On the same day he became a member of the Patriots, receiver Antonio Brown has been sued for sexual assault and rape. Brown’s lawyer, Darren Heitner, has issued a detailed statement that admits to the existence of a sexual relationship between Brown and the plaintiff, Britney Taylor, but denies any wrongdoing on Brown’s behalf. The lawyer’s statement calls the lawsuit a “money grab.” “He will pursue all legal remedies to not only clear his name, but also to protect other professional athletes against false accusations,” Heitner vows. In the statement, Heitner characterizes Taylor as someone who was looking for funding from Brown to launch a business project. She allegedly sought $1.6 million. “When Mr. Brown refused to make the $1.6 million ‘investment,’ the accuser supposedly cut off communication with Mr. Brown,” Heitner contends. “However, in 2018, the accuser resurfaced and offered to travel to Pennsylvania and South Florida to train Mr. Brown for the upcoming season. Thereafter, the accuser engaged Mr. Brown in a consensual personal relationship. Any sexual interaction with Mr. Brown was entirely consensual.” Heitner claims that the relationship continued after the alleged rape in May 2018. “Mr. Brown’s accuser has continually posted photographs of Mr. Brown on her social media in an effort to financially benefit from his celebrity,” Heitner writes. “Mr. Brown, whose hard work and decision to his craft has allowed him to rise to the top of his profession, refuses to be the victim of what he believes to be a money grab.” The statement narrows the focus of much of the looming legal fight to the credibility of Brown and Taylor, since it’s clear that they knew each other and had a personal relationship. While third-party witnesses and circumstantial evidence may tip the scales one way or the other, this one will (barring a settlement) boil down to whether a jury believes him or believes her. While that may not be enough to ever secure a conviction in criminal court, it’s more than enough to satisfy the much lower burden of proof in civil cases. My opinion: This has actually been out for a while and it seems to be fairly clearly about her and another guy trying to extort money from Brown. While Brown is surely an idiot, I think he's going to walk in the end after a long time after of being dragged through the mud.
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One day after coach Adam Gase's public criticism of the team, the New York Jets traded for wide receiver Demaryius Thomas and changed kickers for the third time since training camp -- a mini-shake-up that sends a message to the locker room.
The Jets acquired Thomas from the New England Patriots for a 2021 sixth-round pick, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter. That the bitter rivals made a trade was stunning. It was a first for Patriots coach Bill Belichick, who previously had executed a trade with every team except the Jets. Thomas became expendable after New England signed wide receiver Antonio Brown. Thomas, who tore his Achilles in December, was activated off the physically unable to perform list on Aug. 20. He had seven catches for 87 yards and two touchdowns in the Patriots' preseason finale, which was his first game since the injury. With Thomas out, the Patriots' wide receiver depth chart now features Brown, Julian Edelman, Josh Gordon, Phillip Dorsett, Jakobi Meyers and Gunner Olszewski. Dorsett reeled in two touchdowns on Sunday night, while Gordon caught one of his own. Meanwhile, Edelman led the team in receptions with six. Gase was critical of his wide receivers after Sunday's 17-16 loss to the Buffalo Bills, telling reporters Monday that he wasn't happy with their route running. He didn't name names, but he was clearly unhappy with Robby Anderson. Not surprisingly, the Jets waived kicker Kaare Vedvik and signed free agent Sam Ficken, who was cut recently by the Green Bay Packers. He will be their fourth kicker since the start of training camp. Vedvik lasted only a week on the roster. He struggled in his NFL debut, missing an extra point and a 45-yard field goal. He replaced the ineffective Taylor Bertolet, who replaced Chandler Catanzaro, who retired abruptly after the second preseason game. On Monday, Gase was fuming and sprayed criticism at several position groups on his roster. He was particularly angry with the receivers, saying, "We made some mistakes and they were fatal to us ... They need to do a better job of executing what they're supposed to be doing." The passing game ran through slot receiver Jamison Crowder, who caught 14 passes for 99 yards. Anderson and Quincy Enunwa were held to a combined four catches. Gase exonerated quarterback Sam Darnold, who passed for only 175 yards, choosing to blame the receivers and offensive line. Thomas will be new to New York, but he is familiar with Gase. He served as the Denver Broncos' wide receivers coach from 2010 to 2013 and then as the team's offensive coordinator from 2013 to '14. Thomas spent the first nine years of his career in Denver. The Jets will also welcome a veteran presence within their receiving corps. The 31-year-old Thomas is now the oldest wideout on the team ahead of Anderson (26), Joshua Bellamy (30), Braxton Berrios (23), Crowder (26) and Enunwa (27). Berrios was among the Patriots' final cuts this season. Demaryius Thomas will reunite with Adam Gase, who was an offensive assistant during Thomas' time in Denver. Brian Fluharty/USA Today SportsThe Jets opted for Ficken after a morning tryout at their facility that consisted of five free-agent kickers. His only regular-season experience came in 2017 and 2018 with the Los Angeles Rams, but it was only four games. He made three of six field goals (a long of 34 yards) and was 14-for-15 on extra points. Ficken attempted only one field goal for the Packers in the preseason (he made it), and was 5-for-5 on extra points. On Monday, Gase expressed his frustration with the kicking carousel, saying, "What do you want me to do? We haven't performed well. We're going to try to figure out a way to fix it." The Jets' kicking saga started in March, when they let Jason Myers -- a Pro Bowl selection -- leave via free agency. He signed with the Seattle Seahawks, who gave him a $5.5 million guarantee. On another note, the Patriots have now traded with all of the other teams since Bill Belichick took over. The last trade between the Patriots and Jets was the trade for Bill, which was obviously won that trade by getting Shaun Ellis, Jamie Henderson, and James Reed while the Patriots got Bill and two guys who are currently homeless underneath a 495 bridge. A super finish in the Superdome, and a confident win in the Coliseum. The season-opening "Monday Night Football" doubleheader had it all.
