbilt
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The penultimate edition of the 2022 College Football Playoff Rankings were released on Tuesday, and the intrigue heading into conference championship weekend has been cranked up in a big way as multiple teams are in contention to occupy the final spot in the four-team field. 

Georgia held tight at the No. 1 spot, Michigan jumped to No. 2 after topping Ohio State last weekend and TCU chimed in at No. 3 after finishing the regular season 12-0. One-loss USC slid into the No. 4 spot, but the Trojans are in a perilous position knowing they can't slip up in the Pac-12 Championship Game. Should USC fall to No. 11 Utah, it'll get jumped by either the fifth-ranked Buckeyes or No. 6 Alabama

The chatter will be heated between now and Selection Sunday. 

Let's take a look at who's overrated and underrated in the penultimate edition of the rankings. 

Why on Earth is Tennessee ranked below No. 6 Alabama? Because it has an ugly loss to No. 19 South Carolina? That looks way better now than it did two weeks ago when the world thought that South Carolina was a middling SEC East team with no upside. Conversely, Alabama's loss to No. 14 LSU -- a team Tennessee throttled in Baton Rouge -- looks worse after the Tigers lost to Texas A&M last weekend. 

Oh, and there's that pesky little head-to-head matchup on Oct. 15 when the Volunteers topped the Crimson Tide 52-49. That should matter, but apparently it doesn't. Why? Is it because star Volunteers quarterback Hendon Hooker tore his ACL against South Carolina and Joe Milton is now at the helm? That is considered by the committee, but it isn't nearly enough to convince me. 

Tennessee has a signature win over Alabama and a road win over LSU. What is Alabama's signature win? A Week 2 win at No. 20 Texas? A late-October home win over No. 24 Mississippi State? Tennessee is being unjustly punished because it isn't a traditional power. It proved it deserves to be in line for a CFP spot if chaos ensues and, at the very least, earn the SEC's Sugar Bowl spot if it's left out. 

Overrated: No. 14 LSU

LSU analysis is baked into the analysis of Tennessee and Alabama above, but it really shouldn't be that big of a talking point. There is no way that the Tigers should be ranked No. 14 after that debacle in College Station, Texas, last weekend. They got smoked 38-23 by an Aggies team that hadn't scored more than 31 points against any opponent this year, was decimated by injuries and hadn't appeared to be motivated down the stretch during their 6-game losing streak. If Texas A&M can torch LSU's defense, what would No. 15 Oregon State, No. 16 Oregon or No. 17 UCLA do? It would get very, very ugly. 

A nine-win regular season in coach Brian Kelly's first year is a tremendous accomplishment, and something that very few people outside of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, saw coming. But it struggled against Arkansas and then lost to Texas A&M when the target on its back grew. That has to matter. 

It seems like there's a knee-jerk reaction to assume that all Pac-12 teams are overrated and don't deserve national recognition, and Washington's ranking at No. 12 proves it. The Huskies have the nation's top passer in Michael Penix Jr., a top-10 receiver in Rome Odunze, a top-five scoring offense (40.8 points per game) and the Pac-12's second-best defense in terms of yards per play (5.52). 

The loss to No. 17 UCLA is understandable, but the loss the following week to Arizona State is what's holding them back. But Utah -- which is one spot ahead of Washington -- has three losses, one of which was to a Florida team that went 6-6. Kansas State has three pretty solid losses (No. 18 Tulane, No. 3 TCU and No. 20 Texas), but they are still three losses. An argument could even be made that Washington's resume with wins over No. 15 Oregon State and No. 16 Oregon are more impressive than Clemson's signature win over No. 13 Florida State

Washington deserves to be in the top 10.

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World Cup 2022: Scenarios, standings, tiebreakers as Brazil, Portugal qualify for last 16; 27 teams alive - CBS Sports

untitled-design-38.png
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We're reaching the business end of the World Cup group stage as some of the groups only have one match remaining. So far, France, Portugal, and Brazil are the only teams to book their passage to the round of 16 but more will join them on the final matchday of each group. Qatar have also joined South Africa as the only World Cup hosts to ever fail to make it out of the group stage. But let's take a look at who can join the trio in the last 16 and what their path is to get there. 

