Tag Archives: Minnesota Vikings

NFL playoffs and Super Bowl 2023 expert predictions

The notorious Serby Crystal Ball that before this wild and wacky NFL season foresaw a Bills-49ers Super Bowl matchup has been dusted off just in time for the playoffs. 

Much has changed for both teams, of course: Trey Lance (ankle) was lost Week 2 and Jimmy Garoppolo (foot) was lost Week 13 and the football world was introduced to Mr. Irrelevant, Brock Purdy. 

The Bills endured the emotional roller coaster of a near-tragedy to the uplifting, inspirational, heartwarming story of Damar Hamlin, who was remarkably released from the University of Cincinnati Medical Center on Monday, one week after suffering cardiac arrest making a tackle against the Bengals’ Tee Higgins. 

Can the Bills be a Team of Destiny and win their first Super Bowl in five tries? Can Purdy be America’s Mr. Relevant? Can Tom Brady capture his eighth ring? Can Patrick Mahomes win his second? Will Joe Burrow be smoking postgame cigars? 

The Serby Crystal Ball has it all in clear focus: 

Super Wild Card Weekend

Saturday 

Seahawks at 49ers

Geno Smith, meet Nick Bosa. Kenneth Walker III, meet Fred Warner. America, meet young Mr. Purdy, who won’t melt under the searing hot playoff lights. In two losses to the Niners, the Seahawks scored one offensive touchdown. And the Niners rushed for 189 (without Christian McCaffrey) and 170 yards. 

49ers 31, Seahawks 17 

The full bracket for the 2023 NFL playoffs.
NY Post illustration
Brock Purdy won’t wilt in the bright lights of the NFL playoffs.
USA TODAY Sports

Chargers at Jaguars

A matchup of Golden Boys at quarterback, Justin Herbert vs. Trevor Lawrence. Brandon Staley opted to go more Tom Coughlin than Brian Daboll in the regular-season finale and might have dodged a bullet because WR Mike Williams (back) should be good to go. Herbert has had Williams (ankle) and Keenan Allen (hamstring) together for only four games start-to-finish. If Joey Bosa (groin) is OK to team with Khalil Mack, the Bolts will enjoy an experience pass-rush edge over The Other Josh Allen and rookie Travon Walker. Forever Trevor will need Travis Etienne to go off against the 28th-ranked run defense. 

Chargers 27, Jaguars 24 

Sunday 

Dolphins at Bills 

The Tua Tagovailoa Dolphins stood toe-to-toe and snow-to-snow with the Bills in their last-second, 32-29 loss on Dec. 17. That was before Tua’s latest concussion woes. Will Tua be cleared? If not, expect Teddy Bridgewater (pinky) instead of rookie Skylar Thompson. The long-range forecast is sunny and balmy (28 degrees) with 8 mph winds, so Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle can eat. But Josh Allen threw for 4 TDs and ran for 77 yards last time. 

Win one for Damar. 

Bills 33, Dolphins 17 

Giants at Vikings

Daniel Jones will be armed with confidence facing the league’s 31st-ranked passing defense. Saquon Barkley is rested and ready for the 20th-ranked rush defense. Brian Daboll and Wink Martindale are dangerous the second time they see an opponent (see Commanders). Dexter Lawrence and Leonard Williams will contain Dalvin Cook, and Wink won’t let Justin Jefferson (12-133-1 TD) and T.J. Hockenson (13-109-2 TDs) wreck the game this time. Xavier McKinney is back (Adoree’ Jackson too?). This time, Graham Gano, not Greg Joseph, walks it off. 

Giants 27, Vikings 24 

Ravens at Bengals

Ja’Marr Chase and the Bengals air game are in for a cage match with the Ravens.
Getty Images

Their mantra Play Like A Raven is much easier when Lamar Jackson is the quarterback. He hasn’t practiced in five weeks (PCL). Burrow didn’t have Higgins in the early-season loss to Baltimore; he has him now alongside Ja’Marr Chase. The defending AFC champs have an eight-game win streak. The Ravens passing game never recovered from the trade of Hollywood Brown. The red zone has been a dead zone for them. If it’s Tyler Huntley or Anthony Brown at quarterback, everybody sing “Who Dey?” Let’s guess on a rusty Lamar return and a maniacal defense led by MLB Roquan Smith neutralizing Joe Mixon, and Marlon Humphrey and Marcus Peters limiting Chase and Higgins, and J.K. Dobbins and Mark Andrews doing enough in a vicious, chippy steel cage match. 

Ravens 24, Bengals 21 

Monday

Cowboys at Buccaneers

Brady (with his seven rings) is 7-0 against the Cowboys. Dak Prescott has a seven-game interception streak. Ezekiel Elliott hasn’t been eating much lately. Micah Parsons and Demarcus Lawrence will be problems, but Brady will get the ball out quickly to Mike Evans and Chris Godwin against rookie corner DaRon Bland. Playoff Lenny Fournette can have success against 22nd-ranked rush defense, and if center Ryan Jensen (knee) can return, that would be a huge lift. Brady versus Dan Quinn … Falcons HC in Super Bowl 51 who blew that 28-3 lead to the GOAT, FWIW. 

Bucs 24, Cowboys 21 

Micah Parson and the Cowboys will be too much for Tom Brady & Co. to handle.
USA TODAY Sports

Divisional Round

AFC 

Ravens at Chiefs

Lamar ran for 107 yards and 2 TDs in a 36-35 win early in 2021 in Baltimore to beat Mahomes for the first time in four tries. Steve Spagnuolo and Chris Jones won’t let that happen again. Magic Mahomes no longer has Tyreek Hill and it doesn’t matter. Jerick McKinnon and Isaiah Pacheco give Andy Reid more balance, and while rookie safety Kyle Hamilton owns size and range, Travis Kelce will be too savvy for him. Kadarius Toney: 1 TD, 1 tweaked hamstring.

Chiefs 34, Ravens 17 

Chargers at Bills 

The long-range forecast is calling for light snow on Jan. 21 and snow Jan. 22. Austin Ekeler will need to be a passing-game weapon against the fifth-ranked rushing defense (104.6 yards). Allen, Devin Singletary and James Cook will lead a 150-yard rushing assault. Win one more for Damar. 

Bills 33, Chargers 21 

Devin Singletary and the Bills will rush their way through the Chargers.
Getty Images

NFC 

Giants at Eagles

It’s not easy beating a division rival three times in one season. 