Let's start in New Orleans, where a back-and-forth fourth quarter that featured three lead changes and three scores in the game's final minute finished on the leg of Saints kicker Wil Lutz, who knocked in a game-winning 58-yard field goal with zeroes on the clock. New Orleans Saints 30, Houston Texans 28 1. Result aside, this was Deshaun Watson's game. The Texans quarterback was battered and bruised by a ferocious Saints defensive front (more on that later), entering the medical tent twice in the first half with an apparent back injury and receiving treatment from a Texans staffer throughout the second half. Despite the hits he took, Watson grew more poised as the game wore on. His connection with DeAndre Hopkins was in midseason form (8 rec, 111 yards, 2 TDs), most notably on Houston's last-ditch drive. "We knew we weren't out of the game," Hopkins said later of Houston's late six-point deficit. "We knew it was just a couple of plays, especially with a quarterback like Deshaun." The QB with five fourth-quarter comebacks to his name last season, Watson "drove" the Texans 75 yards in just two plays and 13 seconds to steal the lead with under a minute to go. Houston had not scored since early in the third quarter, but with time running out, Watson uncorked his two best balls of the night to pull the Texans ahead -- a 38-yard strike to Hopkins on the sideline and a picture-perfect deep score to Kenny Stills, whom Houston acquired in a trade just days ago. All this with an unsettled back and an unsettled line. If not for the comeback king on the other sideline, Watson would have been hailed as Monday night's hero. Hell, he still is. 2. The Saints keep marching on, doing the same things that took them within a no-call of the Super Bowl. Alvin Kamara, playing his first game without Mark Ingram in New Orleans, was as slippery as ever, racking up 169 total yards on 20 touches. His new backfield mate, Latavius Murray, was used sparingly. Despite the presence of tight end Jared Cook, Michael Thomas was Drew Brees' top target once again (10 rec, 123 yards). Brees, 40 years young, posted the 116th 300-yard passing game of his career, launching just six of his 43 attempts more than 15 yards through the air. The Saints signal-caller saved his best for last, marching New Orleans into field-goal range in three pass plays with 37 seconds on the clock and just one timeout at his disposal. None of the plays went out of bounds, but thanks to two spikes and a timeout with two seconds left, Wil Lutz was afforded the opportunity to knock in his career-long game-winner. It was the game-sealing drive under pressure that one expects from a future first-ballot Hall of Famer in Brees, and a sign that this year in New Orleans might different than the last. This time, Brees and the Saints finished. 3. Houston invested heavily in protecting Watson when it sent first-round picks (plural) to Miami for a franchise left tackle in Laremy Tunsil (and Stills). Did the investment pay off in his first week on the job? Depends. Tunsil was as advertised on Watson's blind side, but he couldn't patch wounds along an offensive line without its starting left guard and playing for the very first time in a game, preseason or regular season. Watson was under furious pressure all night, often from up the middle, and took six sacks and 11 QB hits, escaping even more due to his preternatural elusiveness. Houston led the league in sacks allowed last season with 62. One game into 2019, the Texans are well on the way to exceeding that number. With time and practice will come better communication along the refurbished front, but that was not the case on Monday evening. 4. Have you guys seen J.J. Watt? I could've sworn Jadeveon Clowney was the one who was no longer on the Texans. In his first game without Clowney across from him on Houston's defensive line, Watt did not show up on the stat sheet. No tackles, no sacks, no QB hits, no nothing -- the first time in his 105-game career Watt has enjoyed an oh-fer, per NFL Research. He forced one holding call on right tackle Ryan Ramczyk, but other than that, Ramczyk and the Saints' top-five offensive line handled Watt and Houston's pass rush. Brees was sacked just once, which compared to his quarterbacking compatriot across the sideline was clean living. Without Clowney in the Texans' front seven, Houston will need to look to other names to put pressure on opposing quarterbacks, assuming Watt is playing like the three-time Defensive Player of the Year that he is. When he's not, like on Monday night, Clowney's absence will be magnified. -- Jeremy Bergman Oakland Raiders 24, Denver Broncos 16 1. For the first time in what felt like the longest time, the Raiders found themselves able to make the storyline about actually playing football. Following a win of the coin toss, Jon Gruden wanted the ball to start Monday's game. And his offense -- yes, his Antonio Brown-less offense -- responded marvelously with Derek Carr performing as phenomenally as he ever has. Carr was perfect in Oakland's opening salvo, going 5-for-5 for 58 yards, including an 8-yard score to Tyrell Williams -- the team's No. 1 receiver for three days running now. It was the start the Raiders wanted -- and perhaps needed. And that held true from the first emphatic drive to the final seconds that ticked away with a grinning Gruden embracing the front row of the Black Hole in the glow of a 24-16 win. As much as anyone, the onus was on Carr and he responded to the challenge and sparkled (22-of-26 for 259 yards, one TD, 121.0 rating). Williams (six catches, 105 yards, TD) likewise proved he can be a top target. And for the Gruden-helmed franchise, it was a sigh of relief and a fist pump for an exciting win. They triumphed despite the distractions, scrutiny and fallout from the Brown roller coaster going off the rails and likely more impressive, though it won't garner the same attention, they carried on despite cornerback Gareon Conley being immobilized and removed from the game. This was exactly what the Raiders needed. 2. Two debuts. One underwhelming loss. Vic Fangio's first game as a head coach and Joe Flacco's initial outing as the Broncos' starting quarterback were equally flat and unfulfilling. Flacco was immobile and erratic with his throws, often coming up short as he tried to navigate a Broncos offense that was shut out in the first half and held out of the end zone until Flacco found Emmanuel Sanders in the fourth quarter to make the game feel closer than it really had for the majority of the night. At the end of the night, Flacco's stat line looks fine -- 21-of-31 for 268 yards, the TD and no picks. But that didn't tell the story. There was little fire until it was too late. Fangio's debut was as puzzling as it was disappointing. All the excitement and anticipation to see how fearsome a Fangio-coached defense with Von Miller and Bradley Chubb was for naught in a listless premiere. There were no sacks. There were no QB hits. Chubb looked out of place dropping back in coverage. The Broncos tallied no takeaways. The question was whether Flacco could provide a solution for a long lackluster offense. Instead, both sides of the ball are now cause for concern in Denver. 3. At the forefront of the Raiders' first-round rookie trio, from the outset, was running back Josh Jacobs. Oakland established the run and balance on offense, feeding the ball to Jacobs even if it wasn't racking up yards. At least it was keeping the Broncos guessing. On the night, Jacobs scored twice and proved to be a workhorse (he had 23 carries for 85 yards with only three carries going to other backs). Following the game, Jacobs told NFL Network's MJ Acosta he was disappointed in himself because he left a lot of big runs on the table. After his debut, it's hardly difficult to prognosticate a lot of big runs are left ahead. Jacobs' first-round brethren -- defensive end Clelin Ferrell and safety Johnathan Abram -- likewise made their presence felt. Ferrell helped quell thoughts of a Broncos rally with a fourth-quarter sack that led to a questionable Fangio decision to kick a field goal and keep a two-score deficit at two scores. His debut included three tackles, a tackle for a loss and a batted pass, while Abram (five tackles) established himself as the dangerous presence in centerfield most believed he could be. In their first chance, the rookies responded, provided further glimpses of hope for an illuminated Silver and Black future and, above all else, contributed to a winning debut. 4. A pass rush has arrived in Oakland. In the aftermath of a turbulent offseason the Raiders are mindful of moving on from, it almost seems like an afterthought that one of the prevailing problems for Oakland has been providing its defense with a pass rush. Though the Broncos themselves deserve some credit for their offensive woes on Monday night, the Raiders defense was stingy and impressive in allowing only one touchdown (which didn't come until the fourth quarter). Vontaze Burfict burst through for a sack early in the second quarter, only to have it negated by an illegal contact call. Four plays later, Benson Mayowa notched the Raiders' first sack of 2019 after a dismal 2018 in which they mustered 13 -- dead last by a mile in the NFL. Naturally, Mayowa added another sack to become the first Raider to have multiple sacks in a game since Khalil Mack late in the 2017 season. Ferrell added another and the Raiders' three sacks were every bit as much a cause for notice as the Broncos finishing with none was a cause for concern. Last season came and went without the Raiders tallying more than two sacks in a game, and they started with three to begin 2019. The days of a punchless Raiders pass rush are steadily dwindling. -- Grant Gordon The Saints can’t catch a break from officials. They didn’t get the obvious pass interference penalty late in the NFL Championship Game in the Superdome, and eight months later, officials botched the play clock in the final seconds of the first half of their season opener in the Superdome. Al Riveron, the NFL’s senior vice president of officiating, admitted in a postgame pool report that officials improperly applied a 10-second runoff that cost the Saints 15 seconds. “The play ended at 41 seconds when we ruled him down,” Riveron told pool reporter Larry Holder of TheAthletic.com. “Then, we stopped the game for a replay review. After we did our administrative duties, we should have reset the clock to 41 seconds because that’s when we blew the play dead. At that time, we should have gone back to coach [Sean] Payton and asked him if he wanted to take a timeout in lieu of a 10-second runoff. Instead of setting the clock to 4, we inadvertently set it to 26 and then had a 10-second runoff because he did not want to take the timeout. Again, we should have reset it to 41, not 26, and then ultimately to 31 after the 10-second runoff.” Saints quarterback Drew Brees completed a 17-yard pass to Michael Thomas on third-and-17 to the New Orleans 30. The replay official called for a review of the first down ruling, stopping the clock. The play was upheld, but since it was a running clock, the stoppage required either a New Orleans timeout or a 10-second runoff by rule. The Saints elected not to use the timeout, snapping the ball with 14 seconds left. The Saints missed a 56-yard field goal on the final play of the first half. The Saints were not happy with officials improperly applying the 10-second runoff. “That can’t happen. That’s a game-changer,” Brees said, via Jeff Duncan of TheAthletic.com. The best part is that a good portion of the Saints fans were wearing ref costumes at the game. The NFL offers up its annual opening weekend doubleheader of Monday Night Football tonight.
