Tag Archives: Thanksgiving

The Winners and Losers of Thanksgiving Day Football

Every week this NFL season, we will celebrate the electric plays, investigate the colossal blunders, and explain the inexplicable moments of the most recent slate. Welcome to Winners and Losers. Which one are you?

Winner: Flags

Some people like to watch the parade on Thanksgiving Day; others like to watch the National Dog Show. But I live for one thing: that moment when the Cowboys game returns from commercial break accompanied by soft piano music and little graphics of leaves falling, and a video plays in which the game’s referees wish me a happy Thanksgiving. All the turkey in the world wouldn’t be able to cheer me up if it wasn’t for this tiny vignette of NFL official Shawn Hochuli looking directly into the camera and sending my family good tidings with the same demeanor he’d use to announce that my uncle had committed a neutral zone infraction. This happens every year, and I don’t know why:

But the referees got significantly more airtime in Cowboys-Raiders than just that eight-second snippet. Over 66 minutes of game time, the refs called 28 penalties for 276 combined yards. Dating to 1940, only 13 games have had more combined penalty yards, and only 16 have featured more combined penalties. Thursday’s game was just the ninth in NFL history in which both teams were flagged at least 14 times.

Many of those flags were thrown because of Cowboys cornerback Anthony Brown, who was called for pass interference four times. Because defensive pass interference penalties are always marked at the spot of the foul, the Raiders gained 91 yards off of these four flags, resulting in two scores. A first-quarter call set up Las Vegas on the Dallas 1-yard line and quickly led to a Josh Jacobs touchdown; an overtime call on a third-and-18 awarded the Raiders 33 yards and set up Daniel Carlson’s game-winning field goal.

According to AP reporter Josh Dubow, Brown had the most penalty yards called in a game against any one player since 2009. Last season, only three NFL players were responsible for more than 91 total yards in pass interference penalties. And prior to Thursday, Brown hadn’t been flagged for pass interference once all season. The only call that had been made against him in 2021 was a 5-yard penalty for illegal contact.

Just by looking at the stats, you’d assume that Brown was completely outmatched all game, tackling receivers any time the ball was thrown in his direction. But that’s not what happened. Outside of the first call, which was made after Brown actively dragged Raiders wide receiver Bryan Edwards, the other three flags were thrown on plays in which Brown’s actions could have been interpreted as 50-50 jostling for the ball. On the last call, Brown seems to have been penalized for breaking up a pass with the back of his helmet instead of turning his head around:

This game reinforced the absurdity of making pass interference an automatic spot foul—the only foul in the league that is enforced this way. Do we trust NFL referees to consistently and accurately enforce pass interference calls? No! We don’t trust NFL referees to consistently and accurately make any calls, and pass interference calls are some of the toughest to make in the sport. That’s why two seasons ago the league temporarily allowed pass interference calls to be reviewed by instant replay, a move that was widely viewed as a disaster, as even instant replay regularly failed to determine whether a play warranted a flag.

If defensive pass interference penalties resulted in simply 15 yards and a first down, they would still provide a huge boost to the offense. But the calls on Brown essentially gave the Raiders a touchdown and the game-winning field goal. If we don’t trust refs to make this call, why do we give them the opportunity to completely change the outcome of games?

Loser: The Third-and-32 Detroit Lions

For the third time this season, the Lions lost a game on a field goal as the clock expired. They fell to the Ravens in Week 3 when Justin Tucker made the longest field goal in NFL history as time ran out; they lost to the Vikings in Week 5 when Greg Joseph converted a 54-yarder in a similar scenario, making Detroit the first team in NFL history to lose two games in the same season on final-second 50-plus-yard kicks.

Chicago’s 28-yard game-winner on Thursday was less dramatic. While the Ravens and Vikings both used frantic last-ditch drives to get into field-goal range, the Bears drove almost all the way to the goal line while running down the remaining clock.

With all the close losses (and one tie!), the 0-10-1 Lions feel tantalizingly close to finally winning a game. But in other ways, they seem so damn far away. On Thursday, the Lions twice committed strings of penalties that moved them more than 30 yards back from the line to gain.

In the first quarter, Detroit was putting together a successful offensive drive, moving the ball from their own 33-yard line to the Chicago 29. But then the Lions committed back-to-back-to-back penalties—two false starts and a hold—to bring up a first-and-30. This is rare: It marked only the second time this season that a team had faced a first-and-30.