Davis Webb lobbies to start this one, citing his chemistry with Kenny Golladay, and Daboll tells the media that he will sit down with GM Joe Schoen and discuss everything on Friday night (eye roll). Anyway, a healthy Jalen Hurts and the top-ranked pass defense proves too much for Jones without a true No. 1 receiver, even though Barkley catches eight passes and totals 130 yards. 

Eagles 27, Giants 17 

Bucs at 49ers: 

Brady versus his boyhood team. Brady versus Purdy. Brady’s last game as a Buc before leaving for Raiders? Brady’s last game before leaving for Fox? Purdy has George Kittle. Brady doesn’t have Gronk. Purdy has Kyle Shanahan. Brady does not. Demeco Ryans boasts the second-ranked (77.7 yards) rushing defense. 

49ers 31, Bucs 17 

NFC Championship 

49ers at Eagles 

Garoppolo beat the Eagles 17-11 at the Linc early in 2021. Will Purdy blink? Remember, cornerbacks Darius Slay and James Bradberry are no slouches. But if there is a team built to win physical battles on the road, it is these 49ers. Hurts will have some success against the Niner secondary targeting A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith and Dallas Goedert, but Warner, Dre Greenlaw and Arik Armstead will stifle Miles Sanders and make Nick Sirianni one-dimensional. 

49ers 27, Eagles 24 

AFC Championship

Bills vs. Chiefs 

The next Allen-Mahomes dream showdown. An eerie environment at a neutral site — the halfway point between Buffalo and Kansas City is Indianapolis FYI. Gabe Davis won’t catch 4 TD passes against the Chiefs this time, but Stefon Diggs will haul in a couple against a group of young, inexperienced cornerbacks, including No. 1 draft pick Trent McDuffie. Last one with the ball wins. Allen is the last one with the ball. 

Win another for Damar. 

Bills 33, Chiefs 30 

Josh Allen and the Bills will get over the hump this time and give Buffalo it’s long-awaited title.
Getty Images

Super Bowl 2023 

49ers-Bills 

During the two weeks between the NFC Championship game and the Super Bowl, Shanahan ponders the same question that Bill Belichick pondered prior to Super Bowl 36: Brady or Drew Bledsoe? For Shanny, it’s Purdy or Garoppolo, whose foot has finally healed enough. And like Belichick, he stays with the hot hand. 

But when Purdy suddenly develops the yips, Garoppolo is summoned off the bench and brings the Niners back from a first-half hole. McCaffrey and Deebo Samuel begin imposing their will on the night, and Marv Levy and Jim Kelly are sweating bullets in the owners’ box. But Allen, in his huddle at the start of a late fourth-quarter drive, looks up in the stands and says: “Hey look, it’s Will Smith and Chris Rock!” It eases the tension, and Allen engineers a 98-yard drive that culminates in him leaping over the end zone third-and-goal from the 3. 

Won the Big One for Damar.

Bills 33, 49ers 27

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“I always thought we’d pull it off”: Vikings make largest comeback in NFL history

MINNEAPOLIS — Before Saturday, the largest NFL comeback was a Bills/Oilers playoff game in 1992–that was 32 points. The Vikings broke that record by winning 39-36 in overtime against the Indianapolis Colts after being down 33.

WCCO’s Ren Clayton caught up with the Vikings on their most recent win.

“It’s unbelievable. I came in here and shed tears thinking about it. All of the things that we’ve been through, and to be down by 33 at half, and come back with this team, with that fight to go and win the game, it’s definitely something crazy to think about,” said wide receiver Adam Thielen.

Minnesota had no points until K.J. Osborn scored with 8-plus minutes left in the third — the start of a 36-3 run.

“This has just been a day. It’s been so crazy. But if that was the spark that we needed to get us going I was happy I was able to do that,” said defensive back, Chandon Sullivan.

The Vikings did not play perfect football down the stretch and had two Chandon Sullivan fumble recoveries for touchdowns called back by the refs. Wins heal all.

“I always thought we’d pull it off. We’ve been doing it all year,” said safety Harrison Smith.

The Vikings could have clinched the division with a tie, but that would have done the comeback a disservice.

“It was everything you would want. A game like this to win the division, you would want it to be that difficult, you wouldn’t want it to come easy,” said offensive lineman Brian O’Neill.

Minnesota Vikings wide receiver K.J. Osborn (17) celebrates with teammates Dalvin Cook (4) and T.J. Hockenson (87) after catching a 2-yard touchdown pass during the second half of an NFL football game against the Indianapolis Colts, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2022, in Minneapolis.

Abbie Parr / AP


More from Associated Press: Comeback king Vikings set NFL rally record in win vs. Colts

With the Minnesota Vikings gathered in their humbled locker room at halftime in a huge hole, cornerback Patrick Peterson set the tone for an historic escape by promising his offensive teammates the defense would do its part to hold the Indianapolis Colts.

“You just need five touchdowns,” Peterson told them. “That’s nothing.”

This rally sure was something, though.

The Vikings completed the biggest comeback in NFL history, erasing a 33-point deficit by beating the Colts 39-36 on Greg Joseph’s 40-yard field goal with three seconds left in overtime Saturday to win the NFC North division in their typical dramatic fashion.

Kirk Cousins passed for 460 yards and four touchdowns to lead the Vikings (11-3), who trailed 36-7 late in the third quarter and became just the third team in league history to win 10 games in a season by eight points or fewer.

“We’re going to grind it out until they tell us there’s no more ball left to play,” coach Kevin O’Connell said.

The Colts (4-9-1) landed on the infamous side of this list, just ahead of the Houston Oilers in the 1992 postseason. They blew a 32-point lead (35-3) and lost to Buffalo (41-38) in overtime.

“When you have chances to put people away, we’ve got to do a better job than we’ve done up until this point,” quarterback Matt Ryan said.

According to Sportradar data available since 1930, the Vikings became only the second team in 1,551 regular-season or playoff games to trail by 30 or more points and still win.

“Nothing fazes us. We showed that in Buffalo,” said Peterson, who aided a 33-30 overtime victory over the Bills on Nov. 13 after a 17-point deficit. “We showed that again today.”

The Vikings took this rally all the way to their second possession of overtime. Cousins hit K.J. Osborn — who caught the first score and had a career-high 157 yards — for 15 yards. He found Adam Thielen — who had the second of three fourth-quarter touchdown passes — for 21 yards. Then he threw to Justin Jefferson for 13 yards to move into range.

Ifeadi Odenigbo was called for delay of game for lying on Jefferson to try to keep the Vikings from setting up for the kick, putting Joseph 5 yards closer for the winner.

“It’s a special group, a lot of fighters,” Thielen said.