Beginning the evening, Deshaun Watson and the new-look Texans face the host Saints and Drew Brees. Closing the curtain on Week 1 will be Jon Gruden's Raiders, taking on the spotlight on the field after an eventful offseason off the field and across premium cable, as they host the rival Broncos, with Vic Fangio making his head coaching debut. Here are a half-dozen things to watch for in the pair of primetime football tilts taking over your TV screens Monday night. 1. Here come your No. 1 contenders Looking to move past a dismal end to the previous season, the New Orleans Saints will start the season with many prognosticating them as a Super Bowl favorite. Talent -- on the offensive side of the ball, in particular -- from future Hall of Fame quarterback Drew Brees to stud wide receiver Michael Thomas to running back Alvin Kamara (who takes on a larger role) is in abundance. It will also be interesting to see how tight end Jared Cook fits in and if the pass-catcher can improve an already outstanding offense. An NFC Conference Championship runner-up facing the reigning AFC South champ is an intriguing matchup all by itself. But this is the start of what many believe could be a special season in NOLA. 2. Houston, we have some new faces So, those Texans sure made some changes -- in one day. A flurry of movement on cutdown day has seen Houston bring in left tackle Laremy Tunsil, receiver Kenny Stills and running back Carlos Hyde, while parting ways with Jadeveon Clowney. Houston has also added RB Duke Johnson. It's clear Bill O'Brien doesn't want to waste the talents of Deshaun Watson and De'Andre Hopkins, but can the Texans really build chemistry this quickly? We'll start to see just that on Monday. And if the Texans, who are surely still coming together as a team, can impress against the Saints, that bodes very well for them going forward into a wide-open AFC South. 3. Flags will fly, crowds will roar In case you hadn't heard, there's a new rule in the NFL this year that allows coaches to challenge pass interference calls and non-calls. Of course it stems from the Saints' bitter loss to the Rams in the NFC Championship Game. If/when New Orleans coach Sean Payton challenges a PI call and wins, the eruption from the home crowd could be seismic. 4. The post-A.B. Raiders debut Where do the Raiders go from here? In the aftermath of one of the craziest Saturdays in NFL history, the Raiders move on to Monday night, looking to start a new season with myriad fresh faces and no Antonio Brown. Having gone through a cavalcade of distractions due to the New England Patriots' newest receiver, Oakland will try to move on and open up a season, but the shadow of A.B. will no doubt linger over this game and the Silver and Black. How Jon Gruden rallies his troops will be a sight to see no matter how it plays out. How will Derek Carr look? How will free-agent receiver Tyrell Williams do now that he's become the No. 1 receiver. There are three first-round rookies to get excited about -- Clelin Ferrell, Jonathan Abram and Josh Jacobs. With or without Brown on board, this team was going to be marked by plenty of new faces. How they will react, move forward and begin carving out the newest chapter in Raiders history begins, fittingly, on a Monday night. 5. Fangio and the Broncos D -- let's see what happens Down in Atlanta in September of 1995, Vic Fangio began his tenure as defensive coordinator of the Carolina Panthers and a long journey to get to Monday night, where he will make his debut as a head coach for the Denver Broncos. Fangio's ascent to the Broncos helm comes after he was voted the 2018 NFL Assistant Coach of the Year in his final season with the Bears. In Chicago, Fangio's guidance propelled the Bears defensive into a dominant entity that keyed the franchise's worst-to-first turnaround. In Denver, Fangio finds himself manned with plenty of defensive talent once more -- led by pass rushers Von Miller and Bradley Chubb, along with defensive backs Chris Harris, Kareem Jackson and Bears transplant Bryce Callahan. Against a questionable Raiders offensive line, the Broncos' pass rush will look to shine in Fangio's system and terrorize Carr. Just how formidable the Broncos' defense can be -- or perhaps dominant -- will begin to take shape on Monday. 6. Can Flacco fill the void? A search for a Broncos franchise quarterback has endured since Peyton Manning retired. Draft busts and free-agent misses have marked seasons lost for a great defense as the offense sputters along. The latest hope lies upon the shoulders of veteran Joe Flacco. Flacco won a Super Bowl during a long tenure with the Ravens and at 34 looks to ignite an offense that's been searching for a spark for some time. Along with receiver Emmanuel Sanders, who's returning from a season-ending Achilles injury, Flacco lends veteran presence to a young offense. There's potential here. And there's a start of another quarterback under center for the Broncos looking to help a franchise that fell so suddenly from a Super Bowl winner to a forgotten squad in a top-heavy AFC West. Can the Broncos be players once again with Flacco under center? That answer begins to come to the forefront against the Raiders. Here's what we've learned from the first Sunday of the 2019 NFL season:
New England Patriots 33, Pittsburgh Steelers 3 1. The Patriots are immortal, inevitable and damn near impossible to defend. Without Rob Gronkowski on its payroll for the first time this decade (but in the building and in uniform!), New England played like he never existed. Tom Brady threw just twice in the direction of a tight end (Ryan Izzo) and spread the ball around to everyone else, completing at least three passes to five different pass-catchers. Josh Gordon, less than four weeks since being reinstated, was the downfield threat New England needed in Gronk's absence. Phillip Dorsett caught two scores after grabbing just three over the last two seasons. Julian Edelman and James White were deployed in the same manner that won the Patriots their last two Super Bowls and spliced the Steelers' secondary in the process. Is there even room for Antonio Brown in this receiving corps? I kid! (But seriously.) 2. Speaking of Brown, Pittsburgh could not replace his impact on the offense in its first go-around without the mercurial pass-catcher. With JuJu Smith-Schuster taking on Brown's No. 1 role, James Washington, Donte Moncrief and Ryan Switzer scooped up most of Roethlisberger's targets. While Switzer was a reliable security blanket (six catches on as many targets) and Washington was on the receiving end of Big Ben's prettiest throw of the night, Moncrief was a drop-happy mess. On 10 targets, Pittsburgh's potential No. 2 receiver hauled in just three balls for seven yards; that's .70 yards per target. All the while, James Conner was a non-factor in the ground game. Pittsburgh's three points were its lowest output since a loss to the Eagles in Week 3, 2016, which was also the only other time Big Ben's Steelers had lost by more than 30 points. The Killer B's are gone. All that's left is an offense that on Sunday night was dead on arrival. 