But things quickly got worse. The Lions lost yardage from there, and the Detroit crowd booed as the team elected to run the ball on third-and-32:

Then, in the fourth quarter, the Lions committed back-to-back-to-back penalties again—this time, the sequence was a false start and two holds. They were trying to cling to a one-point lead; that wasn’t possible after facing a third-and-32. Detroit punted and never touched the ball again.

Before Thanksgiving, there had been only eight third-and-30-plus-yard situations in the NFL this season, and no two had happened in the same game. No team had managed to face multiple third-and-30s in one game since 2016. Detroit’s offense repeatedly moving backward played a big role in the team remaining winless: Chicago scored a touchdown after the first third-and-32 scenario, and hit the game-winning field goal after the second.

The Lions had comical issues all day. They couldn’t get the right number of players on the field for an extra point—as broadcaster Joe Buck noted, they probably aren’t used to scoring touchdowns:

You don’t make it to December winless without being a deeply broken football team, and the Lions pretty clearly seem broken. They keep getting close to an elusive win, but much like that first-down marker, their target seems to be getting farther and farther away.

Winner: Drew Brees

Earlier this year, NBC had Drew Brees fly to Foxborough to watch Tom Brady break his all-time passing yardage record. But Thanksgiving was a better day for the newly minted media member, as Brees was on the scene for the Saints’ matchup against the Bills. It was Brees’s first time calling an NFL regular-season game; he’d previously called a preseason game and some Notre Dame games, but this was his first legit action. He slid into Cris Collinsworth’s spot well. (Literally.)

The choice of Brees’s first game as a commentator was no surprise: In case you didn’t know, Brees was the Saints quarterback for the past 15 years. (Longtime Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo also called the Dallas game; there were no biased announcers on the Bears-Lions broadcast, because neither franchise has ever had a quarterback good or popular enough to become a national commentator.) And New Orleans went all out for Brees’s return, holding a halftime ceremony for the future Hall of Famer.

What’s more, everybody in the stands probably wished that they were cheering for Brees in the game. The Saints got absolutely wrecked by the Bills, losing 31-6. New Orleans fell into a 24-0 hole and failed to score until the fourth quarter. It was the fourth loss in as many starts for quarterback Trevor Siemian, who was the team’s fourth-stringer last season while Brees was on the roster. But Jameis Winston is out for the year after tearing his ACL, and supposed backup Taysom Hill didn’t play a snap on Thursday. He was active, but recovering from a foot injury.

(It’s unclear exactly what the Saints are doing with Hill right now. Is he too hurt to play? Are the Saints keeping him from his usual utility role because they don’t want to risk aggravating his injury further in case Siemian gets hurt? Either way, the Saints clearly think it’s working, because they signed him to a contract extension last week.)

This team needed Brees—but instead, he was giving commentary on Siemian’s hilarious habit of dropping back 10 to 12 yards in the pocket, exacerbating his arm weakness and making it easy for Buffalo to sack him:

What a night for Brees. He stood in the middle of a stadium packed with tens of thousands of fans chanting his name, many of whom skipped Thanksgiving dinner at home not to watch their struggling football team, but to cheer for their former hero. And the millions of fans at home likely thought: Damn, the Saints are terrible—it’s a shame Brees is in the booth. Playing football is nice, but so is being retired when everyone keeps screaming your name and thinking about how good you were.

Loser: Dan Campbell

Brown wasn’t the only person on Thursday who was flagged for a critical third-down penalty that led to a game-winning field goal—but he was the only player. Lions head coach Dan Campbell called back-to-back timeouts on the Bears’ final drive, incurring a rare defensive delay of game penalty that made life significantly easier for Chicago on a key third down.

Campbell spoke about his decision after the game, explaining how much of his secondary was lined up incorrectly as a result of a miscommunication, and how he figured that taking the penalty would be better than allowing the Chicago play to run. He said that if the Bears threw a pass “out in the flat, it was about to be a touchdown,” so taking a 5-yard penalty instead was the easy call.

But that doesn’t make Campbell’s decision-making any less perplexing! Even if we overlook the ridiculously embarrassing nature of his team failing to properly communicate coming out of a timeout, Campbell’s reasoning still doesn’t track. The delay of game penalty presented the Bears with a third-and-4 instead of a third-and-9. After intentionally taking a penalty to set up that third-and-4 situation, Campbell’s team came out in a defense that … didn’t actually defend the first-down marker 4 yards away.