Colts interim coach Jeff Saturday didn’t exactly get conservative in this collapse. Ryan was stopped short on a fourth-and-1 sneak at the Minnesota 36 with 2:19 left in regulation. Then Cousins hit Dalvin Cook for a 64-yard touchdown on a screen pass on the next play and T.J. Hockenson for the 2-point conversion to tie the game before the 2-minute warning.

“We would have closed the game out and ended the game,” Saturday said. “I’m in. Everybody’s in. We didn’t convert.”

Outscored 33-0 in the fourth quarter of their most recent game, a 54-19 loss to Dallas on Dec. 4, the Colts came back fresh from their bye week and stunned the Vikings with a 33-0 halftime lead that was the second-largest in the NFL this season. Cincinnati led Carolina 35-0 on Nov. 6.

The intermission deficit for Minnesota was the second-biggest in franchise history, behind a 45-10 score at Seattle in 2002.

The Vikings even overcame a pair of fumble returns for touchdowns by Chandon Sullivan that were wiped out by the whistle.

“I know that there’s other games that don’t end like that. It was just cool to see everybody battle back and I’m just happy that I get to share this moment with my teammates,” linebacker Eric Kendricks said, wiping away tears.

YOU LIKE THAT?

The last team to overcome a deficit of 24-plus points to win a regular season game was Washington over Tampa Bay in 2015, when Cousins was the quarterback. The previous regular season comeback record was 28 points in 1980, when San Francisco rallied from down 35-7 to win 38-35.

ALARMING START

The special teams units bore the brunt of the brutal start for the Vikings. Dallis Flowers returned the opening kickoff 49 yards, and the Colts were in scoring position within seconds.

Odenigbo plowed past two blockers and sideswiped Ryan Wright’s punt with his right arm. JoJo Domann caught the deflected ball and returned it 24 yards for the too-easy score and a 10-0 lead.

Then with the Vikings trailing 20-0 on fourth-and-1 from their own 31, Wright’s pass on a fake punt sailed over Jalen Nailor’s head for a second straight turnover on downs.

JEFFERSON WATCH

Jefferson left the game twice for brief examination following jarring hits to the chest. On the second occurrence, Stephon Gilmore also got him in the facemask and drew an unnecessary roughness penalty in the fourth quarter.

Both times after Jefferson left the game, Cousins threw to Jalen Reagor on the next play and was intercepted after an apparent miscommunication on the routes. The first one was returned by Julian Blackmon for a 17-yard touchdown that made it 30-0 in the second quarter.

Jefferson had 12 catches for 123 yards and a touchdown and raised his season total to 1,623 receiving yards. Calvin Johnson’s all-time record of 1,964 yards was set in 16 games in 2012.

INJURY REPORT

Colts: RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) left the game on the opening drive after a hard tackle as he tumbled out of bounds. He missed three games with the injury earlier this season.

Vikings: LT Christian Darrisaw returned from a three-game absence for a concussion. He limped off twice in overtime with leg cramps. Peterson left briefly with the same problem.

UP NEXT

Colts: Host the Los Angeles Chargers on Dec. 26.

Vikings: Host the New York Giants on Dec. 24.

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Fox’s Joe Davis on calling the Bills-Vikings thriller, Bill Cowher speaks out and more NFL media thoughts

As he flew back home to Los Angeles from Buffalo (with a quick stop in Detroit) on Sunday evening, Fox Sports game-caller Joe Davis reflected on the best NFL game he’s ever been part of as a broadcaster — a back-and-forth second half and overtime that saw Minnesota rally from a 17-point deficit to defeat Buffalo, 33-30, in overtime. The final two minutes of regulation included a Buffalo goal-line stand with 49 seconds left only to see Bills quarterback Josh Allen fumble the next snap and Minnesota recover for a touchdown for a 30-27 lead. The Bills then marched down the field for a game-tying field goal with two seconds left in regulation. After Minnesota settled for a field goal in overtime, the Vikings ultimately won it when cornerback Patrick Peterson picked off Allen in the end zone with 1:12 left.

“It was amazing in that it felt over four or five times only to swing back the other way,” Davis said from many miles above the ground. “In the span of about one minute of game time at the end of regulation, Buffalo lost the game, won the game, lost the game, and tied the game. Stunning play after stunning play. When you combined that with the environment in Buffalo and the anticipation that came with two division leaders playing, it’s gotta be the best NFL game I’ve done. It’s also on a short list of the best I’ve been lucky enough to do in any sport.”

As I noted below, the production crew, led by producer Pete Macheska and director Artie Kempner, really delivered late, including replays that helped amplify the insanity of the final stretch.

“The truck deserves complete credit for us being on top of the missed call near the end of regulation on the Gabe Davis catch,” Davis said. “(Analyst) Daryl (Johnston) and I are doing our best to stay on top of the next play with the game on the line, so in a situation like that when it’s ‘play on,’ that’s all those guys in the truck including our tape room and (rules analyst) Dean Blandino back in L.A. Pete was guiding us through telling that story while also focusing on the game-tying field goal that was coming.”

Davis said the day was also memorable for him for barely making his flight back home.

“The last improbable play of the day was our convoy leaving the stadium at 5:10 p.m. ET with 50,000 other people, traveling 20 minutes to the airport, and still somehow making a 5:55 p.m. ET flight,” Davis said. “Big thanks to the New York State Troopers and my dad. My dad is my spotter and was driving our getaway car.”

GO DEEPER

Justin Jefferson immense as Vikings outlast Bills in ‘craziest game I’ve been a part of’


Some additional Week 10 NFL media thoughts:

• It remains rare to see high-profile NFL analysts offer specific criticism of NFL owners — and pointed criticism of owners during a game broadcast comes at the same frequency as blood moons. But on Sunday, CBS “NFL Today” analyst Bill Cowher really dialed it up on Colts owner Jim Irsay’s decision to hire Jeff Saturday as his new head coach. Cowher gave an impassioned two-minute speech — with a ton of specific detail — that he says was the same one he gave during the show’s production meeting on Friday.

“It’s something that hits close to home, and I felt an obligation to speak on behalf of the coaching profession,” Cowher said on Sunday night. “I felt I needed to make a statement. Everyone (in the cast) was very respectful. Everyone had an opinion on it. But (“NFL Today” producer) Drew (Kaliski) was great about making that segment a little bit longer to allow some extra time. Being here for 16 years at CBS, the one thing I’ll say is they will give you the time to be able to express your thinking.

