Tag: Fox Sport News

  • Rookie Report: First-year players set to deliver in fantasy playoffs and bring home championships

    Instead of another broad look at the rookie class, I want to drill down on impact. Which first-year players are actually going to decide fantasy championships over the next three weeks. Which rookies are going to be in starting lineups when trophies get raised and payments hit the group chat in Week 17?

    These are the five rookies I expect to have the biggest impact on crowning fantasy championships three weeks from now, and why.

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    Emeka Egbuka, WR, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    This one is tough and I know fantasy managers do not want to hear it right now because of how bad Egbuka has been. Since Week 6, he has averaged less than 10 fantasy points per game and it has felt like he is sinking your lineup every time you click start. He has absolutely left some plays on the field himself, but he is still getting the opportunity. If we are talking about rookies who are going to impact fantasy football championships three weeks from now, Egbuka still belongs on that list even if it does not feel like it today.

    And yes, Baker Mayfield has to play better. This is not just an Egbuka thing. Baker has not been good this season. But my goodness, this playoff schedule for Tampa Bay is as good as it gets. Falcons, Panthers and Dolphins, three defenses that can absolutely be had through the air. When you zoom out and look at the usage, the raw data still screams you do not bench this dude. Egbuka is seventh in the NFL in total targets, top 15 in target share and top 10 in routes run. He is sixth in air yards, eighth in red-zone targets and sixth in deep targets.

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    If there is an obvious star on your roster, you roll with that star, but this level of volume on this schedule is exactly the kind of usage that can swing fantasy playoffs. Egbuka still has the talent and opportunity to make a massive championship impact — even with Mike Evans looking like he’ll return to action this week.

    TreVeyon Henderson, RB, New England Patriots

    Big Hendo finally showed us in Q3 why we held on through the early season mess. He went nuclear for a two-week stretch in November with five total touchdowns, then cooled off before the bye with two straight games under 100 total yards and no scores. That lull plus Rhamondre Stevenson’s return has people nervous, but the usage still points to Henderson being on a lot of championship rosters.

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    In Rhamondre’s first game back, Henderson handled 18 carries to Stevenson’s six. The next week before the, bye it was 12 carries for Rhamondre and 11 for Henderson, with both backs earning three receptions. That is basically a split, which is fine when you are attached to one of the best offenses in football led by potential MVP candidate Drake Maye, who is playing at a historic clip from an efficiency standpoint at quarterback. We know New England trusts Henderson in high-leverage situations and we know he has the juice to flip a matchup on one drive.

    The playoff schedule lines up: Bills, Ravens and then the Jets in Week 17. That Jets matchup should have every manager’s attention. The last time Henderson saw New York, he hung three touchdowns in a true breakout game. You are not chasing that single performance, but it is a reminder of what his ceiling looks like even with Rhamondre active. The fear from September is long gone. We know what he is in this backfield and the impact that he can make on any given week, any given play, any given touch is absolutely worthy of having the biggest impact on crowning a fantasy championship.

    Woody Marks, RB, Houston Texans

    Another rookie I expect to see on a ton of championship rosters is Woody Marks. He took an absolute beating in that Kansas City game yet Houston needed every one of those 26 rush attempts and he answered the call. This rookie out of USC is not the biggest back on the field but he runs like he does not know that. With Nick Chubb banged up and status unknown, there is even more room for Marks to own this backfield the rest of the way.

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    The volume has quietly been rock solid. Over his last 10 games, he has hit double-digit carries nine times. Since Week 10, he has not dipped below 14 rush attempts in a single outing. He only has one rushing touchdown over that stretch and he has not been heavily featured as a receiver, which might make the weekly box scores feel a little underwhelming. The reality is he is getting pure bell-cow work on a team that wants to play through its defense and run game.

    Now look at the playoff schedule: Cardinals, Raiders and Chargers. We just watched Saquon Barkley rip through that Chargers front. Houston’s defense is good enough to keep the offense in positive scripts which means a whole lot of Marks on the ground as the team tries to close out wins and lock up the AFC South. Marks is set up to be that rookie back you plug into the RB2 or flex spot every week and do not think twice. When the dust settles after Week 17, do not be surprised when you see Woody Marks sitting in more than a few fantasy championship lineups.

    Luther Burden III, WR, Chicago Bears

    On paper, you probably do not want any rookie wideout walking into playoff matchups against the Browns, Packers and 49ers. In most cases, you would just stay away. Luther Burden III is not that type of rookie. With Rome Odunze sidelined on a week-to-week timeline and Chicago fighting for its playoff life, Burden is about to find out what it looks like to be the grown man in the room.

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    DJ Moore just turned in a one-catch, minus-4 yard performance in a must-win game against Green Bay. The rushing attack is doing its job. The missing piece is a perimeter playmaker defenses actually fear. Over the last four games, Burden has quietly become that guy. At least five targets in every game. At least three receptions in every game. A carry in every game. Explosive plays every week. Chicago is already designing touches for him inside and out because he brings speed this receiver room badly needs.

    The Bears went from the top of the NFC to hanging onto a wild-card spot and they know it. They have to keep their foot on the gas to hold off Detroit and have a chance of catching Green Bay. That means leaning on the player who can flip a drive in one snap. Burden might not be as polished as Moore yet, but he is Chicago’s most dynamic weapon. He is the type of rookie wide receiver that can absolutely bring significant impact to your lineup based on the offense, his skill set and the opportunity available to him.

    Harold Fannin Jr., TE, Cleveland Browns

    I do not know if there will be a more impactful player at his position on fantasy football championship rosters than Harold Fannin Jr. The thing with Fannin is, the usage has been steady all year. He has not dipped below two receptions in any matchup this season and he has been under five targets only twice. That matters at tight end, where most people are praying for one or two usable weeks.

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    Now we finally get to see what it looks like when the offense actually runs through him. With Shedeur Sanders under center, this Browns unit looks functional. Not a juggernaut, not Mahomes and Kelce but competent enough to support a difference-maker at tight end. On the season, in half-PPR scoring per game, Fannin is sitting at TE11. If you zoom into the last three games with Sanders, he jumps to TE4, one of only five tight ends averaging double-digit half-PPR points over that stretch.

    Over the last three weeks, you see names like Colby Parkinson and Brenton Strange inside the top-10 TEs. In that landscape, a rookie who has locked in weekly targets, red-zone work and a young quarterback who clearly trusts him is exactly what you want to roll out through the fantasy playoffs. With matchups against the Bears, Bills and a hot-and-cold Steelers defense on deck, Fannin is live to be a tight end everyone is talking about when trophies get handed out.