Looking at tiebreakers, the start is simple with the team that has the most points advancing. If two teams are level on points then it will go to their overall goal difference. If they still can't be split, next up the team that has scored the most goals will be the side to advance. The rules will then be reapplied with only the head-to-head match between the two teams that are tied. So the point total in those matches is next followed by goal difference in head-to-head play and goals scored. If they make it the entire way through and can't be split it finally goes to the fair play system.

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The fair play system will see the team with the fewest penalties in matches advance. So a team loses a point per yellow card, three points for each red card caused by a second yellow card, four points for a straight red card and if a yellow is followed by a straight red card it will count as five points. 

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Here are the groups including all groups that have played two matches

Group A

Team Name W D L Goal Difference Matches Played Points

Netherlands

1

1

0

2

2

4

Ecuador

1

1

0

2

2

4

Senegal

1

0

1

0

2

3

Qatar 0 0 2 -4 2 0
  • Netherlands: Can make the round of 16 with a win or draw against Qatar. Can win the group by bettering Ecuador's result. 
  • Ecuador: Can make the round of 16 with a win or draw against Senegal. Can win the group by bettering the Netherlands' result.
  • Senegal: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win against Ecuador. Can also qualify for the round of 16 with a draw versus Ecuador and the Netherlands losing to Qatar by more than two goals. Can win the group with a win versus Ecuador and a draw or loss by the Netherlands versus Qatar.
  • Qatar: Eliminated from contention for the round of 16.

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Group B

Team Name W D L Goal Difference Matches Played Points

England

1

1

0

4

2

4

Iran

1

0

1

-2

2

3

United States

0

2

0

0

2

2

Wales

0

1

1

-2

2

1

  • England: Can win the group with a victory over Wales. Can qualify for the round of 16 with a draw or a loss by fewer than six goals and a United States draw or loss.
  • Iran: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win or draw versus the United States. Can win the group with a win and an England draw or loss.
  • United States: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win over Iran. Can win the group with a win and an England loss or a win and an England draw if they make up 4 goals worth of goal difference.
  • Wales: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win over England and a loss by Iran. Can also qualify with a win over England by more than four goals. Can win the group by bettering Iran's result and defeating England by more than four goals.

Group C

Team Name W D L Goal Difference Matches Played Points

Poland

1

1

0

2

2

4

Argentina

1

0

1

1

2

3

Saudi Arabia

1

0

1

-1

2

3

Mexico

0

1

1

-2

2

1

  • Poland: Can win the group and qualify for the round of 16 with a victory over Argentina. Can also qualify for the round of 16 with a draw but would only win the group in that case if Saudi Arabia draws or loses to Mexico.
  • Argentina: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win over Poland. Can also qualify for the round of 16 with a draw and a Saudi Arabia draw or loss by fewer than three goals to Mexico. Can win the group with a victory and a Saudi Arabia draw or loss.
  • Saudi Arabia: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win over Mexico. Can also qualify with a draw and a loss by Argentina or a loss and Argentina losing by one more goal. (i.e. Saudi Arabia loses 1-0 and Argentina loses 2-0 would see Saudi Arabia advance
  • Mexico: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win and a Poland victory over Argentina. Can also qualify by winning and making up the goal difference advantage on Poland/Argentina while Argentina defeats or draws Poland. 

Group D

Team Name W D L Goal Difference Matches Played Points

France

2

0

0

4

2

6

Australia

1

0

1

-2

2

3

Denmark

0

1

1

-1

2

1

Tunisia

0

1

1

-1

2

1

  • France: Qualified for the round of 16. Can win the group with a win or draw against Tunisia or an Australia draw or loss.
  • Australia: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win versus Denmark. Can also qualify with a draw and a Tunisia draw or loss. 
  • Denmark: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win versus Australia.
  • Tunisia: Can qualify for the round of 16 with a win versus France and an Australia loss to Denmark where Tunisia wins by more goals than Denmark. Tunisia can also qualify for the round of 16 with a win over France and an Australia draw.