“Devin McCourty is here straight from the locker room,” Cowher continued. “Nate (Burleson) isn’t long from coming off the field. We have a great opportunity to get a cross-section of opinions on how this may or may not play out. But the bottom line is, I’m the one coach that’s up here. I spent five years as a player, seven years as an assistant coach, and 15 years as a head coach. I have great respect for the coaching profession and understand all the things that go on when people lose their jobs. It’s never easy, but it’s part of a profession we get into. But there’s certain ways of doing certain things and commitments that people make that when things are not done properly, it needs to be pointed out. Regardless of how this plays, it was a travesty in terms of how this unfolded.”

• Johnston called the final 120 seconds of regulation between the Bills and Vikings the most amazing two minutes of football he had ever seen. It wasn’t hyperbole. Macheska and Kempner really delivered. Even a small detail like seeing Minnesota receiver Justin Jefferson’s feet stay in bounds on a clutch overtime catch was great for viewers. Blandino nailed the replay of Buffalo’s Davis bobbling a key reception on the Bills’ game-tying drive and was clear that officials had erred by not reviewing it. “It’s too big a play not to stop it,” Blandino said. Good stuff.

• You want a broadcaster to live up to the big moments — and Davis did here:

And also here:

• I’m planning to do a podcast in the next couple of weeks that offers a top-down view of Amazon’s NFL coverage as it hits the three-quarter mark of the 2022 season. That’s usually a good time to weigh in with some perspective. Last week’s viewership for a game with little national appeal (Falcons–Panthers) averaged a season-low 6.80 million viewers. Sports Media Watch said it was the lowest-watched “Thursday Night Football” game since a Week 4 Broncos-Jets game in 2020. Amazon said its first-party measurement, which is proprietary to Amazon and would include alternative broadcasts and Twitch viewing, measured eight million viewers. The short answer is the game was a dog.

Amazon’s NFL broadcasts are averaging 9.65 million viewers through nine games per Nielsen, which is a couple of million lower than what they promised advertisers. (Amazon says they are averaging 11.4 million, according to Amazon’s first-party measurement.) I expect those numbers to go up with better games late in the season. Where Amazon has a good story to tell is in its demographics. The company says the median age of the TNF on Prime audience is 46 years old, which is eight years younger than the NFL average. Broadcasts are averaging 2.24 million viewers in the 18-34 demographic, which Amazon says is up 20 percent versus last year’s Thursday broadcasts on FOX, NFL Network and Prime Video (1.86 million).

• What is the ceiling for the NFL games in Europe when it comes to interest back in the States? The NFL Network drew 5.5 million viewers for the Giants–Packers game from London on Oct. 9. That’s the current viewership record for a Europe game — which is a little low for the NFL to really be satisfied. I watched some of Tampa Bay’s win over Seattle from Munich’s Allianz Arena — the open press box made the sound quality for viewers very challenging at times — which was the NFL’s first-ever regular season game in Germany. I’ll be curious to see the final viewership number. Our Greg Auman covered the game — and wrote a great preview piece — and said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell would not be surprised if the league expands from their initial commitment of four games in Germany in four years. The NFL says Germany has now surpassed Britain as the NFL’s largest market in Europe, and that was obvious from the atmosphere.

Related: Listen to the stadium sing “Take Me Home, Country Roads:”

• I asked Cowher what he thought of the final minutes of regulation and overtime in Bills-Vikings.

“I’ve never seen anything like the display that Kirk Cousins and Justin Jefferson put on,” Cowher said. “I feel the frustration that Josh Allen has had. We’ve watched the last couple of weeks Josh getting into the red zone and it reminds me a little bit where Patrick Mahomes was a year ago, that sometimes they get a little bit careless, try to do too much. Pulling back a little bit will be something Josh will be able to do. Those are two teams that have playmakers at the receiver position, playmakers at the quarterback position and their defenses are very good. These are playoff teams, and this is kind of murky waters that comes during the course of an NFL season. Everybody has to work through them. Sometimes it takes the depths of a valley to reach the heights of a mountain. Sometimes you have to get knocked down before you really get back up and stand straight.”


The Ink Report

1. “College GameDay” executives have always answered questions about the future of the show post-Lee Corso with thoughtfulness. Both on and off the record, they’ve been consistent about working around Corso’s desires, health and schedule given the realities of his age. You’ve never heard any leaks about ESPN management pursuing a replacement because no talks have ever gotten that far. Rather, they have always said the show will simply evolve whenever that time comes. Corso missed his third consecutive show this week — the expectation is that the 87-year-old analyst will return later this year — but the last couple of Saturdays, you saw a blueprint of how the show might close in a post-Corso universe. The realities of this time slot make it very important to have a strong draw to close the show — as Corso’s famous picking segment has been — because “GameDay” serves as a big lead-in into the noon ET game ESPN is broadcasting. The celebrity picker for “GameDay” — as long as it’s someone with broad appeal — gives the show its best attempt to keep an audience until they roll into the game broadcast asset of Corso’s famous head gear segment. It gives you options on whose voice should be the most profound when the show leaves the air. On Saturday, Corso technically made the last pick as relayed by Kirk Herbstreit. It was a good way to close, even though Corso went big on Texas over TCU.

1a. Episode 254 of the Sports Media Podcast features a conversation with Sean Keeley, the editorial strategy director at Comeback Media and the creator of Nunes Magician. Last week Keeley wrote a piece, “What happens to sports media if Twitter dies?” and that’s the topic of our conversation. In this podcast, we discuss Sean’s piece with multiple sports media members and what they believed the impact of Twitter is; what the social media site’s ending would mean for them individually; the impact of Twitter on careers; the wave of impersonations, including Adam Schefter and LeBron James, on Twitter and what it means; the utility of sports Twitter; how advertisers see the product right now; how individual sports media people monetized a large Twitter following; what a Twitter alternative for sports might look like; whether any large sports media organization would direct its employees to leave the site and more.

You can subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, and more.

2. Episode 255 of the Sports Media Podcast features a conversation with Deirdre Fenton, executive director of Unscripted at Meadowlark Media. In this podcast, Fenton discusses “Good Rivals,” a three-part docuseries (Fenton is the executive producer) on the rivalry between the Mexican and American national men’s soccer teams that debuts on Amazon Prime Video on Nov. 24; how Fenton defines her role at Meadowlark Media; the making of “Good Rivals” and the challenge of getting Mexican team players; what an executive producer does in totality; the Meadowlark/Skydance Sports upcoming documentary on Diana Taurasi; if women’s sports stories are an untapped market; the projects Meadowlark hopes to do heading forward; serving as a producer on the Academy Award-winning documentary “OJ: Made in America” and the BAFTA-winning “Hillsborough”; how a young person can get to a position like Fenton’s and more.