The Bears picked up the first down on a 7-yard pass to Damiere Byrd, allowing them to run out the clock and kick an easy game-winning field goal. If Campbell’s Lions had simply allowed a touchdown following their supposed miscommunication, Detroit would have at least gotten the ball back with a chance to respond. Instead, Campbell’s penalty and the bad defensive call all but assured Chicago would end the game on top.

I’ve praised Campbell for his persona, but this was a disastrous example of late-game management—some of the worst from any coach in any game this season. Campbell’s energy hasn’t helped Detroit win any games yet, and his late-game decision-making just helped it lose one.

Winner: Egg Bowl Shenanigans

Thanksgiving is one of the few days each year in which big-time NFL games and big-time college football games happen concurrently. The most-watched NFL games of the season are on; so too is the Egg Bowl between Ole Miss and Mississippi State. NFL and college games take place simultaneously on lots of other Thursdays, but usually it’s a matchup like Jaguars-Bengals going head-to-head with something on the level of Miami-Virginia. This game featured a Rebels team ranked ninth in the country with a potential first-round draft pick in quarterback Matt Corral, and a Bulldogs team that has wins over Texas A&M, Auburn, and Kentucky.

The game didn’t feature a game-deciding piss penalty, but it still brought its fair share of shenanigans. My personal highlight: This sequence in which Mississippi State dropped touchdown passes on first, second, and third downs, and then missed a field goal on fourth down:

The NFL will never give you a sequence this spectacular. Yeah, it’ll give you perfect touchdowns, and if you’re lucky it’ll give you one embarrassing blooper. But it will never give you multiple wide receivers and a kicker mind-melding to create 50 gallons of Failure Stew. Ole Miss won 31-21 to secure a berth in one of this season’s top bowl games. Now, roughly half of an American state will spend the next 360-plus days thinking about the time their team collectively became disinterested in scoring from the goal line against their biggest rival.

Winner: Coin Toss Confusion

This Thanksgiving started with a bang, as both the Lions and Bears made it clear they were uninterested in playing football. Detroit won the coin toss and elected to defer their decision to the second half. This is essentially choosing to kick the ball off, but there is a slight possibility baked into the rulebook that the opponent will accidentally give you the ball to open both halves, which almost happened in a 2019 game between the Cowboys and Rams. For a second, it looked like this might be the case, as the Bears also announced that they wanted to defer:

Here we had two teams standing at midfield, both announcing their refusal to make a choice. In an ideal world, they would have simply stood there, deferring, until the NFL called off the game. Unfortunately, the referee stepped in, repeatedly barking “YOU WANT THE BALL?” at the Bears until the Bears realized they were supposed to say that they wanted the ball.

A more critical coin toss happened later Thursday, as the Cowboys-Raiders game went to overtime. Las Vegas captain Foster Moreau had to call the toss. Knowing his answer would decide who got the ball first in the extra period—and perhaps a bit surprised that he, Foster Moreau, was the Raiders’ captain—he took a lengthy and unconfident pause before incorrectly calling for heads:

I deeply love listening to NFL players make decisions on microphones. Sometimes, we get a “BOOM, WE WANT THAT MOTHERFUCKER”; other times, we get a squeaky and tentative “heads?” The NFL could probably get rid of the coin toss—but if the time ever comes to make that decision, I hope the league defers.



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Cowboys vs Raiders: Dallas suffers heartbreaking Thanksgiving overtime loss to Las Vegas

In what was a penalty-ridden NFL game at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, a pass interference called on Cowboys cornerback Anthony Brown kept the Raiders drive alive in overtime with the scores knotted up.
The penalty allowed Las Vegas quarterback Derek Carr to set his team up within manageable field goal range to claim a famous victory, and Carlson duly converted his fifth field goal of the game.

The win ends a three-game losing streak for the Raiders and is their first Thanksgiving victory since 1968.

It is a crushing defeat for the Cowboys who have Super Bowl aspirations this season.

After the game, as is Thanksgiving NFL tradition, a player from the winning team celebrates in style — taking a bite out of a turkey leg. And this time it was Carlson’s turn after his clutch kick.