3. No David Andrews, no problem for Dante Scarnecchia's offensive line. After losing their starting left tackle in free agency (Trent Brown) and their starting center to blood clots, the Patriots' front five let little get past it in the season opener, displaying none of the discontinuity that one might expect from a new line. Isaiah Wynn enjoyed a strong first start on Brady's blind side. The same for reserve guard Ted Karras, who filled in for Andrews at center. There was cause for concern near the end of Sunday's beatdown, though, as right tackle Marcus Cannon left with a shoulder injury. But the Patriots have depth along the line, having, in the aftermath of Andrews' injury a few weeks ago, swung trades for backups like Korey Cunningham and Jermaine Eluemunor. New England remains ahead of the curve and, with the woeful Dolphins up next, on pace for another victory next Sunday. -- Jeremy Bergman Detroit Lions 27, Arizona Cardinals 27 (OT) 1. From the most horrendous of starts to the doorstep of a storied comeback victory, Kyler Murray's never-ending debut ended in a tie and promise for the future following an awful onset. Trailing 17-0 in the second quarter and by 18 in the fourth, the Cardinals were buoyed by their rookie signal-caller and their veteran Hall-of-Famer-to-be receiver on the way to a 27-27 overtime comeback tie. Before the comeback bid that came up just short, Murray -- who rarely looked confident or settled and was visibly frustrated on the field and off it -- was a dismal 6-of-16 for 41 yards and an interception. His QB rating was a horrendous 19.8, just more than the 19 yards he lost on three sacks. As the second half wore on, the Lions lost their bite and Murray found his way. The No. 1 pick was 23-for-38 for 289 yards and a pair of touchdowns -- the first of his career to David Johnson and the second to Larry Fitzgerald -- in the second half. Following Fitz's scoring grab, Murray (29-for-54 for 308 yards in the game) found Christian Kirk for two points and sent the game into overtime. That's where it ended 10 minutes of game time later. But in one night, Murray rescued a horrible premiere for himself and rookie coach Kliff Kingsbury and salvaged a tie. Maybe Murray grew up over 70 minutes of football. Likely not. But he provided evidence that there's tangible skill in the arm of the top pick and intangibles within that are needed to turnaround a franchise. 2. Seven spots after the Cardinals drafted a QB out of Oklahoma, the Lions selected a tight end out of Iowa. T.J. Hockenson was the 2019 first-round pick who put on the most impressive show in Arizona on Sunday and turned in one of the best days for a rookie across the board. Hauling in six passes from another former No. 1 overall pick -- Matthew Stafford -- Hockenson had 131 yards receiving, which is the most for any rookie tight end in his first game. Unfortunately, the first touchdown of Hockenson's career -- a 23-yarder -- was the last of the day for the Lions. It's likely Hockenson's impressive debut could be a forgotten footnote to a Lions collapse that gave way to a memorable showing from Murray. However, the Lions have a new weapon, a beast over the middle and a possible star at his position. 3. Larry's still got it. It wasn't that long ago that Larry Fitzgerald's retirement was a possibility. Sunday showed there was no reason for one of the all-time greats to hang them up. While the headlines will belong to Murray, Fitzgerald showed off the experience and skill in the clutch that the Cardinals needed to steer their sinking ship. It was Fitzgerald's four-yard TD catch with 47 seconds left that led to overtime, and it was his huge 45-yard gain in overtime that set up Zane Gonzalez's fourth and final field goal. Ending the afternoon with eight catches for 113 yards, Fitzgerald started his 16th season with a 100-yard game after recording just one in his 15th campaign. Myriad questions remain to be answered for the Cardinals' offense after a Week 1 showing that was good, bad and all the ugly in between. Fitzgerald still has the skill and presence to be the guiding light needed to shine when called upon. -- Grant Gordon Los Angeles Chargers 30, Indianapolis Colts 24 (OT) 1. Melvin Gordon who? The Chargers offense did very well with their star running back still holding out. Austin Ekeler dominated the game and sealed the victory with a rushing TD in overtime. He finished the game with 18 touches, 154 yards and three touchdowns. NFL Network's Ian Rapoport and Mike Garafolo reported Sunday morning Gordon plans to report to the Chargers in six to eight weeks. It'll be interesting to see what happens in the meantime. Overall, this was not a good day for Gordon and his agent. Philip Rivers also showed no signs of slowing down in his 16th season with the Chargers. The 37-year-old quarterback went 25-of-34 for 333 yards and three touchdowns. His favorite target Keenan Allen had eight receptions for 123 yards and one touchdown. 2. Of all the things that could've gone wrong for the Colts, the biggest surprise was kicker Adam Vinatieri. He left seven points on the field with a missed extra point and two missed field goals. This is the first time this has happened in his 24-year career, per NFL Research. Vinatieri dealt with "a little bit of a knee issue" during training camp and the preseason but coach Frank Reich did not believe the injury was "anything that was going to be a problem." After Vinatieri's performance today, this is enough to cause concern for Indy. On the other side of the field, Chargers rookie Ty Long outplayed Vinatieri. Long picked up punter and kicker duties after Michael Badgley suffered a groin injury on Friday. Long made good on his only field-goal attempt (from 40 yards) and was a perfect 3-for-3 on extra points. 3. Jacoby Brissett had an impressive day in his first game as the Colts starter. If it wasn't for poor performances by the special teams and defense in the first half, the team could've won the game. There were far too many mistakes but Brissett, wideout T.Y. Hilton (8/87/2) and running back Marlon Mack (25/174/1) kept them in the game. Brissett finished the game with 21-of-27 attempts, 190 yards and two touchdowns. -- Lakisha Wesseling Baltimore Ravens 59, Miami Dolphins 10 1. All Lamar Jackson did was throw touchdowns. Playing just a half-hour from his hometown, the Ravens quarterback made good on his vow to put on a show. He completed his first 10 passes, including four for scores. The dual-threat demon exhibited his usual scrambling ability, only it was often a means for more throwing. (Jackson ran just three times.) Perhaps most impressive was the how. Jackson beat the coverage on multiple downfield throws, while finishing with a career-best five touchdown passes and 324 yards and playing just three quarters. That his 17 completions were also a career-high speaks to his limitations as a passer last year, and perhaps a new era in Baltimore. Everything won't come this easy, but the Jackson-OC Greg Roman arrangement definitely takes on another level of intrigue. 2. The Dolphins might be worse than we thought. They struggled to pass, they didn't bother running and their defense surrendered 390 yards by halftime (and 643 overall). After gutting its roster in the offseason, little was expected from Miami and first-year coach Brian Flores entering the season. But this isn't college football. Allowing 42 points in the first half of a season opener is beyond bad. In fact, it's an NFL record. The second half saw a quarterback change and backup Josh Rosen getting picked off on his very first snap as a Dolphin. Miami already appears to be in the fish tank. It's probably not too early to check in with Alabama's Tua Tagovailoa and Oregon's Justin Herbert about possibly working in South Florida next year. 3. They don't just call him Hollywood for nothing. Rookie wide receiver Marquise Brown had a scintillating debut, catching long touchdown passes with his first two receptions. It started simple enough with a quick slant that he turned into a 47-yard score. He turned on the Jets just a few minutes later, as he got behind the Miami defense and hauled in a deep strike from Jackson for an 83-yard TD. Speed kills, and Brown looked as fast as anyone while catching four passes for 147 yards. That late first-round slot is already looking warranted. -- Adam Maya Kanas City Chiefs 40, Jacksonville Jaguars 26 1. It took all of three offensive plays for reigning NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes to remind everyone just how special he is. That's how long it took for the Chiefs to score their season's first touchdown. Truth be told, it was very much a spectacular play from Sammy Watkins, who took a short ball over the middle and turned it into a 68-yard sprint to pay dirt. But it was Mahomes the magnificent who just kept the Chiefs' all-star offense rolling along. Mahomes completed his first five passes of the season for 141 yards (in just two drives) as K.C. ran out to a 10-0 lead. It was a