  • 2026 NFL Draft: League shortens time between first-round picks from 10 to 8 minutes

    The NFL Draft is, generally, a slow process. With 10 minutes in between picks in the first round, the opening night of the event can last until nearly midnight Eastern Time despite starting almost five hours earlier.

    In an attempt to allow football fans to get more sleep, the NFL reportedly reduced time between first-round picks from 10 to 8 minutes. That new mandate will go into effect during the 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

    The move should wind up being a positive for fans, as the time between the biggest action — the picks — will be much shorter. While the change also means commentators will have less time to talk about every single team when on the clock, that’s probably a trade-off most fans will support.

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    The decision, however, could have a negative impact on one area of the draft. With the shortened time between picks, that puts more pressure on teams to complete trades quickly. It’s possible the change will make it tougher to see draft trades in the first round, at least until general managers adjust to losing two minutes between each pick.

    While that’s a concern, it’s probably not significant. Teams were reportedly on board with the decision to shorten time between picks, a sign executives feel they can still make deals and debate picks while on the clock.

    It’s also not the first time the NFL has cut down on time between picks during the draft. Prior to 2007, teams had 15 minutes to make their first-round selections. That number was dropped to 10 minutes for the 2008 NFL Draft.

    It’s unclear whether the NFL will look to shorten times in other rounds. NFL teams have seven minutes in between picks in the second round, five minutes in the third through six rounds and four minutes in the seventh round.

  • Reports: Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles expected to take same position at Tennessee

    Jim Knowles looks to be headed to his third school in three seasons.

    According to multiple reports, the longtime college assistant is expected to become the new defensive coordinator at Tennessee after negotiating a buyout at Penn State.

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    Knowles arrived at Penn State after he coordinated Ohio State’s defense during the Buckeyes’ title run in 2024. He became the highest-paid defensive coordinator in the country at Penn State, but things did not go as planned for the team that was ranked No. 2 in the AP Top 25 to start the season.

    After a 3-0 start, Penn State lost three straight games to fall to 3-3. That third loss, a defeat to Northwestern, resulted in the firing of coach James Franklin. Penn State ended up losing six straight games before three straight wins to close out the season and a spot in the Pinstripe Bowl against fellow 2025 underachiever Clemson.

    The Nittany Lions allowed 21.4 points per game and 5.3 yards per play in 2025. Penn State allowed at least 30 points in four games, including a 38-14 loss to Ohio State on Nov. 1.

    The Buckeyes gave up the fewest points in the country a season ago at 12.9 as they rebounded from a Week 13 loss to Michigan to win four straight games in the College Football Playoff. Knowles departed the Buckeyes not long after the season to join their rival and Ohio State replaced him with longtime NFL coach Matt Patricia.

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    At Tennessee, Knowles would replace Tim Banks. The Volunteers gave up nearly 29 points per game and 5.5 yards a play in 2025 as opposing QBs threw for almost 250 yards per game. A season ago, Tennessee had one of the best defenses in college football and allowed just 189 passing yards per game.

    Knowles had been at Ohio State for three seasons before heading to Penn State. Prior to joining the Buckeyes, he was the defensive coordinator at Oklahoma State for four seasons and the defensive coordinator at Duke for eight seasons.

  • Fantasy Football Rankings: Risers and fallers ahead of the first round of the playoffs

    The fantasy football trade deadline has passed, but Justin Boone’s playoff rankings can help in your pursuit of a championship. This week, he released his final rest-of-season rankings and value charts. You can use them as a guide to help manage your roster, whether you’re debating waiver adds, drops or otherwise.

    Below, he highlights some of the players who are rising or falling as the fantasy playoffs begin.

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    Rest-of-season rankings for the fantasy playoffs

    Risers

    Joe Burrow, Bengals

    Since returning from injury, Burrow has posted back-to-back QB1 fantasy finishes with 545 yards, six touchdowns and two picks over that span.

    None of his opponents in the fantasy playoffs (Ravens, Dolphins, Cardinals) are cause for concern, which means there are only a small handful of quarterbacks you should consider starting over him.

    Even with Tee Higgins’ status uncertain this week as he attempts to clear concussion protocol, Burrow remains a high-end fantasy option in what projects to be a high-scoring affair with Baltimore.

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    Other QB risers: Brock Purdy, 49ers

    Saquon Barkley, Eagles

    Barkley’s fantasy production finally came to life with 122 yards and a score on 20 touches last Sunday.

    Star tackle Lane Johnson is expected back in the lineup soon, perhaps as early as this week, which will provide a massive boost to the Eagles’ entire offense.

    His impact will also coincide with an extremely easy upcoming schedule during the fantasy playoffs with the Raiders, Commanders and Bills over the next three weeks.

    From Barkley’s perspective, all three of those defenses rank inside the top eight for most fantasy points allowed to running backs.

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    While it’s been a disappointing season for the reigning NFL Offensive Player of the Year, there are plenty of signs pointing to a strong fantasy finish for Barkley.

    Other RB risers: Travis Etienne Jr., Jaguars

    Jauan Jennings, 49ers

    Jennings hasn’t popped for many monster weeks, but he’s been very consistent lately with stat lines of 4-41-1, 6-71-1, 4-54-0, 5-41-1 and 4-39-1 over his last five outings.

    While the touchdowns are doing some of the heavy lifting there, he was also producing in some tougher matchups.

    Now, Jennings gets one of the easiest fantasy playoff schedules with the Titans, Colts and Bears defenses, which are all among the top-10 for fantasy points given up to wideouts.

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    We’ve seen Jennings get really hot for short stretches in the past and he’s set up to do it again at the most important time on the fantasy calendar.

    Other WR risers: Jakobi Meyers, Jaguars

    Harold Fannin Jr., Browns

    Even though I’ve written and spoken about Fannin constantly this season, including in this week’s waiver wire column, the rookie is still available in 42% of Yahoo leagues.

    That seems off for a player who’s the TE11 in fantasy points per game this year and has been the fourth-highest scoring player at his position over the past three weeks.

    That rise in fantasy production matches up with an increase in playing time as teammate David Njoku battled through injuries. The veteran left with a knee issue last Sunday, which could cost him time.

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    If that happens, you can expect Shedeur Sanders to continue keying in on Fannin. The pair combined for 11 targets in Week 14 alone, connecting on eight of them for 114 yards and a score.

    Not only am I starting Fannin as a TE1 in the fantasy playoffs, but I see top-five upside the rest of the way.

    Other TE risers: Jake Ferguson, Cowboys

    Fallers

    Justin Herbert, Chargers

    It was impressive to see Herbert suit up on Monday night, despite having surgery on his non-throwing hand earlier in the week.

    He’s also been playing behind a banged-up offensive line that’s lost both its star tackles. While his presence helped the Chargers get a win, Herbert’s fantasy numbers continue to dwindle.