“Every win’s important. We’ve been working really hard,” Carlson said afterwards. “It’s tough when things don’t go your way for a few weeks. On a short week to be able to get a win like that, that helps us going forward. Like I said, I think that just speaks to the character of this team and our will to win.”
Every season, the Cowboys play on Thanksgiving and it’s one of the most watched NFL games of the year.

But this time around, they entered the game shorthanded, missing their two best wide receivers in Amari Cooper and CeeDee Lamb.

And it resulted in a slow start for the Cowboys offense, as the Raiders raced into a 17-13 halftime lead.

Despite losing star tight end Darren Waller during the game to injury, the Raiders kept scoring and edging ahead of Dallas.

Carlson hit his fourth field goal of the game with 1:57 left in the fourth quarter to give the Raiders a three-point cushion, but Dallas kicker Greg Zuerlein hit a 45-yard field goal with just seconds left to tie the game at 33-33 and send it to overtime.

After the Cowboys’ drive stalled in overtime, the big pass interference play on Brown — the fourth called on him in the game — on third-and-18 set up Carlson’s game-winning kick.

The loss is the Cowboys’ fourth in their last five Thanksgiving games.

Carr threw for 373 yards and one touchdown, while Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott finished with 375 yards and two touchdowns.

There were an extraordinary 28 penalties in the game for 276 yards, as well as a scuffle between both teams that led to two ejections and an official getting a bloody chin in the third quarter.

“It feels like we showed the heart of our team today,” said Raiders wide receiver Hunter Renfrow. “To fight like we did, for them to go down and score and for us to respond. I really feel good about the character of our team, especially with what we’ve been through these last couple of weeks. It was huge to get that win and hopefully we can build on that as we go forward.”

The Lions’ drought goes on

The Detroit Lions will have to wait a bit longer for their first win of the season after they lost 16-14 to the Chicago Bears earlier on Thanksgiving.

A last-second field goal from Bears kicker Cairo Santos ensured the winless start to the season goes on for the despairing Lions, meaning they slip to 0-10-1 on the season.

The game started with a bizarre opening coin toss where the Lions chose to defer after winning the toss. When asked by the officials if they wanted the ball, the Bears players chose to defer, which they were told that they could not do, as the Lions had already chosen to defer.

But the victory could prove a vital win for under pressure Bears head coach Matt Nagy, whose future at the helm of the franchise has been the subject of speculation this week.

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“When there’s distractions, which is in every sport, in all facts of life — there’s always going to be distractions,” he told the media after his team improved their record to 4-7 with the win.

“It’s how you handle them. And again, we got the win today, and it could’ve went a lot of different ways. But the reason why we got the win is because of how they handled the distractions, you know?

“That’s where to me, when you’re in this business and you lead people, it’s my job to make sure of honest and open communication. That’s where, for me, I just can’t tell you how much this win means today to me because of what they did.”

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Citadel Outlets in Commerce open early for Black Friday shopping

COMMERCE, Calif. (KABC) — The Citadel Outlets opened on Thanksgiving for Black Friday shopping, the first time since the start of the pandemic that they opened early for the holiday tradition.

“We are hoping we return to some return normalcy, that we have a big crowd, that people are happy to be back,” said outlets manager David Blagg.

According to Blagg, the outlets did not open early for Black Friday shopping in 2020 – which usually happens on Thanksgiving night.

This year, they opened the gates to the property at 4 p.m. to let shoppers in, but the stores opened at 8 p.m.

Lines were long as shoppers waited for the chance to buy merchandise at discounted prices and thousands of people showed up to the mall.

In light of recent flash mob thefts that have been going on across California, Blagg said they’re taking a different approach with security this year.

“We do have some new security measures that are in place,” said Blagg. “Let’s just say that within a minute to two minutes of an alarm being sounded, needing to close the centers as far as access in or out we are very capable of doing that,” said Blagg.

Copyright © 2021 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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Georgia mom fatally stabbed by son in Thanksgiving Day killing, police say

A Georgia mom was allegedly stabbed to death on Thanksgiving Day by her 18-year-old son, according to reports.

Varian Hibbert, the son, was arrested at the scene, the Gwinnett Daily Post reported. His mother, Marcia Chance, who was 42, was found dead inside the Lawrenceville residence. The paper reported that the incident occurred shortly before noon and officers responded to a domestic violence call.