sweltering hot and testy day -- exemplified by Jags linebacker Myles Jack's ejection -- but the Chiefs never cooled off. While the Jaguars stumbled to a 5-11 mark last season, they still boasted one of the best pass defenses, with Mahomes being held to a season-worst 62.7 rating in the Chiefs' 30-14 2018 victory. Mahomes still had 313 yards, but no touchdowns. Mahomes matched that mark exactly in a stifling first half (16-of-20 for 313 yards and two TDs). A stellar day was had at season opener's end for the QB, who posted 378 yards and three scores with a phenomenal 143.2 rating. While there's no doubt cause for concern with Tyreek Hill's first-half exit due to a shoulder injury, the Chiefs showed they have no shortage of weapons in addition to Mahomes. Watkins (see below), Travis Kelce (three catches for 88 yards) and the recently acquired LeSean McCoy (10carries for 81 yards) all had fine days. The Chiefs offense is just as outstanding as we remember it to be -- if not more so. 2. In one game, Watkins matched his touchdown output for all of the 2018 season. On the first Sunday of the season, Watkins was wonderful with three touchdowns and 198 yards on nine receptions. This was Watkins at his best -- no, really, it was his career-high for yards and TDs in a game. Sure, Watkins was with the Chiefs last season, but this version of Watkins certainly was not. Regardless of Hill's status going forward, having Watkins as another option for Mahomes sees one of the NFL's richest offenses get even richer. And that it came against a usually excellent Jaguars passing defense is all the more reason to believe Watkins' outstanding ways could continue. 3. Nick Foles lofted his first touchdown pass as a Jaguar to D.J. Chark and moments later was on the sideline in pain and that was it for the former Super Bowl MVP's Jacksonville debut. NFL Network's James Palmer reported he suffered a broken left clavicle. Though things certainly got chilly on this hot Florida afternoon, rookie Gardner Minshew was cool and calm coming off the bench. The sixth-round pick completed his first 13 passes, was 9-for-9 for 128 yards at halftime and finished a losing effort with a terrific line of 22-for-25 for 275 yards, two touchdowns, one pick and a 122.5 rating. The Jags are hoping for a speedy return, but Minshew's performance off the bench deserves recognition and at least some confidence going forward that he can provide a stellar substitute. Sure, an injury to a starting QB is always a huge worry, but Jacksonville made its name with defense, and after giving up 491 yards in a 40-26 defeat, the Jaguars have larger concerns that worrying about how their rookie backup can do. -- Grant Gordon Seattle Seahawks 21, Cincinnati Bengals 20 1. The Seahawks didn't have much to celebrate offensively. They just got what they needed. Feature back Chris Carson picked up 21 of his 46 rushing yards on a crucial third down late in the fourth quarter that allowed Seattle to milk the clock to under a minute. Carson scored two touchdowns in the first half, including a 10-yard reception on third down. That TD was set up by a 42-yard pass to D.K. Metcalf, who wasted no time demonstrating big-play potential (four catches, 89 yards). Russell Wilson mixed in the usual few spectacular plays with efficiency, as Seattle got away with a forgettable 233-yard output. 2. Seattle brings out the best in wide receiver John Ross. The former University of Washington star had the best day of his three-year career against the Seahwks. With A.J. Green sidelined and Zac Taylor now pulling the offensive strings, Ross played the part of a go-to receiver. He came into the game with 21 career catches for 210 yards and came out of it with seven more for 158 yards and two touchdowns. That included the speedy Ross sneaking behind a linebacker on a wheel route for a 33-yard score, and then coming up with a jumpball downfield just before the half on a 55-yard TD. 3. New coach, same old Bengals? They showed signs of life on offense but this loss won't sit well with them. They outgained Seattle by nearly 200 yards and dominated time of possession but came away with no points on three trips to the red zone. Three fumbles, a missed 45-yard field goal and a failure to capitalize a recovered fumble inside the Seahawks 20 ultimately caught up to Cincinnati. In fact, the Bengals didn't score any points on their trips to the red zone. Adding injury to insult, running back Joe Mixon left in the second half after hurting his right ankle and did not return. Andy Dalton registered the franchise's first 400-yard passing game since Carson Palmer in 2010. It was ultimately in vain as the Seahawks held Cincinnati to just three points in the second half. Jadeveon Clowney had a sack but was otherwise relatively quiet in his first game in Seattle, as Bobby Wagner and Quinton Jefferson led the way for Seattle's bend-but-don't-break defense. -- Adam Maya Philadelphia Eagles 32, Washington Redskins 27 1. It took a while to get going but the Eagles' offense took flight in the second half against the Redskins. After throwing for 112 yards in the first half, QB Carson Wentz helped lead four straight scoring drives to push Philly to victory in his first game since his injury-plagued 2018 campaign. Three of those drives ended with Wentz TD passes, including an impressive 53-yard bomb to DeSean Jackson in his first game back in an Eagles uniform; it was Jackson's second 50-plus yard TD catch of the day. He ended with a game-high 154 receiving yards, tying him with Cowboys great Michael Irvin for the most Week 1 100-yard receiving games in NFL history. Wentz, who signed a huge extension in June, ended the day 28-of-39 for 313 yards and three TDs. The run game also deserves some praise; a quiet eight-carry, 20-yard output in the first half from the team's three RBs (Jordan Howard, Darren Sproles and rookie Miles Sanders) was all but forgotten after a 96-yard second half. 2. The Redskins offense looked promising in the first half with Case Keenum under center. Tight end Vernon Davis showed he still has it with a beastly 48-yard catch-and-run TD to give the Redskins their first opening drive TD in Week 1 since 2004. Keenum started 4 for 4 for 71 yards and finished the half outshining big-money Wentz with 257 yards and 16 completions on 22 attempts; he finished 30-of-44 with 380 yards and three TDs. Terry McLaurin, the 2019 third-round pick, stepped up big-time in the first half; the rookie wideout tallied three receptions for 104 yards, including a monster 69-yard TD catch to give Washington an early 17-0 lead. Penalties, coupled with the Eagles' O controlling the game with lengthy scoring drives, limited the offense's performance in the second half. Washington's offensive line, still without Pro Bowl left tackle Trent Williams, accounted for all five of the team's penalties for a loss of 45 yards. After a hot start, McLaurin cooled off with five targets and three catches for 21 yards, all of which came when the game was out of reach. 