You can subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, and more.

3. Tim Bella, a Washington Post staff writer and editor, has published a biography of Charles Barkley, the Hall of Fame basketball player and longtime TNT NBA analyst. Bella said he thought Barkley was worthy of a book treatment exploration in 2022 because “you don’t see many people have a grip on that level of relevancy and respectability for as long as he’s had — especially not when they’ve been arrested multiple times, gotten into bar fights, throwing guys through windows, often sharing unpopular opinions, and come out the other side as well as he’s been able to do.”

Bella said he reached out to Barkley’s representatives but Barkley declined to take part in the book. I asked Bella what areas he would have focused on had Barkley agreed to sit down with him.

“If he would have agreed to speak, I would have mostly wanted to get into his upbringing in Leeds, Alabama, and his family life,” Bella said. “I would have wanted to talk about his mother, Charcey, and grandmother, Johnnie Mae, the women who made and raised him. All you see from Charles is because of them. I would have wanted to talk about his father, Frank, and how they took a strained, nonexistent relationship and were able to make peace with each other after years. Charles had a lot of anger toward his father for leaving him and Charcey when Chuck just turned 1. I would have asked about his brothers, especially his brother Darryl, whom he has often referred to when speaking on addiction. I would have wanted to talk about his wife, Maureen, and daughter, Christiana, both of whom he’s largely kept out of the spotlight. There are so many other topics I would have wanted to dig into — race, politics, Michael Jordan, his gambling and drinking, TNT — but family would have been the most important.”

3a. Rest in peace, Fred Hickman.

4. Sports pieces of note:

• SI’s Jon Wertheim on Robert Griffin III.

• The World Cup collision is coming to Qatar. The question is how hard will it hit? By Bruce Arthur of The Toronto Star.

• Via Bruce Feldman of The Athletic: Biff Poggi, Jim Harbaugh’s consigliere, is the most interesting man in coaching.

• Amazon’s silence on Kyrie Irving-publicized movie is pathetic. By Andrew Marchand of the New York Post.

• ESPN’s Doug Glanville wrote a poem for Dusty Baker.

• This was very good from CBS’ James Brown on hate and antisemitism.

• Gunshots shattered her hoop dreams. Now she wants them back. By David Gardner of The Washington Post.

• Jane Gross, Sportswriter Who Opened Locker Room Doors, Dies at 75. By Richard Sandomir of The New York Times.

Non-sports pieces of note:

• 44 indelible images from more than a century of Boston Globe photography. By Stan Grossfeld.

• FTX held less than $1 billion in liquid assets against $9 billion in liabilities. By Antoine Gare of Financial Times.

• The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger. By David Segal of The New York Times.

• Two Weeks of Chaos: Inside Elon Musk’s Takeover of Twitter. By Kate Conger, Mike Isaac, Ryan Mac and Tiffany Hsu of The New York Times.

• How Tennessee Disenfranchised 21 Percent of Its Black Citizens. By Bianca Fortis of ProPublica.

• The Ferrari Fugitives. By Brett Popplewell for Toronto Life.

• She was a celebrated oncologist. Why did she hide her breast cancer until it was too late? By Jessica Bartlett of The Boston Globe.

• Why Elon Musk’s Quest to Revive Twitter Is Likely to Fail. By Christopher Mims of The Wall Street Journal.

• She decoded Nazi messages and helped win World War II. Now she’s 101. By Dave Kindy of The Washington Post.

• Years after brothers serve 20 years for rape they said they did not commit, judge tosses wrongful conviction. By Roy S. Johnson of Al.com.

• Elon Musk’s Twitter Is a Scammer’s Paradise. By Matt Burgess of Wired.

• We got Twitter ‘verified’ in minutes posing as a comedian and a senator. By Geoffrey Fowler of The Washington Post.

• U.S. intel report says key Gulf ally meddled in American politics. By John Hudson of The Washington Post.

(Photo: Isaiah Vazquez /Getty Images)



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Minnesota Vikings rookie Lewis Cine carted off field after gruesome injury to left leg

Minnesota Vikings rookie safety Lewis Cine suffered a gruesome left leg injury in the first quarter of Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Saints at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Cine was taken off the field on a cart, quickly ruled out for the rest of the game and transported to a hospital for further evaluation, according to the NFL Network telecast.

The Vikings’ first-round selection in this year’s draft, Cine was slowed during training camp and early this season by a knee injury and had been limited to special teams so far.

Cine suffered the injury while covering a punt with 1:08 remaining in the first quarter Sunday. Replays at the stadium showed Cine’s leg bending unnaturally. Vikings medical officials quickly placed an air cast over the leg before he was carted off the field.

ESPN’s Katherine Terrell contributed to this report.

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Updates on Jaire Alexander, Keenan Allen and others

Week 4 of the NFL season is here, and teams continue to assess injuries to their players ahead of game time.

The San Francisco 49ers have suffered another blow to their offense, as star left tackle Trent Williams is expected to be out four to six weeks with an ankle injury. Linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair will miss time after he sprained an MCL against the Denver Broncos. The New York Giants also lost a key offensive player after wide receiver Sterling Shepard tore an ACL against the Dallas Cowboys on Monday, ending his season.

The New England Patriots will be without quarterback Mac Jones, who suffered a high ankle sprain last week against the Baltimore Ravens. Veteran Brian Hoyer will start Sunday against the Green Bay Packers. He has lost 11 consecutive starts.

In more positive news, New York Jets quarterback Zach Wilson is expected to make his 2022 debut against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday. Wilson has been out since the first game of the preseason because of a torn meniscus and a bone bruise in his right knee.

Our NFL Nation reporters have more updates on key players entering the weekend:

Quick links:
Schedule | Depth charts | PickCenter

Injury: Knee

Patterson is officially listed as questionable on the team’s injury report, but he told ESPN on Friday that he plans on playing against the Cleveland Browns.

“I feel like I’m going to play every Sunday, no matter what the situation is,” Patterson said. “I plan on playing Sunday and we all know that’s the plan.”

Patterson, the NFL’s third-leading rusher, did not practice Wednesday or Thursday and was listed as a “resting player/knee.” He returned to practice Friday, did work on a limited basis and then was listed as questionable with a knee injury.

Coach Arthur Smith said Friday that Patterson “looked good,” but that he would assess Patterson’s status Saturday.