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    Herbert hasn’t topped 15 fantasy points in four straight games and he hasn’t finished higher than QB17 during that span. That’s especially surprising considering he ran for 66 yards in his most recent outing.

    As a victim of circumstance, it’s hard to trust Herbert in the fantasy playoffs as anything more than a volatile QB2/streamer. Matchups on the road in Kansas City this week and at home versus the Texans in Week 17 are spots to avoid him.

    Other QB fallers: Caleb Williams, Bears

    RJ Harvey, Broncos

    Am I really going to make a case against a player who finished as a top-five fantasy running back each of the last two weeks?

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    That’s correct.

    In his first start before the recent surge, Harvey managed just 50 scoreless scrimmage yards in a tougher spot against the Chiefs.

    Despite being set up well versus the Commanders in Week 13, he only amassed 62 yards in an overtime game, but saved his fantasy day thanks to two touchdowns.

    There’s no doubt his Week 14 outing against the Raiders was his best performance yet, but again, that was another easy opponent like Washington.

    Now the degree of difficulty will be ratcheted up when he has to face the Packers, Jaguars and Chiefs again. Those are all defenses inside the top 10 for fewest fantasy points allowed to running backs.

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    So, keep your expectations in check for Harvey, who is more of a riskier fantasy RB2 than the high-end RB1 he’s been delivering for the last two weeks.

    Other RB fallers: Rico Dowdle, Panthers

    Alec Pierce, Colts

    Pierce has been a great story this season as a meaningful part of the Colts offense and an upside WR3 for fantasy. However, the loss of Daniel Jones to a season-ending injury completely changes the equation for Pierce moving forward.

    With it looking more and more likely that 44-year-old Philip Rivers or unproven Riley Leonard could start for Indy, this passing attack is about to shift dramatically — leaning more on the run game and less on downfield throws where Pierce does his best work.

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    Overall volume is also in question as the team tries to get by without their starter.

    To make matters worse, Pierce gets a Seahawks defense in Week 15 that’s allowing the fourth fewest fantasy points to his position.

    Even after a great season so far, Pierce can only be viewed as a boom-or-bust WR4/flex.

    Other WR fallers: Khalil Shakir, Bills

    Oronde Gadsden II, Chargers

    Gadsden’s struggles continued this week with his worst fantasy outing of the season, resulting in just one catch for seven yards on four targets.

    That’s the latest in a string of poor performances that have netted him yardage totals of 13, 41 and 27 prior to this outing.

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    The player we were teased with from Week 6 to Week 9, who averaged the third-most fantasy points among tight ends during that month, is no longer around.

    Instead, he’s been replaced with a minor contributor in a deflated passing attack.

    The rookie has gone from weekly TE1 to low-end TE2/streamer. He doesn’t even have an easy matchup that we can target in fantasy playoffs.

    The future is promising for Gadsden, but don’t expect much from him for the remainder of the 2025 fantasy campaign.

    Other TE fallers: Hunter Henry, Patriots

    Rest-of-season rankings for the fantasy playoffs

  • NBA Cup reactions + are the Knicks the team to beat in the East?

     

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    Tom Haberstroh and Dan Devine break down the keys to the New York Knicks punching their ticket to Vegas with their victory over the Toronto Raptors, including Jalen Brunson’s impact this year and the Knicks’ elite 3-point shooting game. Are the Knicks now the East favorite?

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    Next, they discuss the Magic’s victory over the Heat as they advance to the next round of the NBA Cup. They share how Desmond Bane, Jalen Suggs, and Anthony Black are the difference makers for Orlando and discuss the keys for Orlando’s success in the next round of the NBA Cup.

    Later, the duo shares their picks for the NBA Cup Quarterfinals. Are the Thunder untouchable? Can the Spurs take down the Lakers without Wemby?

    1:42 Are the New York Knicks the top contender in the East?

    20:02 Are Desmond Bane, Jalen Suggs, and Anthony Black better on the floor without Banchero?

    29:10 NBA Cup Eastern Conference semifinal preview

    36:56 NBA Cup Western Conference quarterfinal preview

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • Hannah Hidalgo on her game: “I’m a dog!”, can UConn go undefeated? + new WNBA CBA insight

    Subscribe to Hoops 360

    Hoops 360 host Caroline Fenton and women’s basketball writer Cassandra Negley sit down with Notre Dame superstar Hannah Hidalgo for a deep dive into team chemistry, leadership, and handling big-time pressure. Hannah also shares her biggest takeaways from the Fighting Irish’s solid start to the season.

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    Caroline and Cassandra break down what goes into negotiating a new CBA—and debate the question on everyone’s mind: Can UConn actually run the table this year? Hear their bold predictions and insider insight.

    Got questions or topics for Hoops 360? Email us at hoops360@yahoosports.com and you could hear them on the show!

    01:36 – Hoops 360 welcomes Notre Dame guard Hannah Hidalgo

    13:41 – Cass breaks down her conversation with Tamika Tremaglio, Sports Industry Strategic Advisor

    23:56 – Can UConn go undefeated this season?

    26:47 – What could be the cause for any potential losses for UConn

    30:59 – How impactful is scheduling to a team’s success?

    34:12 – Upcoming games to watch

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • Four Verts: Bucs need to think about big changes at QB, while the Colts are doing WHAT

    Quarterback is the most important position in the NFL, and one perennial winner needs to rethink its approach there, while another is getting super desperate. This week’s edition of the Four Verts column hits that, plus a coach with a defensive reputation who needs to start living up to it and a look at the division races heating up down the stretch.

    Tampa Bay needs to hit a quick reset

    It’s time. The Super Bowl honeymoon appears to be over in Tampa Bay as its once-great offense has come to a sputtering stop, and now its playoff hopes are on the line as the Carolina Panthers move within striking range of the NFC South crown.

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    Since starting off the season 5-1, including a blazing offensive performance against the stalwart Seahawks defense, the Buccaneers are just 2-4 and have cratered to the point they’re barely functional on offense. Whether they make the playoffs or not, it’s time for things to change in Tampa Bay because they don’t have enough to be a real threat to win another Super Bowl.

    In the immediate aftermath of the brief Tom Brady era ending, Baker Mayfield was the perfect quarterback to sign. He was a quality option to plug in at quarterback in an attempt to stay competitive while the team tried to figure out what was next as it stared at its Super Bowl rings. It was a good move! The Bucs have made the playoffs both years with Mayfield as the starter. But there’s an expiration date on everything, and this appears to be headed toward a situation where at the very least the Buccaneers need to make a sizable quarterback investment to compete with Mayfield going into next season.