FLORIDA MAN CHARGED IN DEATH OF WOMAN WHOSE REMAINS WERE FOUND UNDERWATER

Varian Hibbert, 18, is accused of fatally stabbing his mother on Thanksgiving.
(Gwinnett County Police Department)

Hibbert was charged with felony murder and other felonies, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. 

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Fox 5 Atlanta reported that specific details of what led to the stabbing were not clear. Hibbert was arrested last August and charged with criminal damage to property in the second degree and willful obstruction of law enforcement officers by use of threats or violence.

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Kansas City couple killed in train crash driving home from Thanksgiving dinner

An elderly couple was killed in a crash involving a train in rural Kansas on Thursday night while driving home from their family’s Thanksgiving dinner, according to local officials.

Around 6:30 p.m. local time on Thursday, officials believe a slow-moving freight train struck the couple in their vehicle in Miami County.

The vehicle was pushed a considerable distance down the tracks while the train tried to stop. At some point, the vehicle caught fire, officials told KCTV.

The elderly victims, who are from the Kansas City metro area, had been on their way home from Thanksgiving dinner when the accident happened. Their adult son reportedly showed up at the scene after the accident.

“This is an emotional call for anybody involved in this,” said Capt. Matthew Kelly with the Miami County Sheriff’s Office said, according to KCTV. “Not just for the family but also for us on scene. Nobody wants to go to these calls. These are very traumatic for anybody involved. Anybody that has anything to do with this. I think it makes it even more traumatic on a holiday like this.”

He said his department has reached out to the victim’s family to offer any assistance.

The investigation — which will include checking whether the crossing’s railways and lights were functioning properly — is ongoing, officials said.

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NFL Thanksgiving grades: Raiders earn ‘B+’ for shocking Cowboys, Bears don’t impress in win, Saints fall flat

getty images

The most appetizing NFL game wasn’t the first one on Thanksgiving Day 2021, but though the level of play in Bears-Lions left much to be desired, it did give us a game that wasn’t decided until the final kick. And Raiders-Cowboys went a step further, needing overtime before it too was decided on the final kick. As for Bills-Saints … two close games out of three ain’t bad.

We got out our red pens and graded all the Thanksgiving Day performances, starting with the Bears and Lions, two of the worst teams in football — and they looked like it. We couldn’t give the winner even an average mark in that one, but the Raiders showed plenty of spark in upsetting the Cowboys in a game where they were 7.5-point underdogs, per Caesars Sportsbook.

All six teams heading into Thanksgiving were coming off a loss in Week 11, so there were plenty of “get right” performances at stake on this holiday. 

Here are our report cards from all three Thanksgiving games. 

Bears 16-14 over Lions

Raiders vs. Cowboys 

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

Packers-Vikings grades by Cody Benjamin (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

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NFL playoff picture 2021 – Standings, bracket after Thanksgiving games, plus Week 12 outlook

Welcome to a special Thanksgiving Day edition of our NFL playoff picture. If you kept only one eye on the games, or even if you watched them closely, we have a lot to discuss. The outcomes of two matchups shook up the playoff standings in both conferences. Among the takeaways:

  • The Buffalo Bills regained supremacy in the AFC East, at least temporarily. The Bills, of course, could be back among the wild-card contenders if the New England Patriots beat the Tennessee Titans this weekend.

  • The Bills’ win over the New Orleans Saints elevated the San Francisco 49ers into the NFC wild-card race. They’re currently No. 7 in the NFC standings, while the Saints’ fourth consecutive loss has them looking up at the NFC field.

  • The Las Vegas Raiders’ win over the Dallas Cowboys stopped a mid-season slide and put them back in contention to move into the AFC wild-card race should a current contender falter.

  • The Cowboys’ lead in the NFC East isn’t yet threatened, but the surging Philadelphia Eagles can no longer be discounted in the division race.

We’ve updated those situations and more below. Look for another update after Sunday’s games as Week 12 continues.

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AFC

No team has exemplified this unpredictable season better than the Titans, who won seven of their first nine games despite facing the NFL’s most difficult schedule over that stretch. They then embarked on a much easier schedule, only to suffer a stunning home loss in Week 11 to the Texans. The defeat allowed the Colts to continue closing the gap in the AFC South, shrinking the Titans’ lead to two games with six to play. (Tennessee won both head-to-head matchups with Indianapolis.) Regardless of whether the Colts can catch them, it’s difficult to view the Titans as the clear-cut AFC favorite when two of their losses have come to the Texans and Jets — who have a combined record of 4-16. And now the Patriots, arguably the hottest team in the league, await them on Sunday.