— Michael Rothstein


Injury: Ankle

Stanley, who is officially listed as questionable, said he’s “really close” to returning after missing 31 of the past 32 games. He was given a rest day Friday after fully practicing the previous two days. The Ravens could use the 2019 All-Pro left tackle to protect Lamar Jackson’s blind side. If Stanley can’t play, Baltimore would turn to rookie fourth-round pick Daniel Faalele to block Von Miller.

— Jamison Hensley


Injury: Quad

Barring a setback, McCaffrey should be able to go on Sunday after missing Wednesday and Thursday’s practices. McCaffrey returned to practice Friday in a limited role, and coach Matt Rhule said he was “hopeful” his star would be ready. McCaffrey gave no indication he wouldn’t be ready. “I feel great,” he said.

— David Newton


Injury: Knee

Let’s call this take two. It seemed like Gallup would make his debut last Monday against the New York Giants but he wanted some more time to feel right before coming back. He has had another week of full practices, although the Cowboys were not in pads at all this week. Gallup said he needed to clear a mental hurdle in coming back from the surgery. It appears he is trending toward playing vs. Washington, but he will work his way into the lineup on a snap count. They will not give him the full assortment of plays right away, so Noah Brown will continue as the No. 2 receiver with Gallup seeing something of a situational role. Tight end Dalton Schultz is also trending in the right direction of playing after missing the Giants game with a knee sprain. He has worn a brace in practice, and like Gallup, he might be limited in the number of snaps he plays until he is all the way back.

— Todd Archer


Injury: Groin

Patriots backup quarterback Brian Hoyer might have it a little easier if the Packers’ best coverage defensive back doesn’t play. Alexander dropped out of last week’s game at Tampa Bay, did not appear to do much in practice all week and is questionable for Sunday. Rasul Douglas moved from the slot to the outside after Alexander’s injury, and Keisean Nixon filled in in the slot.

— Rob Demovsky


Injury: Back

Leonard is listed as questionable for the first time this season after being ruled out in the previous three games. The recovery from Leonard’s offseason back surgery has lingered, but the tide turned this week.

“He’s had three pretty good days, continued to make progress,” coach Frank Reich said. “So, let’s see how he responds.”

If Leonard plays, the Colts might consider limiting his snaps. “The original thought was he would probably start out on a pitch count, but you don’t want to limit yourself. You just take it day by day and case by case and you kind of adapt as you go,” Reich said.

Injury: Elbow

Buckner is considered questionable and has been severely limited this week. But his history of playing while injured suggests that he’ll find a way to show up on Sunday. Buckner has missed just one game due to injury in his seven seasons.

Injury: Ankle

The Colts’ starting free safety will miss Sunday’s game with an ankle sprain, a development that will likely press seventh-round pick Rodney Thomas II into action. Thomas played well in last week’s game after Blackmon left the contest and impressed coaches.

— Stephen Holder


Injury: Hamstring

Allen suffered a hamstring injury in Week 1, was inactive in Week 2 and 3 and will remain on the sideline Sunday when the Chargers play the Texans. Earlier in the week, coach Brandon Staley expressed growing confidence that Allen would return in Week 4, but said Friday that the veteran receiver “felt something” during individual workouts, so he has been ruled out.

— Lindsey Thiry


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Za’Darius Smith criticizes Green Bay Packers for treating him poorly after injury

As if there wasn’t enough juice to the season opener between the rival Green Bay Packers and Minnesota Vikings, one player who has switched sides gave it a little extra.

Za’Darius Smith, who signed with the Vikings this offseason after three seasons with the Packers, criticized how his former team handled the back injury that kept him out for most of last season.

In an interview with GoLongTD.com that was published Wednesday, Smith said he was “treated bad” by the Packers during the process of trying to return from his injury and that the team seemed bothered that he had sought a second opinion.

“How I was here in the building,” Smith said in the interview, holding his hand high before tilting it down, “I came down to here. To a nobody. To everybody in building. I was like, ‘Damn, why am I being treated like this? I brought the culture. I helped change this s—. Why the f— am I the one being treated like that?’

“Walking past me not saying nothing. ‘Z, how’s your back doing?’ There was none of that. As you can see, that adds on to why I’m on the other side. So, I can go back. I get to go back two times a year.”

Said Packers coach Matt LaFleur on Wednesday: “I think we may have a different perspective of how things transpired.”

Smith said in the story that he injured his back while weightlifting heading into training camp last summer. He missed most of camp but played in the season opener before deciding to have surgery shortly thereafter. He missed the rest of the regular season but returned for the Packers’ playoff loss to the San Francisco 49ers.

The Packers released Smith this past offseason in a move that saved them $15.75 million on their salary cap. Smith, who was named to the Pro Bowl in each of his first two seasons with the Packers (2019-2020), initially agreed to rejoin his original team, the Baltimore Ravens, before he backed out and signed with the Vikings instead.

“I put my all into it,” Smith said in the story. “That’s why I felt the way I did with Green Bay. I gave that s— my all. I put my blood, sweat … I put my back on the f—ing line. I put everything. And that Year 3, I was treated bad. That’s why I’m here now. So I can play them twice a year.”

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Cleveland Browns claim Kellen Mond off waivers to be third QB

The Cleveland Browns claimed quarterback Kellen Mond off waivers from the Minnesota Vikings on Wednesday.

Mond gives the Browns a third quarterback on their active roster behind starter Jacoby Brissett and backup Joshua Dobbs while Deshaun Watson serves his 11-game suspension for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy.

Watson’s suspension began on Tuesday. He can’t return to the facility or have contact with the Browns until Oct. 10, and he can’t practice again until Nov. 14.

Mond was waived by the Vikings on Tuesday as they trimmed to their initial 53-man roster. His fate was sealed last week when the Vikings acquired quarterback Nick Mullens in a trade with the Las Vegas Raiders.

Mond, a third-round draft pick in 2021, never got settled in Minnesota. He tested positive for COVID-19 during training camp last summer, setting back his development and forcing the Vikings to sign Sean Mannion as Kirk Cousins’ backup before the start of the season. When Cousins was sidelined by COVID-19 for a Week 17 game at the Green Bay Packers, then-coach Mike Zimmer started Mannion and said he had no interest in seeing Mond in a regular-season game.

New coach Kevin O’Connell gave Mond a fresh start, but he was far too inconsistent to be trusted as a No. 2 quarterback. In playing roughly half the Vikings’ preseason snaps, Mond completed 29 of 51 passes for 303 yards and two touchdowns with two interceptions. He took five sacks.

The Browns waived quarterback Josh Rosen on Tuesday. Coach Kevin Stefanski said after Tuesday’s practice that the team would be adding another quarterback.