Group E

Team Name W D L Goal Difference Matches Played Points

Spain

1

1

0

7

2

4

Japan

1

0

1

0

2

3

Costa Rica

1

0

1

-6

2

3

Germany

0

1

1

-1

2

1

  • Spain: Through to the last 16 with a win or draw versus Japan. Can win the group with a win over Japan. Can also advance with a loss to Japan and a draw between Costa Rica and Germany.
  • Japan: Through to the last 16 with a win versus Spain. Can also advance to the last 16 with a draw against Spain and a draw between Costa Rica and Germany. Can win the group with a victory versus Spain and having a better goal difference than Costa Rica if they defeat Germany. 
  • Costa Rica: Can advance with a victory over Germany and a loss by one of Span/ Japan or a draw between the two. Can also advance with a draw and a loss by Japan. Can win the group with a win, a Spain loss, and making up the six goal difference between Japan.
  • Germany: Can qualify for the last 16 with a win and a loss by Spain or Japan. Can also advance with a win by more than one goal and a Japan draw.

Group F

Team Name W D L Goal Difference Matches Played Points

Croatia

1

1

0

3

2

4

Morocco

1

1

0

2

2

4

Belgium

1

0

1

-1

2

3

Canada

0

0

2

-4

2

0

  • Croatia: Can advance to the round of 16 with a win versus Belgium. Can also advance with a draw versus Belgium and a Morocco loss to Canada. Can win the group by bettering Morroco's result.
  • Morocco: Can advance to the round of 16 with a win or draw versus Canada. Can also advance to the round of 16 with a loss and a loss by Belgium or a loss, a Belgium win, and having a better goal difference than Croatia. Can win the group by bettering Croatia's result and making up the one-goal difference. 
  • Belgium: Can advance to the round of 16 with a win over Croatia. Can also advance with a draw and a loss by Morocco by more than three goals.
  • Canada: Eliminated from contention for the round of 16.

Group G

Team Name

W

D

L

Goal Difference

Matches Played

Points

Brazil

2

0

0

3

2

6

Switzerland

1

0

1

0

2

3

Cameroon

0

1

1

-1

2

1

Serbia

0

1

1

-2

2

1

  • Brazil: Through to the last 16, can win the group with a win or draw versus Cameroon or a Switzerland loss.
  • Switzerland: Can make the last 16 with a win or draw versus Serbia. Can win the group with a win, a Brazil loss, and making up the goal difference of three.
  • Cameroon: Can make the last 16 with a win versus Brazil and a Switzerland loss. Can also make the last 16 with a win versus Brazil by more than one goal and a draw between Switzerland and Serbia.
  • Serbia: Can make the last 16 with a win versus Switzerland and a Cameroon loss.

Group H

Team Name

W

D

L

Goal Difference

Matches Played

Points

Portugal

2

0

0

3

2

6

Ghana

1

0

1

0

2

3

South Korea

0

1

1

-1

2

1

Uruguay

-

1

1

-2

2

1

  • Portugal: Through to the last 16. Can win the group with a win or draw versus South Korea or a Ghana loss.
  • Ghana: Can make the last 16 with a win or draw versus Uruguay. With a draw, they will need to have a better goal difference than South Korea if they defeat Portugal.
  • South Korea: Can make the last 16 with a win versus Portugal and a Ghana loss or draw versus Uruguay.
  • Uruguay: Can make the last 16 with a win versus Ghana and a South Korea loss or draw versus Portugal. If South Korea wins along with Uruguay, it will come to tiebreakers.

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World Cup 2022: Scenarios, standings, tiebreakers as Brazil, Portugal qualify for last 16; 27 teams alive - CBS Sports
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Monday, November 28, 2022

World Cup 2022 highlights: Fernandes, Portugal defeat Uruguay, 2-0 - FOX Sports

The second week of the 2022 FIFA World Cup continued Monday with Portugal defeating Uruguay 2-0 at Qatar's Lusail Stadium, and we had you covered with every must-see moment from the Group H tilt on FOX.