3. After a torn ACL robbed him of his rookie season, 2018 second-round pick Derrius Guice made his regular season debut in Week 1. With veteran RB Adrian Peterson inactive for the day, the bulk of the carries went to Guice, who coach Jay Gruden said would be a focal point of the offense this season. Guice made his presence known out of the gate with a 5-yard carry on the game's opening drive. Throughout the game, Guice showed flashes of his two-way potential and ended the night with 10 carries for 18 yards, thanks to the solid play upfront by the Eagles defensive line, and three catches for 20 yards. Speaking of young Redskins the team is relying on for future success, defensive tackle Jonathan Allen exited in the first quarter with a left knee injury and didn't return. If he's not able to go for the foreseeable future, the Redskins' defense will have a noticeable hole on the depth chart, as evidenced by the difficulty they had stopping the run in the second half. -- Jelani Scott Dallas Cowboys 35, New York Giants 17 1. Give Dak all the money. If Prescott's agent wanted any leverage in contract negotiations the Dallas Cowboys' quarterback provided it Sunday with a marvelous outing in the season opener. Prescott dissected a porous Giants defense with a bevy of dimes, hitting receivers perfectly in stride time after time en route to a four-touchdown demolition of a division rival. Prescott started off on fire, earning a career-high 256 yards passing yards, and finished with 405 and completing 78 percent of his passes for a perfect 153.8 passer rating. The first game of the Kellen Moore era was a masterpiece. The Cowboys new OC deploy a host of play-actions to open up the middle of the field for Dak, repeatedly sent multiple players in motion, and called plenty of shots downfield. The Cowboys spread the ball around to Amari Cooper (6/100/1), Michael Gallup (7/158), Randall Cobb (4/69/1), Blake Jarwin (3/39/1), Jason Witten (3/15/1), Ezekiel Elliott (1/10) and even Tavon Austin got in the action (1/8). Some of the explosiveness can be attributed to a disastrous Giants defense, but make no mistake, the Cowboys offense will be a load to handle in 2019. 2. Mission accomplished: Ezekiel Elliott returned from his holdout, got his feet wet in the opener, scored a TD, didn't suffer any sort of injury, and got to sit out the fourth quarter of the blowout. Zeke took just 13 carries for 53 yards and the TD, while playing just 32 plays, per Next Gen Stats. The Cowboys couldn't have scripted it much better after Elliott's offseason holdout officially ended on Wednesday. We didn't see any explosive plays from Zeke -- long run of 10 yards -- but they are coming as he gets more work in coming weeks. 3. Saquon Barkley popped a huge 59-yard run on the first series, setting up the Giants opening-drive score. The Giants then criminally underutilized their best player. Barkley touched the ball just seven times in the first half and went away from the running back far too often. The epitome of Big Blue's Barkley usage came late in the third quarter with the Giants trailing big already. After driving deep into the red zone, New York had third-and-short and fourth-and-short. Barkley didn't touch the ball either play. The fourth-down call was a rollout with 38-year-old Eli Manning that didn't have a shot to work and ended in a blown-up fumble. Barkley finished with 120 rushing yards on 11 carries. Manning's check-down routine is tiresome, and the blowout is another step closer to Daniel Jones taking over. But if Pat Shurmur is going to under-utilize Barkley, what are the Giants even doing? Jones got in the game with 1:46 left in the lopsided tilt, completed his first three passes, but fumbled trying to run for a first down, sealing the tilt. -- Kevin Patra Tennessee Titans 43, Cleveland Browns 13 1. The Browns entered with all the hype and looked like the steamroller the world expected on a 73-yard opening-drive touchdown. Then the Titans defense smothered Baker Mayfield and all the positive vibes in Cleveland. Dean Pees' defense dominated, gobbling up five sacks and three second-half interceptions, including a pick-six that put the icing on the cake of Tennessee's road celebration. The ageless Cam Wake took advantage of a suspect Browns offensive line sacking Mayfield 2.5 times, including one for a safety -- his 100th career QB takedown. The Tennessee defense kept the Browns discombobulated with a bevy of pressures that didn't allow Mayfield time to find his weapons on the outside. With the game still in question, safety Kevin Byard snuffed out the Browns' chances with an interception. On the next drive, Logan Ryan perfectly undercut a pass for another pick. Game, blouses. Tennessee's D walked into Cleveland and smashed all the offseason puff-pieces surrounding the Browns for one week. 2. The Titans offense ran a balanced operation under new offensive coordinator Arthur Smith. Using a bevy of play-action passes to find chunk gains and riding Derrick Henry, the Titans did well to protect a reshuffled offensive line, which stood out when compared to the Browns own O-line struggles. Henry picked up where he left off last season as the beating heart of the Tennessee offense (19/84/1). Smith's best play-call of the day came on a throwback screen to Henry that was blocked up perfectly for a 75-yard untouched TD. As for the Titans pass-catchers, rookie A.J. Brown (3/100) flashed playmaking ability in space, which led to Tony Romo to compare him to a young Anquan Boldin. It was also evident that Marcus Mariota missed Delaine Walker last season, especially in the red zone. The TE caught 2 TDs on five receptions in a return after missing all but one game in 2018. Welcome back, Mr. Walker. 3. Entering with expectations soaring, the Browns imploded. Penalties destroyed Cleveland at every turn. A whopping 18 penalties for 182 yards were the most by a Cleveland team since 1951(!). On offense, the flags shattered every positive play after the opening drive. On defense, the penalties gave Tennessee first down after first down. In the first half alone, Cleveland's miscues included a missed PAT, nine penalties (giving Tennessee five first downs), three sacks (one for a safety), 0-for-5 on third down, and starting left tackle Greg Robinson getting ejected for kicking an opponent. The undisciplined play continued in the final two quarters and was exacerbated as the Browns got down big. The two offseason undercurrents posed as counters to the Cleveland hype were the offensive line and how the team with a first-time coach would handle expectations. In Week 1 the answers were disastrous. The offensive line was a sieve, and the Browns couldn't right the ship when things went awry. How Freddie Kitchens' team responds in Week 2 will speak volumes. -- Kevin Patra San Francisco 49ers 31, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 17 1. Mustering two interceptions in a season, like the 49ers did in 2018, will never be an effort worth writing home about. In just one afternoon against Jameis Winston and the Bucs, the Niners managed to top that with three picks, two of which they took to the house after scoring drives. The first came in the third quarter following a seven-play, 75-yard scoring drive that ended with a 39-yard TD pass from Jimmy Garoppolo (more on him in a second), giving the 49ers a 14-7 lead. On the second play of the Bucs' ensuing drive, safety Richard Sherman picked off a pass intended for RB Peyton Barber and returned it 31 yards to bump the lead to 14 points. The Bucs cut into the lead with a score and a FG on two of their next three drives before Niners K Robbie Gould made it 23-17 late in the fourth. With the game on the line, Winston tossed a short pass into the waiting arms of 49ers CB Ahekllo Witherspoon who iced the game with a 25-yard TD return. In all, it was a tough night for Winston (20-of-36, 194 yards, 1 TD, 3 sacks, 45.4 passer rating) as the Niners' D was relentless all game. 2. With only nine game appearances to his name in two years as a Niner, Jimmy Garoppolo was looking to show the world why he's one of the highest-paid players in the league. The 49ers QB nearly silenced the critics early with an eight-yard TD pass to TE Greg Kittle on the Niners' second pass of the game but an offensive PI call negated the play. Things would only get worse for Jimmy G later in the half after CB Vernon Hargreaves' pick-six gave the Bucs an early lead. Aside from the turnover, Garoppolo's first half was efficient but not spectacular -13-of-16 for 100 yards - and with his team down 7-6, he needed to have a strong second half. Unfortunately for him, that didn't exactly happen but he did add to the winning effort with the TD pass to wideout Richie James. Now that Week 1 is in the books, Garoppolo will look to build on his solid day (166 yards, 80.2 passer rating) against the Bengals in Week 2. 