After claiming Mond, the Browns released defensive end Isaac Rochell on Wednesday in a corresponding move.

ESPN’s Jake Trotter and Kevin Seifert contributed to this report.

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Seeking backup options behind Kirk Cousins, Minnesota Vikings acquire quarterback Nick Mullens from Las Vegas Raiders

EAGAN, Minn. — The Minnesota Vikings acquired quarterback Nick Mullens from the Las Vegas Raiders on Monday for a conditional 2024 draft pick, giving them an additional option behind starter Kirk Cousins amid an uneven summer for his incumbent backups.

Mullens will get a chance to unseat Sean Mannion and Kellen Mond, who have been competing for the job. Neither has stood out in training camp or in two preseason games, where the two have split reps evenly. Coach Kevin O’Connell declined to endorse either of them after Saturday night’s 17-7 loss to the San Francisco 49ers, during which they combined to complete 20 of 35 passes for 147 yards, with Mond throwing two interceptions.

“Ultimately you would have loved to come out of the night feeling like, shoot, they both moved the team and scored a lot of points and we’ve got a heck of a hard discussion and conversation ahead as a staff and as an organization,” O’Connell said Saturday night. “Although we didn’t do that, I still think there were some real teachable moments and then some real moments where we’ll be able to evaluate and kind of really look at where we are at that position as we kind of restack everything to go into this week to see how we need to allow those guys to compete.

“Because as we’ve talked about, in my mind the clock is going. Although I feel like our starters are in a great spot for Sept. 11, and that’s where our emphasis is really on, there’s a lot of jobs that we have to still allow to play themselves out so we feel good about the overall depth of our team, and we’ll certainly allow that in practice this week.”

Mullens started 16 games for the San Francisco 49ers from 2018 through 2020, playing in an offense similar to the one O’Connell is installing with the Vikings. He added one start last season for the Cleveland Browns, but he was behind Derek Carr and Jarrett Stidham on the Raiders’ depth chart this summer.

The Vikings overhauled their football operations this offseason, but new general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah decided to bring back all three of their 2021 quarterbacks for training camp. Cousins signed a contract extension, and Mannion signed a one-year deal. Mond was a third-round pick in the 2021 draft and has not looked ready to take over as a No. 2 quarterback this summer.

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NFL training camp updates 2022

The quarterbacks were the story at camps Tuesday. New Carolina Panthers QB Baker Mayfield hit on a electric deep ball that got fans talking. The Philadelphia Eagles’ Jalen Hurts had his most impressive day so far, and the Joneses — the New York Giants’ Daniel Jones and the New England Patriots’ Mac Jones — logged encouraging days for their teams.

In non-QB news, Kyle Pitts continues to dominate Atlanta Falcons practices. New York Jets rookie running back Breece Hall is coming on strong, showcasing his burst and versatility. And Orlando Brown Jr. practiced for the first time since signing his one-year contract worth almost $16.7 million.

Things are picking up throughout the NFL. Who made a mark Tuesday? Who got dinged up? Who had the most fun?

Here’s what you need to know from camps across the league:

What our NFL Nation reporters saw today

The kicking competition between Lirim Hajrullahu and Jonathan Garibay has gotten off to a slow start. On Tuesday, Garibay made 6 of 8 attempts in special teams drills but missed all three tries from 49, 54 and 59 yards in the special situation portion of the work. Hajrullahu was just 3-of-8 in drills and made one attempt in his situational work.

In three days of kicking, both kickers are 17-of-27.

“That wasn’t [a] confidence builder going against about a 50 mph wind trying them from 60 yards out,” owner and general manager Jerry Jones said. “I was kidding somebody [and said], ‘I just want to see them make extra points and kicks from the 20 and the 30.'”— Todd Archer

It took six practices into training camp, but Lamar Jackson finally threw an interception. Jackson was picked off by safety Tony Jefferson, who made an outstanding play by tipping the ball to himself before pulling it in.

“I don’t know how he got a hand on that ball, in and of itself,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said after practice.

Jackson’s first interception came on what was his sharpest day of the summer. He completed 15 of 19 passes (79%), which included a drop by Rashod Bateman on a deep throw. — Jamison Henley

Bills safety Jordan Poyer suffered an elbow injury during the team’s 11-on-11 drills while tackling rookie running back James Cook. He hyperextended his elbow and will miss a few weeks, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Poyer left the team’s locker room with his left arm inside a shirt and appeared to be wearing a sling. Safety Micah Hyde is also making his way back from hip/glute injury. He has yet to fully participate in practice after suffering the injury Friday. The injuries have opened up opportunities for backups Jaquan Johnson and Damar Hamlin. Johnson seemed to get more opportunities Tuesday with Poyer out, but it will certainly be a competition to watch.

Cornerback Tre’Davious White also continues to progress after tearing his ACL nine months ago. Defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier said that the athletic trainers communicated to him “[White’s] really progressing well and they’re excited about where he is at this point.” — Alaina Getzenberg

Carolina Panthers: Panthers wideout Robby Anderson tweeted “Noooooo” back in April when news came out the Panthers were interested in acquiring quarterback Baker Mayfield from the Cleveland Browns. On Tuesday, teammates and fans were saying “Ooooooh” over a play Anderson made with the former No. 1 overall pick. Mayfield, working with the 1s, threw a strike of about 50 yards that the veteran wide receiver hauled in close to the goal line.

Explosive plays is what you get with Mayfield, and what the Panthers haven’t had in a few years. You also get occasional mistakes. Linebacker Frankie Luvu jumped Mayfield’s pass for an interception late in a two-minute drill. Overall, the day had to go to Mayfield over Sam Darnold, who was working with the 2s, although not by much. In the red zone, Mayfield was 3-for-8 for a touchdown. Darnold was 6-for-8 with two touchdowns and an interception due to an amazing defensive play.

The battle to be the starting QB is still too close to call, but coach Matt Rhule likes how Mayfield has picked up the offense. “We test guys every day,” he said. “His tests come back in the hundreds. He’s a pros pro.” — David Newton

Atlanta Falcons: When the Falcons drafted tight end Kyle Pitts with the No. 4 pick in 2021, the franchise knew he had the potential to be a game-changer and generational player. And while it’s just training camp, the difference in Pitts’ play from a year ago to now is noticeable.

On almost every rep, Pitts is winning off the line of scrimmage and then getting open for the quarterback — both in team and individual drills. The most noticeable one Tuesday came in an individual rep against linebacker Mykal Walker. Pitts accelerated, stopped for the smallest of seconds and then burst past Walker for an easy reception on a deep pass.