    Unlike last year, the Buccaneers haven’t been able to survive a litany of injuries. Since they’ve hit this bout of losing starting in Week 7, the Buccaneers rank 29th in success rate (36.8%), 30th in expected points added per dropback (-0.21) and 24th in points per drive (1.62) — despite having the third-best starting field position in the league over that time (roughly their own 33-yard line). They’re also converting 23.2% of their third-down passing plays, good for 30th in the league over that time. The run game has been above average during that time span, providing them enough to have a decent offense if the passing game could do anything.

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    Mayfield is not the guy who can carry an offense on his shoulders when injuries start piling up. He’s capable enough to have a respectable season in the right circumstances, but that was true in Cleveland as well. Ultimately, this stretch of play shows why he’s been a journeyman quarterback since leaving the Browns. The Bucs don’t need to get rid of him this offseason or anything, but it’s definitely time to start looking and taking a swing for their next franchise QB.

    Tampa’s defense needs to improve its down-to-down consistency against the pass, but this is an above-average unit that’s ninth in points per drive (1.65) during this span of games since Week 7. There’s enough here that the Buccaneers can boom back to the top of the conference with a savvy offseason in 2026, but they clearly need to make changes — winning the dismal NFC South isn’t enough anymore.

    Hey, man, what are the Colts doing?

    Look, it’s hard. Accepting reality is never fun, especially when it started with arguably the greatest offensive start in NFL history and has been whittled into a lost season that puts the entire future of the franchise in doubt.

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    However, the Indianapolis Colts have got to get a grip. With their season on the line, and really the blueprint of the current organizational setup on the line, the Colts have turned to a familiar face. No, not Carson Wentz. Gardner Minshew? Nope. Wasn’t Joe Flacco or current CBS broadcaster Matt Ryan, either. The Colts turned the page all the way back to 2020 and called 44-year-old Philip Rivers out of retirement for the final month of the season. OK, sure.

    Without even a millisecond of critical thinking, it’s easy to see why the Colts wanted to improve their quarterback room. Even though the past month of football has been a disaster, 8-5 still (technically) gives them a good amount of control over their playoff push. They have one of the best running backs of this era in Jonathan Taylor and a capable coaching staff that has far exceeded expectations this season. Injuries have decimated their quarterback room, leaving the team with journeyman backup Brett Rypien as the only healthy option going into the weekend. They needed a quarterback and pickings are SLIM in December. Free agents are the only choice, and this is the one the Colts chose.

    Rivers hasn’t played since the 2020 season, when he finished his career with a one-year stint with the Colts prior to his retirement. Rivers has been coaching high school football in Alabama since then. Almost five full seasons away from the daily rigors of NFL life, he’s jumping back in the fold with a chance to play against the ravenous Seattle Seahawks defense this weekend. Given head coach Shane Steichen is still a branch of the Frank Reich/Doug Pederson tree — Reich was Rivers’ head coach in 2020, and coached him with the Chargers for three seasons — Rivers might actually not be too far behind when it comes to learning the offense.

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    But command of the offense isn’t the issue here. THE ISSUE IS HE’S 44 YEARS OLD AND HASN’T PLAYED IN FIVE SEASONS. Rivers even wanting to do this is baffling given how long he’s been away from the game. Maybe he wanted to see if he could hop off the couch and do what the Colts would like him to do, which is save the season.

    A record of 8-5 with an elite offensive performance for most of the season doesn’t really scream organizational panic, but remember: The Colts have been all-in on this season. They traded away two first-round picks for Jets star cornerback Sauce Gardner (who’s also hurt) and now sit in no man’s land draft-wise. With no first-rounder to fall back on, trying to stay as competitive as they can makes some sense. But not like this.

    The truth is this season is cooked. Indianapolis started hot, sputtered to a stop and suffered too many injuries along the way. This team is not winning the Super Bowl and the desperation to go ahead and make this move suggests the Colts think that is still an attainable goal. Good luck to everyone involved here as 44-year-old Philip Rivers potentially will suit up against the Seahawks and Texans to close the season.

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    Commanders’ defense is apocalyptically bad

    This season has been an objective disaster for the Commanders, with their most recent performance putting a bow on their struggles. A 31-0 loss to the Minnesota Vikings, in a game that felt far worse than even that score would suggest, officially eliminated the Commanders from playoff contention and extended their losing streak to eight games. Their offense has been riddled by injuries, but most basic and advanced statistics have the unit pegged as average-ish this season. Marcus Mariota has done a decent job as a backup and things should improve next season when franchise quarterback Jayden Daniels has a full offseason to heal from his various injuries. The biggest problem, by far, is Washington’s defense.

    This team just can’t play defense. The current Commanders resemble the defenses that Dan Quinn oversaw in Atlanta — jarringly unprepared. Each week Washington has coverage busts and poor run defense, and the players are routinely put in rough situations to succeed. The Vikings, who haven’t been able to do much of anything on offense this season, went up and down the field with ease and made life incredibly easy for J.J. McCarthy. Since the Commanders’ losing skid started, they’re allowing offenses to score 3.2 points per drive, easily worst in the NFL. Almost every single defensive stat over the past two months is ranked dead last in the league. They have been DICED.

    Quinn has already pulled play-calling duties from Joe Whitt Jr., but it didn’t seem to matter even a little bit this past weekend. At times, it felt like the Vikings were just playing on air with no defense out there. At some point, Quinn has to prove he can run a defense without first-ballot Hall of Famers playing in their prime. Since leaving Seattle and the Legion of Boom, the only successful run Quinn has had has been with Micah Parsons and the Cowboys. That cannot be the bar for being able to run an effective defense.

    It’s hard to get a great feel for how some defenders are progressing because they’re routinely put in poor spots (see Mike Sainristil’s game against the Vikings), but one thing that’s clear as day is they desperately need an upgrade at middle linebacker. Bobby Wagner has turned into a marked man on defense and teams are routinely able to get him into spaces that he’s no longer able to defend. With a weak middle of the field and defensive backs failing to execute coverages, the Commanders don’t have a chance right now — especially if their pass rush is still going to collect pressures at a bottom-five rate in the league.

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    This season is over, and if it stays this bad, there may be some tough conversations in Washington. At some point, Quinn has to prove he can coach a defense without super-elite players because the evidence that he can’t is piling up over the past 10 years of results. It doesn’t make sense to have the same coverage issues that he did as head coach in Atlanta, but Quinn has four games to figure something out so his defenses can stop getting shredded by the most basic concepts in the league. It’s time to evolve or improve the staff because right now this defense is lost, which at this point is a staple of the scheme.

    Every division headed toward a dramatic finish

    One of the good things about a massive consolidation of losing teams for the second straight year is that it creates more drama among the winning teams as the season comes to a close. Nine teams have already been eliminated from the playoffs with four games to go, setting the stage for playoff positioning for the top teams in their division. There’s a bit of intrigue with every division, with a handful of massive games this weekend.