3. For a moment, it looked the highly-touted tandem of DE Dee Ford and rookie LB Nick Bosa were going to have uneventful debuts for their new team. While neither player racked up a gaudy amount of tackles, both were solid in the win. Ford sacked Winston in the midst of a Bucs drive that concluded the first quarter; the series eventually ended with a lost fumble by Tampa TE O.J. Howard. Ford also provided the pressure on the Winston pick that wrapped up the Niners win. Bosa earned his first NFL sack in the third quarter and was involved in the pressure that resulted in another Winston sack on third-and-7 from the Niners 8 late in the fourth quarter. That drive ended with a FG. -- Jelani Scott Minnesota Vikings 28, Atlanta Falcons 12 1. What a start by the Vikings. A sack on their first defensive play. A blocked punt to end the Falcons' first drive. A healthy Dalvin Cook showing his stuff. And Kirk Cousins finding old pal Adam Thielen for a 23-yard touchdown. All three facets sparkled in all of 2 minutes and 3 seconds as Minnesota vaulted to a 7-0 lead and rode it to a 28-12 win that was largely decided by halftime. A season ago, Minnesota fell flat of living up to his expectations of a Super Bowl hopeful without as it didn't even make the playoffs. Though it's just Week 1, the Vikings looked every bit the part of a team that can fulfill high hopes. The defense was stellar as it held a formidable Falcons offense at bay for the first three quarters and turned in three turnovers. The offense was balanced and special teams made an impact. Overall, the Vikings were outstanding on their first Sunday. 2. Running backs Dalvin Cook of the Vikings and Devonta Freeman of the Falcons each returned to action following injury-shortened seasons looking to rebound for teams looking, much the same, for returns to form following playoff-less 2018 campaigns. The contrasting outcomes for the backs - who each attended Miami Central High - were very much emblematic of their teams' fates and outlooks going forward. Cook was simply outstanding in his return. It was on the second drive that he began to shine with two carries covering 40 yards, including a 19-yard split around left end to the pileon. Cook concluded his statement-making return with 21 carries for 111 yards and two scores and provided reason to believe he can still be the back everyone expected him to be before he was derailed after four games in his rookie season. Perhaps more importantly, Cook could revitalize a rushing attack largely absent last year when the Vikings stumbled. Freeman had less than 19 yards rushing in his return. He was stifled and frustrated. Just like the Falcons as a whole. As the returning RBs went, so to did their teams. 3. A day after scoring a huge extension, Julio Jones scored a touchdown, as well. But it was too late and far too little. Sure, Jones, in his 112th game, became the second-fastest receiver to 700 catches, but he continued to struggle against the Vikings, who have held him down like no other team. The touchdown was his first in five games against Minnesota and his 31 yards were shy of his dismal average in his previous four games versus the Vikings (40.5). The Vikings defense and cornerback Xavier Rhodes, in particular, continue to confound one of the game's greatest receivers. It's yet more evidence of why the Vikings could emerge very quickly as a team on the rise for the NFL's biggest prize at season's end. -- Grant Gordon Buffalo Bills 17, New York Jets 16 1. This was a weird comeback. The Bills were shut out for the first 40 minutes and fell behind 16-0 before scoring on three consecutive possessions to win it. The Jets losing linebacker C.J. Mosely in the second half might have been a tipping point. Also helping the Bills was Josh Allen not giving the ball away. He had four turnovers in the first half, including a pick-six to Mosley. The Jets will surely lament not scoring off the other three turnovers. Buffalo moved the sticks better than their AFC East counterpart throughout Week 1 and it eventually produced points. A costly roughing the passer penalty on third-and-10 extended a Bills drive late in the third quarter, resulting in a field goal. Running back Devin Singletary heated up on the ensuing Bills drive, picking up 55 yards to set up and Allen touchdown scramble. Allen capped off the comeback with a 38-yard touchdown to John Brown, who not only beat Darryl Roberts down the sideline but drew defensive pass interference on the play. The whole stretch was so Jets. 2. The anticipated development of Allen and Sam Darnold was anticlimactic in their Year 2 debuts. Allen was obviously a mixed bag with the turnovers and late comeback, which included completing 5 of 7 passes on the go-ahead drive. His seven completions for 123 yards to Brown were a welcome sight for Bill fans. Darnold didn't have a turnover and connected on 28 of 41 attempts, yet it amounted to just 175 yards. New York's revamped offensive line is still a work in progress, as Darnold was under constant pressure while being sacked four times and resorting to too many throws underneath. After more than a year away from football, 3. This isn't what the Kaare Vedvik hat trick was supposed to look like. After being touted as a potential placekicker and punter who could also handle kickoffs, Vedvik had a forgettable first game with the Jets. It started with him missing an extra point and continued with him shanking a 45-yard field goal. By the time the Jets scored their second touchdown in the third quarter, they opted to bypass the PAT altogether and try for two. Expect Gang Green to re-enter the kicker market soon. -- Adam Maya Los Angeles Rams 30, Carolina Panthers 27 1. All eyes were on the Rams backfield after questions regarding Todd Gurley's health were a hot topic coming into Week 1. The first half saw coach Sean McVay opt to mix it up with Gurley and Malcolm Brown splitting touches. It was Brown who made a difference early, scoring the game's first touchdown on a 5-yard rush in the redzone and ending the half with five carries for 29 yards. But, in the second half, it was Gurley -- who only added 8 yards on five attempts in the first two quarters -- that made big plays down the stretch. He opened the third quarter with a 25-yard rush on the Rams' third play to push them into the red zone. He followed that with a 5-yard rush two plays later; the drive ended with a 27-yard field goal. In the fourth quarter, Gurley demonstrated his power on several timely runs to the tune of 58 yards, including two back-to-back runs for 12 yards to put the game away in the final two minutes. Gurley's day may have ended with no TDs but 97 yards on 14 carries is by no means a bad outing. Add that in with Brown's 11 carries for 53 yards and two scores and the Rams' run game already looks potent. 2. After a foot injury cut his preseason debut short, Panthers quarterback Cam Newton got the chance to show off his surgically-repaired throwing shoulder. Newton's first throw of the game went to running back Christian McCaffrey, who ended the day with a whopping 209 all-purpose yards and two TDs, for a quick gain of five. After taking a sack on the next play, Newton followed that up with a 13-yard pass to receiver DJ Moore for a first down. The drive would eventually be cut short after a Moore fumble following a 15-yard reception. The play was indicative of an overall rough outing for Newton; the star QB completed 25 of his 38 pass attempts for 239 yards, took three sacks for a loss of 23 yards and turned the ball over twice. 3. Since 2017, the Rams defense has led the league in takeaways, interceptions and fumble recoveries. Led by an already stout group that added safety Eric Weddle and linebacker Clay Matthews in the offseason, the Rams added a forced fumble and an interception to the stat sheet in the Week 1 win. The group also brought the pressure with three sacks and five total QB hits. Something to keep an eye going into Week 2 is the potential loss of Weddle, who exited in the second quarter with a head laceration. -- Jelani Scott If there is any justice, I hope Hill’s shoulder is broken. He does not deserve to be playing on an NFL field for millions of dollars while his son is placed in the foster care system. We can use this as our gameday thread. Sound off everyone.