The Falcons have a lot of questions this year, but Pitts is not one of them. Through a week, he’s been the most dominant player Atlanta has. It might not be close. — Michael Rothstein

Philadelphia Eagles: Jalen Hurts is heating up. It was the team’s first day in pads and Hurts had his best showing of the summer, highlighted by a 50-plus yard dime to Jalen Reagor, the former first-round pick who is “battling for a spot” on the team, per coach Nick Sirianni.

Hurts followed with a laser over the middle to new battery mate A.J. Brown. Earlier in the session, during one-on-ones, he hit DeVonta Smith down the left sideline, dropping it in over corner James Bradberry. Hurts has been up and down to this point in camp, with the arrow pointing up over the last couple days. — Tim McManus

New York Giants: Daniel Jones had himself a day. His best this summer. By a good margin. It’s a good sign considering the Giants’ offense hadn’t exactly been lighting it up early in camp as they learn Brian Daboll’s offense.

For the most part, the first-team unit and its quarterback have struggled. Not Tuesday, when Jones went 16-of-20 with two touchdowns and two interceptions on a day when wide receiver Kenny Golladay sat out team drills. His replacement, David Sills, did a good chunk of the damage. Sills had five catches in live drills, including a touchdown reception to end the day’s action.

“It felt good being in there,” Sills said. “I think DJ has a good feel for where I’m going to be. A trust for me.”

If not for a late red-zone interception, Jones’ numbers and the offense’s performance would look and feel even better. Overall, still a good day. — Jordan Raanan

Houston Texans: Davis Mills was excellent in Monday’s practice, probably his best day in camp. Mills went 13-for-17 in team drills with two TD throws the red zone team 22 period. He also went 6-6 with four TD passes during 7-on-7 red zone from the 12-yard line period. He led the Texans offense into scoring position during the two-minute drill after facing a 4th and 15. — DJ Bien-Aime

New York Jets: With RB1 Michael Carter sitting out 11-on-11 drills with a minor ankle injury, rookie Breece Hall got a chance to get extensive work with the starters. He rotated with Ty Johnson and rookie Zonovan Knight, but Hall got the most carries.

Listed as 5-foot-11, 217 pounds, Hall is the biggest back on the roster. He showed excellent open-field speed and made a diving catch in a 7-on-7 period. The Jets love his versatility, and he will push Carter for early playing time. Carter is listed as day-to-day. — Rich Cimini

Kansas City Chiefs: After sitting out the first week of camp, left tackle Orlando Brown Jr. signed his one-year contract worth almost $16.7 million and practiced for the first time. Brown stepped immediately into the starting lineup as the Chiefs put him to work during a run-blocking period and later a 1-on-1 pass-blocking drill. Brown departed practice shortly before its end for a conditioning session, which is part of the team’s acclimation plan for Brown, who missed all of offseason practice as well. The plan is to steadily increase his workload. — Adam Teicher

New Orleans Saints: Saints quarterback Jameis Winston had one of his best plays of camp when he hit wide receiver Deonte Harty in stride for a touchdown of at least 50 yards in 11-on-11 drills.

Harty, an All-Pro kick returner, is one of the fastest players on the roster, and he showed off his speed by easily beating safety Justin Evans for the score. Starting safety Tyrann Mathieu, who has been excused from camp for personal reasons, has not returned to the team yet.

Harty joked that he owed Winston one for dropping a pass earlier in camp.

“He knew he wanted to throw it there. He told me exactly what to do and I went out there and did it,” Harty said.

He added: “I never lose stride with Jameis. I’ve got faith in his arm.” — Katherine Terrell

Green Bay Packers: The biggest difference in Jordan Love compared to last year was evident Tuesday. One day after he threw a practicing-ending, pick-six, he came back with perhaps his best performance of camp.

Last year, he might have tried to play it safe after a bad day. This time, he came back firing even with heavy pressure in his face. He didn’t flinch and found his primary targets with two of his best throws of camp: a deep crosser to Sammy Watkins and a perfectly-placed ball that rookie Romeo Doubs caught in spectacular, outstretched fashion for a touchdown in the back corner of the end zone during a red-zone period.

“I think it does show growth,” Love said after practice. “Just to be able to trust that I know where the receiver’s going to be with pressure in my face and still be able to try and slow it down a little bit to focus on where I need to put the ball. When you first get here, I wasn’t able to make those throws under pressure.” — Rob Demovsky

New England Patriots: QB Mac Jones capped off his practice with a touchdown throw to receiver Nelson Agholor that sparked an offensive celebration, but Jones acknowledged that the defense has had more success through the first six practices of camp.

“It’s very competitive and when we lose the day, to me that’s like a shot in the heart,” Jones said. “So better days ahead. You know we’re in the start of this thing and we got to get it going.” — Mike Reiss


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Denver Broncos WR Tim Patrick carted off with right knee injury; team awaiting test results

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Kirk Cousins’ focus is on Minnesota Vikings training camp, not GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s comments

EAGAN, Minn. — Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins on Thursday brushed off recent comments from general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, closing the door on an awkward start to training camp at TCO Performance Center.

Asked if he had any reason to question the Vikings’ commitment to him, Cousins said: “I haven’t given it much thought with training camp being so busy and consuming so much of my time. I’m not too concerned about it.”

In a story published earlier this week about team-building philosophies, USA Today quoted Adofo-Mensah saying: “The one asset where you get nervous about not burning it down is quarterback.”

Adofo-Mensah later noted the risk in moving on from an established starter in hopes of finding an elite-level replacement.

The Vikings decided in March to sign Cousins to a contract extension that makes it likely he will be the team’s starter through at least the 2023 season. Cousins will receive $40 million this season and $30 million next season, all fully guaranteed.

On Tuesday, Adofo-Mensah said he was speaking theoretically to USA Today about team-building at the position and not Cousins specifically.

“At times I’m a really passionate person,” Adofo-Mensah said. “I love talking about this stuff, team-building and decision-making. In those moments I can get theoretical and high level, but as the general manager of the Minnesota Vikings, everybody is going to fill in the gaps of what I’m saying and relate it to the team. That’s unfair for me to put that on the organization and I never want to do that. At times your words can be airlifted out of the context of the conversation and placed on the page. As somebody who is new to this, I have to get better at understanding how that might look and apply things.”

Adofo-Mensah indicated that he reached out to Cousins this week to ensure they were on the same page.

“Kirk knows how I feel about him,” Adofo-Mensah said. “We’re in a great place. I love his mindset coming into camp and that’s where we’re at.”

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