    AFC East

    The Patriots and Bills play a huge game Sunday that will help decide the fate of the AFC East. With a win, the 11-2 Patriots can lock in a playoff berth and clinch the division. Buffalo isn’t in real danger of missing the playoffs at 9-4, but they would be forced into a road game if they lose this weekend.

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    AFC North

    Baltimore and Pittsburgh are at the top of the division, with Pittsburgh owning the lead and current tiebreaker over its longtime rival. Neither of these teams seem like they have a real chance to win the Super Bowl, but the Ravens are just one game back. Baltimore will travel to Cincinnati this weekend (who is technically alive in the race) while the Steelers host the Dolphins.

    AFC West

    The Broncos are inching closer to clinching the AFC West on the back of their stout defense, but the Chargers and Chiefs are still lurking in the background. The Chiefs are a long shot to make the playoffs now, but the Chargers are only two games behind the Broncos despite a slew of injuries to their offensive line. The Broncos seem destined to win this division, but the Chiefs and Chargers racing into the wild card is going to be compelling as well.

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    AFC South

    Well. The Colts are doing whatever they’re doing over there. Just ignore them. Unless Philip Rivers has turned the clock back to 2012 then this division is down to the Texans and Jaguars. Both teams have had up-and-down seasons, but Jacksonville (9-4) is currently in the driver’s seat. Jacksonville and Houston split the season series, so tiebreakers could get weird here depending on how the next few weeks go.

    NFC East

    It feels like no one should win this division, but as usual this has come down to the 6-6-1 Cowboys and the 8-5 Eagles down the stretch. Maybe there’s a way for both fan bases to walk away unhappy.

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    NFC North

    Every team is alive here, but the Vikings are probably too far away at 5-8 to actually make a run for the playoffs. Chicago and Green Bay both have nine wins on the season with the Lions still lurking in third place with eight. All of them are alive, but Green Bay is playing the best football right now and has the complete makeup of a title contender.

    NFC West

    The Cardinals had another forgetful season, but there’s a chance the Rams, Seahawks and 49ers all make the playoffs this season. This division has lived up to the hype with the Rams and Seahawks (both 10-3) looking like the two best teams in the sport right now. The 49ers have been hobbled yet again, but they keep churning out wins and sit a game back at 9-4.

    NFC South

    You’re still reading this?! Stop! Go get those presents before you ruin the holidays for your family. Get some fresh air. Just not this.

  • Champions League results: Erling Haaland helps Manchester City beat Real Madrid; Arsenal goes top, remains undefeated

    Arsenal cruised to a 3-0 win over Club Brugge during Matchday 6 on Wednesday to move ahead of Bayern Munich into solo position atop the Champions League table. A brace from Noni Madueke and an insurance marker from Gabriel Martinelli, who has now scored in five straight games in the competition, helped the Gunners to improve to 6-0-0 and remain the only undefeated side.

    Madueke won “goal of the day” honors after opening the scoring with a rocket from outside the Brugge box in the 25th minute.

    In the battle of European giants, Erling Haaland’s 43rd minute penalty was the difference as Manchester City topped Real Madrid 2-1 at the Santiago Bernabéu.

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    Rodrygo put Real Madrid up first after taking a Jude Bellingham ball and firing a sht across the box past Gianluigi Donnarumma for his first goal in 32 matches.

    Seven minutes later, Nico O’Reilly leveled things after putting home a rebound following a Manchester City corner. Rayan Cherki’s ball was met by a Josko Gvardiol header, which Thibaut Courtois couldn’t handle cleanly, allowing O’Reilly to get the visitors back into the match.

    Minutes before halftime, Antonio Rüdiger pulled Haaland down inside the Real Madrid box and a penalty was awarded following a VAR review. Haaland sent Courtois in the wrong direction for his 34th goal this season for club and country and his 55th goal in his 54th career Champions League match.

    Elsewhere around the grounds, U.S national team midfielder Weston McKennie and Canada striker Jonathan David contributed both goals in Juventus’ 2-0 win over Pafos.

    That was the same scoreline as Benfica got by Napoli with goals from Richard Ríos and Leandro Barreiro. PSG earned a point in a goalless draw with Athletic Club and are tied for third with Manchester City and Atalanta on 13 points. Bodø/Glimt and Borussia Dortmund alternated goals during a 2-2 draw. Julian Brandt bagged a brace with goals in each half and Jens Hauge rescued the point for Bodø with a 75th minute equalizer.

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    Newcastle had to settle for a 2-2 draw with Bayer Leverkusen after Alejandro Grimaldo equalized in the 88th minute. Anthony Gordon and 19-year-old Lewis Miley had given the Magpies the lead before the two points were dropped late.

    Ajax moved off the bottom of the table with a 4-2 win over Qarabağ. Oscar Gloukh tied the match at two in the 79th minute and Anton Gaaei put the visitors ahead three minutes later. Gloukh would add his second of the match in the 90th minute to secure the three points. Copenhagen picked up its second win of the competition, thanks to Andreas Cornelius’ 90th minute goal during a 3-2 win over Villarreal.

    Live coverage is over54 updates
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      Grimaldo has the hosts level with just a few minutes left to play.

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      Petter Hauge levels things up in Germany.

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      19-year-old Lewis Miley nearly leaps out of his shoes for the awkward header to snag his first European goal and give the English side the lead.

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      USA and Canada are on the board now in Italy after Jonathan David gets the second one in for Juve. The hosts are cruising now thanks to their CONCACAF contingent.

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      American midfielder Weston McKennie gets the opener with an incredible move inside the box before sending the ball into the roof of the net with a right-footed chip shot.

    Champions League Matchday 6 results

    FT: Qarabağ 2-4 Ajax
    FT: Villarreal 2-3 Copenhagen
    FT: Real Madrid 1-2 Manchester City
    FT: Athletic Club 0-0 PSG
    FT: Bayer Leverkusen 2-2 Newcastle
    FT: Benfica 2-0 Napoli
    FT: Borussia Dortmund 2-2 Bodø/Glimt
    FT: Club Brugge 0-3 Arsenal
    FT: Juventus 2-0 Pafos

  • ‘I’m not here to try to save the day’: Philip Rivers explains decision to rejoin Colts after Shane Steichen, Chris Ballard offer unusual opportunity

    Philip Rivers does not expect to elude many a pass rush.

    But when the 44-year-old quarterback answered a call from Indianapolis Colts head coach Shane Steichen and general manager Chris Ballard on Sunday night, he realized that wasn’t what their challenge would most require.