Antonio Brown has agreed to a deal with the New England Patriots, his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Saturday.
New England is giving Brown a one-year deal worth up to $15 million, Rosenhaus said. It includes a $9 million signing bonus, $10 million guaranteed and $5 million in incentives, the source said. ADVERTISEMENTThe agreement comes hours after the receiver was released by the Raiders, ending a tumultuous stint with Oakland after it acquired him via trade during the offseason. Brown took to social media after he agreed to the deal. Brown was eligible to sign with any team at 4:01 p.m. ET Saturday. Because of that, he is not eligible to play until Week 2 at the earliest, meaning Brown will miss New England's opener Sunday night against his former team, the Steelers. The Patriots and Raiders do not play this regular season. The Patriots will have to make a corresponding move once they officially sign Brown, but for now, their receiving corps includes Super Bowl LIII Most Valuable Player Julian Edelman, Brown, Josh Gordon, Phillip Dorsett, and undrafted rookies Jakobi Meyers and Gunner Olszewski. First-round draft choice N'Keal Harry has opened the season on injured reserve. The agreement comes after Brown asked to be released by the Raiders in an Instagram post earlier Saturday. Oakland had fined him $215,073.53 for conduct detrimental to the team, sources told Schefter, a move that voided the $29.125 million worth of guaranteed money in his deal. In addition, the Raiders sent Brown a letter stating that he no longer will be entitled to termination pay, sources told Schefter. As a result, Brown would have been playing on a week-to-week basis with both his guaranteed money voided and lack of termination pay. Oakland, in turn, cut Brown loose Saturday afternoon, and Rosenhaus said he'd immediately try to find a new home for the seven-time Pro Bowler. "Antonio is looking forward to a new beginning," Rosenhaus said. The acquisition of Brown moved the Patriots past the Kansas City Chiefs and into the role of Super Bowl favorites at multiple Las Vegas sportsbooks. The Patriots went from 6-1 to 4-1 to win the Super Bowl at the SuperBook at Westgate Las Vegas. The Chiefs are 6-1. The Oakland Raiders have announced they've released Antonio Brown, making the wide receiver eligible to sign with any team at 4:01 p.m. ET Saturday.
"We wish him the best," Raiders coach Jon Gruden told ESPN's Ed Werder in a text message. "Now that Antonio is a free agent, we are focused on the future and I will immediately work on signing him to a new team," Brown's agent, Drew Rosenhaus, said in a statement. "Antonio is looking forward to a new beginning." The move comes after Brown asked to be released by the team in an Instagram post earlier Saturday. Brown told ESPN's Jeff Darlington in an email Saturday that there is "no way" he plays for the Raiders. The Pro Bowl wide receiver said that was his stance after the team "took away my [contract] guarantees." He added: "no way I play after they took that and made my contract week to week." The Raiders fined Brown $215,073.53 for conduct detrimental to the team, league sources told Schefter on Saturday. By fining Brown, the Raiders voided the $29.125 million worth of guaranteed money in his deal, sources told Schefter. In addition, the Raiders sent Brown a letter stating that he no longer will be entitled to termination pay, sources told Schefter. As a result, Brown would have been playing on a week-to-week basis with both his guaranteed money voided and lack of termination pay. Though Brown is cleared to sign with any team after 4 p.m. Saturday, he's not eligible to play until Week 2 at the earliest. Antonio Brown's short but rocky tenure with the Raiders is over. Brown never played a game for Oakland, but was the center of the Raiders' offseason story. He spent time away from the team as he attempted to resolve an issue with his helmet, was fined for missing that time, got into a verbal altercation with general manager Mike Mayock over those fines, and was fined for the altercation. Additionally, Brown on Friday night posted a video on YouTube of a private phone call he had with Gruden. In the video, which lasted 1 minute, 57 seconds, Brown is heard taking a call from Gruden, who asks the receiver: "What the hell is going on, man?" Brown answered, "Just a villain all over the news, man." Gruden then called Brown "the most misunderstood" person he has met, before asking him: "Do you want to be a Raider or not?" Brown answered: "Man, I've been trying to be a Raider since day one. I've been f---ing working my ass off harder than anyone. I don't know why it's a question of me being a Raider. It's like do you guys want me to be a Raider?" Raiders Business No Longer BoominWith the Raiders releasing Antonio Brown, the Las Vegas-bound team's odds for this season have taken a severe hit. Gruden then asked the receiver to stop the off-the-field stuff and "just play football." "How hard is that?" Gruden could be heard saying. "You're a great football player. Just play football." Brown then told his coach it's not that simple. "I'm more than just a football player, man," he said. "I'm a real person. I'm a real person. It ain't about the football, I know I can do that. I show you guys that on the daily. This is my life. Ain't no more games." It wasn't immediately clear when the call between Brown and Gruden took place. A Raiders source told ESPN's Chris Mortensen on Friday night that Gruden was truly amused by the video and even thought it was "awesome." After a tumultuous offseason, the Kansas City Chiefs are sticking with receiver Tyreek Hill for the long-haul. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reports that the Chiefs and Hill have agreed to terms on a 3-year, $54 million contract extension, per sources informed of the deal. Hill receives $35.5 million guaranteed with a $5.8 million signing bonus, Rapoport adds. The team later confirmed the extension. "We're pleased we were able to reach an agreement with Tyreek to keep him in a Chiefs uniform for the foreseeable future," Chiefs general manager Brett Veach said in a statement. "He understands our expectations of him as a member of this team and community. This extension is contingent upon the conditions Tyreek agreed to adhere to upon his return to the team in July. Tyreek is an elite player in this league and has played a major role in our team's success, and we're pleased that he'll continue to make an impact for us." A fifth-round pick in 2016, Hill was set to play on the final year of his rookie deal with a base salary of $1.965 million. Now he has a bigger payday coming his way that keeps him in K.C. through the 2022 season. "I'm grateful for the opportunity to continue my playing career here in Kansas City," Hill said in a statement. "Kansas City is my home, and I appreciate the love and support from Clark Hunt, Coach Reid and Brett Veach along with my coaches and teammates. To Chiefs Kingdom, you're the best fans in the world." The new-money average of $18 million per season on the contract extension ties Hill for second-most among receivers in the NFL with Browns' Odell Beckham Jr. -- behind only Saints WR Michael Thomas ($19.25). The Chiefs had been working on a contract extension with Hill earlier this offseason before news broke that he was under criminal investigation for allegations of potential child abuse towards his 3-year-old son. The team barred Hill from attending offseason workouts as the investigation unfolded and paused contract talks. After an investigation, the NFL announced in mid-July it could not conclude Hill violated the league's personal conduct policy and would not be suspended. Following the league's announcement, contract negotiations resumed as Hill joined teammates for training camp. Friday the deal got done. On the field, Hill has proven to be one of the NFL's premier mismatch nightmares with the ability to scorch defenses deep, snag passes in tight windows, and is a demon after the catch. A perfect fit in Andy Reid's scheme, Hill has back-to-back 1,100-plus yard receiving season, and is coming off a 13 touchdowns 2018 campaign. Since entering the NFL in 2016, Hill has generated an NFL-high 44 receptions of 25 yards or more. The three-time Pro Bowler also added four punt return scores and on kick return TD. There is no questioning Hill's on-field talent. The off-field problems have always been the issue with the receiver. The new contract speaks loudly that the Chiefs are comfortable sticking with Hill for the foreseeable future. |
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