With the win, Portugal (2-0-0) has secured back-to-back World Cup wins for the first time since 2006 and will advance to the Round of 16. On the other side, Uruguay (0-1-1) was handed its first loss of the tournament.

Earlier, Ghana earned three points after a wild victory against South Korea to move up to the second spot in Group H. Elsewhere, in Group G, Cameroon rallied to a draw with Serbia, and Brazil topped Switzerland.

You can watch this game and every match of the tournament on the FOX Sports family of networks — the tournament's official English-language broadcast partner in the U.S. — and the FOX Sports app and FOXSports.com. You can also stream full-match replays for free on Tubi.

Here are the top plays!

Portugal 2, Uruguay 0

3': What could have been!

Cristiano Ronaldo & Co. didn't waste any time setting the tone in this one. Portugal's William Carvalho narrowly missed the net on this early shot, which was set up by a smooth shoulder pass from Ronaldo.

18': Blocked!

Ronaldo — fresh off of becoming the first men's player to score in five World Cups in Portugal's previous match — had another chance to put his team on the board with a well-placed free kick, but it was deflected.

32': Heating up

Uruguay had a golden opportunity to take over near the half-hour mark, but Rodrigo Bentancur wasn't able to connect after a monster save from Portugal keeper Diogo Coasta.

54': Goal! 

Bruno Fernandes gave Portugal a 1-0 lead as the one-hour mark approached. The goal was originally credited to Ronaldo.

Portugal's Bruno Fernandes scores goal vs. Uruguay in 54'

75': So close!

Uruguay continued to battle Portugal as the second half unfolded. Maxi Gómez nearly knotted things up at the 75-minute mark, but his shot hit the right post. 

Uruguay was relentless with its attempts late in the game, taking two more unsuccessful shots in the next four minutes, as things winded down.

82': The people's player

Portugal made a few substitutions late in the game, including Gonçalo Ramos checking in for Ronaldo.

90'+3': Double trouble

Portugal kept putting pressure on Uruguay as the second half came to a close. 

Fernandes converted a late penalty in stoppage time to give Portugal a 2-0 lead.

90'+9': No quit

Fernandes nearly added a third goal on the night in the final moments of Monday's match, but his shot hit the left post. In the end, Portugal ran away with a 2-0 win thanks to Fernandes' fancy footwork.

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Check out the full schedule for the World Cup and how to watch each match live here.


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VIDEO: Tyler Adams graciously handles questions about Iran, US - Insider

  • USMNT captain Tyler Adams was corrected about his pronunciation of Iran by a journalist, who then asked about discrimination against Black people in the US.
  • Adams was applauded for his handling of the question and his apology for his mispronunciation.
  • Adams and US manager Gregg Berhalter were peppered with questions about US-Iran relations ahead of a huge match Tuesday.

Tyler Adams, the captain of the US Men's National Team at the Qatar World Cup, graciously handled a tough question from an Iranian journalist during a press conference Monday.

After first correcting Adams' pronunciation of "Iran" during one of his previous answers, the journalist asked Adams how he felt about representing the US, despite the "discrimination" against Black people.

Adams began by apologizing for mispronouncing the country "eye-RAN," instead of the correct way "EE-rahn," then turned to the question, saying, "There's discrimination everywhere you go."

Adams said that his background — his biological father, who is not a part of his life now, is Black and he grew up in a white family — has helped him learn how to "assimilate." He also referenced the journalist's correction of his pronunciation as an example of a helpful teaching moment.

"I was very easily able to assimilate in different cultures," Adams said. "Not everyone has that ease and that ability to do that. Obviously it takes others longer to understand and through education, I think it's super important — like you just educated me now on the pronunciation of your country.

"It's a process. I think as long as you see progress, that's the most important thing."

Adams has received praise for his handling of a difficult situation.

Adams and USMNT manager Gregg Berhalter were peppered with difficult questions throughout the press conference. Berhalter deflected questions about international politics and the relationship between the US and Iran by saying he and the team were trying to focus on the match ahead.