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    A quarterback who knew the playbook? Rivers spent nine years with Steichen as members of the Chargers then a 10th and final NFL season with Ballard and the Colts in 2020. Have a sense of the roster? Rivers said at his (re-)introductory media conference Wednesday that he’s rejoining 14 players who he played alongside with the 2020 Colts, including offensive starters in running back Jonathan Taylor, receiver Michael Pittman Jr. and tight end Mo Alie-Cox.

    So when Steichen and Ballard asked, “Hey, what do you think?” Rivers couldn’t help but be interested. They told him to sleep on the decision, and he awoke Monday more adamant.

    [Get more Colts news: Indianapolis team feed]

    A flight to Indianapolis and a throwing session helped seal the deal. By Tuesday, from his hotel room, Steichen said Rivers told Colts brass: “Dadgummit, let’s freaking go.” Wednesday morning, the Colts announced they had signed Rivers to the practice squad.

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    “I’m not here to stinking save the year or be a hero by any means,” Rivers said. “We got to stinking run the crap out of the football and play defense and do all those things. So if that comes to be, and I’m the one that’s out there, I’m not here to try to save the day. I’m going to know where I’m limited. And as we go, it will get better, if that’s the route we end up going.

    “I ain’t never ran away from anybody anyway. People say, ‘Well, they’re going to know you’re going to be right there.’ And it’s like, ‘Well, they knew that for 16, 17 years.’”

    The Colts’ decision to unretire Rivers five years after his last NFL action is atypical. But so, too, was their predicament.

    Starting quarterback Daniel Jones, who had led the Colts to a surprise 8-2 start, went from declining play due to a broken left fibula to injured reserve with a right torn Achilles. The quarterback Jones beat out in the preseason, 2023 fourth overall draft pick Anthony Richardson Sr., has yet to be cleared by doctors after sustaining an orbital fracture in a freak accident warming up for an October game. Sixth-round rookie quarterback Riley Leonard relieved Jones last Sunday — but began to realize on the plane Sunday and into Monday that he’d hurt his knee.

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    Leonard was able to practice Wednesday but has not yet been guaranteed his availability for a Sunday matchup vs. the 10-3 Seattle Seahawks.

    And the Colts do not appear to have much confidence in journeyman Brett Rypien, also under contract.

    So what does a team with three injured quarterbacks and a playoff berth slipping but not yet out of reach do?

    Remember, this is the same franchise that plucked former offensive lineman Jeff Saturday off the ESPN airwaves to serve as its interim head coach in 2022, when Frank Reich was fired.

    Longtime Colts members knew better than to be surprised.

    “I’ve learned over the years to expect the unexpected,” linebacker Zaire Franklin, an eight-year Colt, said. “Unusual circumstances called for unusual answers. Thankful that we got a guy who knows the system, that knows the building, that knows the guy [and] is able to step in and help us right away.

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    “It is a crazy situation.”

    ORCHARD PARK, NY - JANUARY 09: Philip Rivers #17 of the Indianapolis Colts throws a pass during a game against the Buffalo Bills at Bills Stadium on January 9, 2021 in Orchard Park, New York. (Photo by Timothy T Ludwig/Getty Images)

    Philip Rivers’ last game for the Colts was a wild-card game in 2021 against the Bills. (Photo by Timothy T Ludwig/Getty Images)

    (Timothy T Ludwig via Getty Images)

    Rivers and Leonard may be 22 years apart — but Colts’ QB room isn’t as random as you think

    It would be fair for Leonard to have questions about the Colts bringing in a 44-year-old who hasn’t played in five years to challenge him for Sunday’s starting job.

    In relief of Jones on Sunday, Leonard completed 62.1% (18 of 29) of passes for 145 yards and an interception. He rushed twice for 5 yards and a touchdown.

    Leonard is a Day 3 draft pick with a banged-up knee who is “learning this business and I don’t have an opinion on it,” he said diplomatically of the signing. But in a vacuum, it should be reasonable to ask: What can a 44-year-old even do against a frenetic Seahawks front featuring the likes of Leonard Williams and DeMarcus Lawrence? Does this guy really want to do this?

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    It turns out, Leonard has reason to know better: The 23-year-old worked out with the 44-year-old then-high school coach through the spring in their shared Alabama town of Fairhope.

    So Leonard knows that Rivers knows the scheme because it was Rivers he texted when the Colts drafted him, and Rivers whose house he then drove to to review the Colts’ playbook together. Leonard knows Rivers can throw after the two battled in net target throws in the spring. And Leonard knows Rivers is as competitive as he’s seen because when they raced in sprints or throwing on the run, Leonard would hear about it hours later.

    “If I got him that day in particular, he’d send me a voice memo at 11 p.m. at night complaining on how I cheated and how I picked an unfair drill,” Leonard said Wednesday. “So yeah, I knew he still had [the drive]. But it is crazy.

    “It is as crazy to me as it is anybody.”

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    Rivers rejoins the Colts five years after his last action in a 17-year career. Rivers won 134 of 240 career regular-season games, completing 64.9% of passes for 63,440 yards, 421 touchdowns and 209 interceptions.

    His last NFL action came with the Colts in 2020, after 16 years with the Chargers. Rivers completed 68% of pass attempts for 24 touchdowns and 11 interceptions as the Colts advanced to the playoffs.

    He didn’t sit around hoping this opportunity would come again.

    “Certainly I wasn’t really hanging onto any hope [of] playing again,” Rivers said. “I kind of thought that ship had sailed. But something about it excited me. And it’s kind of one of those deals that a door opens and you can either walk through it and find out if you can do it, or run from it.

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    “I know there’s risk involved obviously or what may or may not happen. But the only way to find out is going for it. And I felt almost like it was a gift and another opportunity to play and cut it loose with the guys in the game you love to play and the dream you got to live. You may get some bonus time. So I really kept it as simple as that in my mind. And here I stand.”

    Do Colts have a chance to make noise with Rivers?

    Playing shape and pocket movement will be the biggest questions for Rivers, even if mobility wasn’t the top trait on which his NFL success long hinged.

    Mastering the game plan, by all accounts, does not seem to be a concern.

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    Not only did Rivers play in this system dating back to his Chargers tenure, including four years with Steichen as quarterbacks coach and then interim offensive coordinator — but also Rivers has coached his son Gunnar’s high school team this year with the same playbook. He and Steichen have reviewed concepts and how they were received throughout the season. The mental catchup, Steichen and Rivers feel, is doable.

    “I told Gunnar last night, I gave him a play off the call sheet and he was like, ‘Dang, because we ran that play two weeks ago in the semifinal game,’” Rivers said. “You know what I mean? So that part’s cool …

    “It’s been a whirlwind of 48 hours, I’ll say. But each moment that goes by, I feel more and more confident.”