Iranian state media called for the US team to be kicked out of the World Cup after the US Soccer Federation removed the Islamic Republic emblem from the Iranian flag in a social media post. The move was a gesture of support to Iranian protesters.

The Tuesday match between the US and Iran is a massive one, with the US needing to win outright in order to advance out of Group B and into the knockout stage. 

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Sunday, November 27, 2022

Kiszla: Voicing the frustration of Broncos Country with Russell Wilson, teammate Mike Purcell chews out quarterback on sideline - The Denver Post

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Losing his ever-loving mind, sick of losing, and screaming at his quarter-billion dollar bust of a quarterback to do something about it, big bad Mike Purcell spoke for all us in Broncos Country.

It’s about time somebody took off the velvet gloves and told Russell Wilson where to go.

Would it be too much trouble for Mr. Unlimited to get Denver’s offense in the end zone more than once a game? If that’s too difficult for DangeRuss, he can take his rockstar lifestyle and go straight to H-E- …

“Frustration,” Purcell said Sunday, explaining his spitting-mad sideline outburst at Wilson during the fourth quarter of Denver’s 23-10 loss to the wretched Carolina Panthers, a new low of a season where there is no bottom. “We’ve got to get a spark somewhere.”

Wilson got an earful of frustration that has been building for 11 games, not only in the Denver locker room, but throughout Broncos Country.

You didn’t have to be a lip-reader to understand the salty tone of Purcell’s message.

“He was (ticked) off,” Wilson recalled. “He just said, ‘You got to go!’ And I agreed.”

The brief but heated verbal confrontation between Purcell and Wilson was caught by television cameras for the all the NFL world to see and occurred distinctly within shouting distance of Broncos coach Nathaniel Hackett, who stood wearing sunglasses and a headset right next to where a 328-pound defensive lineman and his star quarterback exchanged unpleasantries.

And yet someway, somehow, Hackett was oblivious to the ruckus happening right behind his back.

“I didn’t see it,” Hackett said. “I know they’re both competitors. I know Mike wants to win and he’s going to do whatever he can to get the team fired up. But … I’m not sure … We’ll get to the bottom of it.”

In the history of the Broncos franchise, has there ever been a coach so pathetically unaware of the disintegration of a team around him? It’s no longer a question of if Hackett gets fired, but when.

The Broncos cannot possibly go on this way.

“It’s unacceptable,” Wilson said. “This organization, this tradition here and everything else, we’ve got to honor it. We’ve got to honor it by winning.”

Wilson recorded the 300th touchdown pass of his NFL career, but not until he connected with Brandon Johnson for a one-yard strike that was much too little and far too late in the final minutes of a game that encapsulated everything wrong with the most hopelessly inept Broncos team I’ve seen since arriving in Colorado back in 1983.

“We’ve got to get the losing out of our system,” Wilson said. “Winning is a habit. Losing can be, too.”

The chewing gum and duct tape holding together the Broncos disintegrated in the fourth quarter, after a 26-yard field goal by Eddy Pineiro extended Carolina’s lead to 17 points with 13 minutes, 36 seconds remaining. As the kick sailed through the uprights, Purcell got grumpy at the bottom of the pile near the line of scrimmage and drew an unnecessary roughness penalty.

As Purcell stomped toward the Denver bench, he cocked his right ear in the direction of Wilson, and in the manner of an angry man in no mood to take guff from anybody, jumped in the face of his high-priced quarterback and barked words of obvious frustration.

“Me and him are on the same page. There’s no animosity there at all,” Wilson said.  We’re on the same page. We’ve got to win.”

Denver Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson (3) on the bench late in the fourth quarter against the Carolina Panthers at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C., on Nov. 27, 2022. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Denver Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson (3) on the bench late in the fourth quarter against the Carolina Panthers at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C., on Nov. 27, 2022. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

Just when you think the Broncos can’t possibly play any worse, they go out and try to make World Cup soccer fans of us all, tempting even the most die-hard fan to hide under an orange-and-blue blankie on the sofa and switch the TV feed to a futbol match between Spain and Germany.