    Will confidence be sufficient? Rivers is not the first player to return after a period of time away, even if the circumstances have varied. The Browns went to the playoffs during the 2023 season after signing Joe Flacco off the couch in December — but Flacco had spent 11 months away from the game, not 59. Some players have suffered injuries after sudden returns, including safety Eric Weddle tearing a pec in the 2021 season’s Super Bowl with the Los Angeles Rams and Darren Waller injuring his pec earlier this season (Waller has returned from injured reserve).

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    Rivers said he and his family are “a little scared, a little nervous.” But beyond the doubt, he believes football comes with injury risk at any age or stage. The Colts don’t need to look far to remember.

    “You never hope something like that or expect something like that to happen,” Rivers said. “But shoot, something like that happens, I got a long time to recover, so that’s for sure.”

    The Colts, meanwhile, feel time is ticking on the playoff window they demonstrated belief in after a trade-deadline acquisition of cornerback Sauce Gardner. Indianapolis doesn’t want to lose out on a wide-open AFC in a year when Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are set to break their seven-year streak of not just playoff berths but AFC championship berths.

    Any quarterback who can help Indianapolis chase that goal is welcome, beginning with contests against the top two scoring defenses in the Seahawks (17.4 points per game) and Houston Texans (16.0)

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    The Colts’ playoff hopes could hinge on Rivers’ ability.

    After an 8-2 start that featured wins over current playoff contenders in the Denver Broncos and Los Angeles Chargers, three straight losses have followed.

    Losing to the Jaguars last week knocked the Colts out of the playoff picture, their 8-5 record now eighth place in the AFC and third in the AFC South beneath the 9-4 Jaguars and 8-5 Texans (the Texans beat the Colts, giving them the tiebreaker).

    The Colts currently have a 26% chance to make the playoffs, per Next Gen Stats. If they beat the Seahawks this weekend, that chance jumps to 50%, per Next Gen Stat’s model.

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    With that upside, Rivers wants to make a bet on his health and is willing to renounce his 2026 Pro Hall of Fame semifinalist status, his candidacy consideration delayed another five years if he plays.

    He can spend time doubting his ability. Or he could take a chance.

    “The easiest way to eliminate all the things that can go bad is to stay home,” Rivers said. “And the only way to find out, ‘Can you still do it?’ is to go try.

    “There’s something about being back in this building that feels right. And I’m just thankful.”

  • NFL betting, odds, lines: Betting trends to know for Week 15’s biggest games

    Both teams sitting high atop the AFC playoff standings — the Denver Broncos and New England Patriots — are riding 10-game winning streaks.

    Both are also playing at home in Week 15.

    And both are underdogs.

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    Those are just two of the intriguing NFL betting storylines heading into Week 15.

    Elsewhere, the Detroit Lions and Kansas City Chiefs — two preseason Super Bowl contenders currently on the outside of the playoff picture — are in must-win mode against opponents from Los Angeles that are on the right side of the playoff cutline.

    And in the Pacific Northwest, the Seattle Seahawks are laying nearly two touchdowns for a third time in four weeks — this time against a playoff-contending opponent with a dire quarterback situation.

    With all five matchups carrying postseason implications, we’re highlighting each in our weekly batch of NFL betting trends designed to assist with your Week 15 handicapping — and profit-seeking — efforts.

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    All listed odds are via BetMGM and subject to change.

    Buffalo Bills (-1, 49.5) at New England Patriots

    Kickoff: Sunday, 1 p.m. ET

    Moneyline: Bills -115/Patriots -105

    • New England’s 10-game winning streak began with a 42-13 Week 3 rout of Carolina. A week later, the Patriots traveled to Buffalo and stunned the Bills 23-20 as 7.5-point underdogs.

    New England is 8-2 ATS during its 10-game heater, including 4-1 ATS at home and 2-0 ATS as an underdog.

    • While the Patriots enjoyed a Week 14 bye, Buffalo needed a fourth-quarter rally to knock off the Bengals, 39-34.

    The Bills came up short as 6-point favorites and are now 4-8 ATS since cashing in each of their first two games.

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    • Buffalo has dropped the last two matchups in this rivalry, the other being a 23-16 upset in the 2024 regular-season finale at New England.

    The Patriots are now on a 5-0 ATS roll against the Bills. However, the last time they beat Buffalo three times in a row was during a seven-game winning streak that stretched from mid-2016-19.

    • Since legendary quarterback Tom Brady departed New England following the 2019 season, the Patriots have gone 1-4 SU and ATS after a bye.

    On the flip side of the NFL betting trends ledger, first-year Patriots coach Mike Vrabel went 6-0 SU and ATS following a bye as coach of the Tennessee Titans.

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    Included were five victories at home and three outright upsets as an underdog.

    [Check out all of Yahoo’s sports betting content here in our betting hub]

    • Second-year New England quarterback Drake Maye has amassed passing yardage totals ranging from 259 to 294 in each of his last six games.

    BetMGM projects Maye for 232.5 passing yards Sunday.

    Maye’s counterpart — reigning NFL MVP Josh Allen — has thrown multiple TD passes eight times this season and tallied at least one rushing and one passing touchdown six times.

    Allen has -118 odds to throw for at least two scores in New England and -115 odds to record a non-passing TD.

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    • The Bills have stayed under the total in five of six road games this season. The only contest that cleared 43 points: a 40-9 rout at Carolina in Week 8.

    Thus, not a single Bills game outside of Buffalo has eclipsed 49 total points in 2025.

    Also, while the over is 4-1 in the Patriots’ last five home games, New England and its opponents have topped 48 points just once since Week 5.

    KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - DECEMBER 07: Patrick Mahomes #15 of the Kansas City Chiefs is helped up by Kingsley Suamataia #76 after an incomplete pass on fourth down against the Houston Texans during the fourth quarter at Arrowhead Stadium on December 07, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

    Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs could use a lift. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

    (Jamie Squire via Getty Images)

    Los Angeles Chargers at Kansas City Chiefs (-4.5, 41.5)

    Kickoff: Sunday, 1 p.m. ET

    Moneyline: Chargers +170/Chiefs -210

    • These AFC West foes opened the season in Brazil, and the Chargers held on for a 27-21 victory as 3-point underdogs.

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    Although that snapped Kansas City’s seven-game winning streak in this rivalry, the Chiefs are 19-4 against the Chargers dating to the start of the 2014 campaign (9-3 at Arrowhead Stadium).

    However, while the Bolts haven’t swept a season series from the Chiefs since 2013, they are 7-3 ATS in the last 10 clashes.

    • Following a 20-10 home loss to Houston in Week 14, Kansas City is now mired in its first 1-4 slump since quarterback Patrick Mahomes took over the offense in 2018.