Wilson, who finished with a scant 142 yards passing, was outplayed by Sam Darnold, a quarterback viewed as a huge first-round draft bust. That’s inconceivable. Inexcusable. Incompetent.

Despite injuries to key playmakers and a leaky offensive line, there’s no excuse for how bad a quarterback Wilson has become, making it reasonable to wonder if Denver could have possibly been worse than their current 3-8 record if they merely kept Drew Lock and didn’t mortgage their future in a trade with Seattle that made Broncos Country believe a six-season playoff drought was mercifully about to end.

“We’re 3-8. Not even close to where we thought we would be. It’s draining, but nobody cares,” Broncos safety Justin Simmons said.

I consider myself lucky — even stuck at a bad football game — to get paid to watch the Broncos embarrass their proud tradition. It’s my job.

What’s your excuse?

If this team can’t find a new head coach capable of restoring the magic in Wilson, the Broncos will be unwatchable for years to come.

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No. 6 USC takes down No. 15 Notre Dame, improving CFP hopes heading into Pac 12 title game - Fox News

The sixth-ranked USC Trojans already clinched a trip to the Pac 12 Championship, but in order to have any College Football Playoff hopes, they needed some help before their own game on Saturday.

They got it with No. 2 Ohio State’s huge loss to No. 3 Michigan certainly helps USC. They got even more assistance after No. 5 LSU lost on the road to a then-4-7 Texas A&M team.

Just in case that wasn't enough, though, USC still did their job on Saturday night.

The Trojans defeated No. 15 Notre Dame, 38-27.

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Caleb Williams #13 of the USC Trojans throws against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first half at United Airlines Field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.

Caleb Williams #13 of the USC Trojans throws against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first half at United Airlines Field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

Their win, combined with OSU's and LSU's losses, make it very likely that USC gets a spot in the Top 4 of the next CFP rankings.

The first drive of the game finished with an 11-yard touchdown from Caleb Williams to Tahj Washington to give USC a 7-0 leaf. They scored a field goal on their next drive after forcing a three-and-out, and after they got up 10-0, the Irish turned the ball over on downs. On their next drive, they were able to cut into the Trojans’ lead with a 22-yard score by Michael Mayer, but USC answered right back with a rushing touchdown by Williams on their final drive before the half. The Trojans led 17-7 heading into the locker room.

In their first drive out of the half, Notre Dame lost a fumble at USC’s 26-yard line, and the Trojans answered right back with a seven-play drive, 74-yard drive that ended in a Raleek Brown score to give USC a 24-7 lead. The Irish came back with a touchdown of their own to make it a 10-point game, but USC marched down the field again, and at the beginning of the fourth quarter, Williams scored his second rushing touchdown of the night, and the Trojans were up 31-14.

Caleb Williams #13 and Lake McRee #87 of the USC Trojans celebrate a touchdown against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first half at United Airlines Field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. 

Caleb Williams #13 and Lake McRee #87 of the USC Trojans celebrate a touchdown against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first half at United Airlines Field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.  (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

OREGON PLAYER PUNCHES OREGON STATE FAN AFTER DEVASTATING LOSS

Notre Dame did get back to within 10 points with a touchdown, but on their next drive, Drew Pyne threw an interception with just under five minutes to go. That essentially iced the game, but for good measure, Williams ran for his third touchdown, this one for 16 yards. The Irish added a touchdown, but it was too little too late.

Austin Jones didn't find the end zone in the win, but he was still able to manage 154 yards on the ground on 25 carries, while nine Trojans recorded at least one reception.

Caleb Williams #13 of the USC Trojans throws against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first half at United Airlines Field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.

Caleb Williams #13 of the USC Trojans throws against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first half at United Airlines Field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

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USC awaits its opponent for next Friday's conference title game, which will be either Utah or Oregon - that will be decided based on the result of the Washington-Washington State game.

If the Huskies lose, the Ducks are in. If Washington wins, the Utes will face the Trojans.The Pac 12 title game will be held at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas at 8 p.m. ET.

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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...