    The last time K.C. lost five times in a six-game stretch: the middle of the 2017 season.

    • The Chargers escaped with a 22-19 overtime upset of Philadelphia on Monday night, prevailing as 1.5-point home underdogs.

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    Los Angeles has won five of six since a 1-3 slump from Weeks 4-7. However, Jim Harbaugh’s squad is just 3-3 ATS during this stretch and has failed to cover in four straight road games.

    • In addition to their struggles on the field, the Chiefs have failed to cash in five consecutive contests.

    Going back to a seven-game spread-covering funk that began in Week 8 of last season, Kansas City is 8-16 ATS (7-13 ATS as a favorite).

    • Mahomes threw three interceptions in Sunday’s loss to the Texans. He’s now been picked off at least once in five of his last six games.

    Meanwhile, with their four interceptions of Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts last week, L.A. now has 15 picks for the season. Only the Bears (18) have more.

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    Mahomes odds to throw an interception in Week 15: even money (+100).

    • In their five most recent victories, the Chargers’ defense surrendered 14.6 points per game, holding all five opponents under 21 points

    Meanwhile, the Chiefs have produced more than 21 points in regulation just once during their 1-4 slide.

    Those stats put these NFL betting trends into play: The under is 7-1 in Kansas City’s last eight games (5-0 at home) and 4-1 in the last five Chiefs-Chargers meetings.

    Green Bay Packers (-2.5, 43) at Denver Broncos

    Kickoff: Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET

    Moneyline: Packers -135/Broncos +115

    • After winning four straight games by a total of 10 points, Denver finally had a stress-free outing in Week 14, upending the lowly Raiders 24-17 in Las Vegas.

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    The Raiders kicked a “meaningless” field goal as time expired to cover the 7.5-point spread. That dropped the Broncos to 5-8 ATS.

    However, Denver is 3-1 SU and ATS as an underdog in 2025.

    • Green Bay intercepted a Caleb Williams pass in the end zone to preserve a 28-21 Week 14 victory over the Bears, vaulting the Packers into sole possession of first place in the NFC North.

    Green Bay is riding a four-game winning streak and is 7-2 — including 4-0 on the road — since a 40-40 tie with the Cowboys in Dallas in Week 4.

    The Packers also have followed a 1-7 ATS drought by cashing in three straight contests.

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    • Eight of the Broncos’ first 11 games stayed under the total. However, the over has hit in the last two, with the Raiders’ last-second field goal Sunday barely tipping the game past the 40.5-point closing number.

    That said, only three of Denver’s 13 contests have cleared 43 combined points.

    Meanwhile, the under is 5-1 in Packers road games this year. However, eight of their last 12 contests dating to Week 3 have featured more than 43 points — including three of the last four.

    Detroit Lions at Los Angeles Rams (-5.5, 55.5)

    Kickoff: Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET

    Moneyline: Lions +200/Rams -250

    • Detroit rebounded from a 31-24 Thanksgiving Day home loss to the Packers by opening the Week 14 slate with a 44-30 Thursday Night Football rout of the Cowboys as a 3.5-point favorite.

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    With that, the Lions snapped an 0-3 ATS slide and continued two noteworthy NFL betting trends: They’ve now won 15 consecutive games after a defeat (tying an NFL record), but they’ve alternated SU wins and losses in nine straight contests since Week 5.

    • Los Angeles bounced back from a stunning 30-27 loss at Carolina with a 45-17 thumping of the Cardinals in Week 14, easily covering as a 9.5-point road underdog.

    The Rams are now 9-4 ATS for the season. Only Seattle (10-3 ATS) has a better point-spread record.

    • Lions quarterback Jared Goff threw for 309 yards in the win over Dallas, his third-highest total of 2025.

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    Goff has now beaten his passing yards projection in six consecutive games, throwing for at least 255 yards each time.

    Goff’s passing yards prop against the franchise that selected him No. 1 overall in the 2016 draft: 252.5.

    • After his three-touchdown performance at Arizona, L.A. quarterback Matthew Stafford now has 35 TD passes for the season — nine more than anyone else.

    Stafford has multiple scoring tosses in seven consecutive games and 11 of 12 since Week 2. He also has at least three TDs in seven of his last 10 contests.

    Stafford’s odds of throwing three-plus TDs against the franchise that drafted him No. 1 overall in 2009: +110.

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    • Detroit has hurdled the total in three straight games and five of its last six. However, the over/under has split in each of its six road outings.

    Meanwhile, L.A. has been one of the most profitable over teams on the road (5-1), but the opposite is true at home: five unders and one over. None of the Rams’ six contests at SoFi Stadium has reached 50 points.

    Finally, the last four Lions-Rams meetings have come up short of the total. Final scores: 30-16 (2018), 28-19 (2021), 24-23 (2023 playoffs) and 26-20 (2024).

    Indianapolis Colts at Seattle Seahawks (-13.5, 42.5)

    Kickoff: Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET

    Moneyline: Colts +750/Seahawks -1200

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    • The Colts have lost three consecutive games and five of their last six and — as a result, they’ve lost control of first place in the AFC South.

    Adding injury to insult, starting quarterback Daniel Jones suffered a season-ending Achilles injury in last week’s 36-19 loss at Jacksonville. Then rookie backup rookie Riley Leonard suffered a knee sprain.

    Hence the reason the Colts dragged 44-year-old Philip Rivers out of retirement this week — and the reason they’re a near two-touchdown underdog at Seattle.

    Although Indy is in a 1-4 SU and ATS funk, it has covered in three of four as an underdog in 2025 (2-2 SU).

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    • Seattle is in the midst of its third winning streak this season of at least three games.

    In fact, the Seahawks are 12 points away from being undefeated. They lost 17-13 to San Francisco in the season opener, 38-35 to Tampa Bay in Week 5 and 21-19 at the Rams in Week 11.

    In addition to being 10-3 on the scoreboard, Seattle is an NFL-best 10-3 ATS. That includes a current 7-1 spread-covering surge.

    • Some noteworthy NFL betting trends related to this big point spread:

    The Colts have been double-digit underdogs just once this decade; they lost 54-19 at Dallas as a 10.5-point pup in December 2022.

    The last time Indy was as much as a 13-point underdog? Back in Week 16 of 2017, when it traveled to Baltimore and lost 23-16 but covered the 13.5-point spread.

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    Meanwhile, the Seahawks are laying at least 13 points for the third time in the last four weeks. They edged Tennessee 30-24 as 13-point road chalk in Week 12, then dusted Minnesota 26-0 as a 13-point home favorite seven days later.

    Prior to those two contests, Seattle had been a double-digit favorite just once this decade. Result: a 17-12 loss to the Giants as an 11-point choice in December 2020.