Next up: at Patriots


Even without quarterback Lamar Jackson in Week 11, the Ravens managed to maintain their hold on first place in the AFC North. They haven’t been pretty for a while, having lost to the Bengals and Dolphins and eking out an overtime win over the Vikings over the past month. But maybe that’s just how it’s going to be for them.

Next up: vs. Browns


Will a convincing win Thursday in the Superdome be enough to pull the Bills out of a midseason spiral? They entered Week 12 having lost two of their past three games, including an inexplicable defeat to the Jaguars and a 26-point loss to the Colts. The Bills better hope they’ve figured things out, because they’re about to head into a brutal stretch of their schedule. They will play the red-hot Patriots twice in four weeks, with a game at the Buccaneers mixed in there, as well. But for a few days, at least, they’ve returned to the top of the AFC East.

Next up: vs Patriots (Week 13)

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Josh Allen finds Dawson Knox for his second touchdown of the game versus New Orleans.


The Chiefs are rolling off their fourth consecutive victory, a streak that has brought them from below .500 to atop the AFC West. There doesn’t seem to be much doubt that the Chiefs will be among the seven teams representing the AFC in the playoffs, and more likely than not, they will be the AFC West champion.

Next up: vs. Broncos (Week 13)


It took the Patriots less than two months to recover from their 1-3 start and even briefly supplant the Bills atop the AFC East. The Bills reclaimed first place with a Thanksgiving win over the Saints, but the Patriots will retake the position if they beat the Titans in Week 12. Five consecutive wins — and six in their past seven games — have not only given them a division advantage but also put them within reasonable range of the top seed in the AFC. It’s all in front of them now. The Patriots have a fortuitous home game against the AFC-leading Titans this week then play the Bills twice in a three-game stretch next month. If you’re judging postseason seedings by how teams are playing at the moment, it’s difficult to look past the Patriots as the best-situated team in the AFC (right now, of course).

Next up: vs. Titans


There was a time when lots of people were worried about Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s health in returning from last season’s knee injury. Through 10 games, we can say that the concern was mostly unfounded. Just making it through 10 games didn’t seem a certainty when the season began, but he has the Bengals’ offense humming, most recently with a 32-point outburst in Week 11’s victory over the Raiders. ESPN’s Football Power Index (FPI) is giving the Bengals roughly a 50-50 chance of making the playoffs, but in a wide-open AFC, they have absolutely put themselves in position to be in the December conversation.

Next up: vs. Steelers


The Chargers did everything they could to fall out of the AFC’s top seven in Week 11, but in the biggest sign yet that they are turning a corner under coach Brandon Staley and quarterback Justin Herbert, the Chargers stopped doing Chargers things long enough to retake the lead. There is still a lot to question about the Chargers, most notably their special teams, but they showed they are to be taken seriously in the AFC playoff race.

Next up: at Broncos


In the AFC hunt

Pittsburgh Steelers (5-4-1)

The Steelers are winless in their past two games and are now out of the AFC’s top seven. It won’t get any easier when they travel to Cincinnati this weekend.

Indianapolis Colts (6-5)

The Colts have won three consecutive games and five of their past six, but prior to Week 11, the quality of the teams they beat wasn’t too impressive. That changed with a blowout victory at Buffalo. The Colts are trending in all the right directions, and the Buccaneers are their next test.

Las Vegas Raiders (6-5)

We can do nothing but tip our cap to the Raiders, whose post-Jon Gruden slide seemed well underway during a three-game losing streak entering Thursday’s game at the Cowboys. They went into AT&T Stadium and won a war of attrition, and now have 10 days to prepare for a winnable home game against Washington in Week 13.

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Anthony Brown is whistled for a pass interference penalty, which sets the Raiders up for Daniel Carlson’s winning field goal in overtime.

Cleveland Browns (6-5)

It’s incredible that the Browns have won six games given the obvious impact quarterback Baker Mayfield’s left shoulder injury is having on his performance. Oh, and don’t forget the messy presence and departure of wideout Odell Beckham Jr. If you’re picking one team to fall out of the wild-card race due to exhaustion, it’s the Browns. They have a road trip to Baltimore on deck.

Denver Broncos (5-5)

The Broncos will return from a bye with a .500 record, but consecutive games against the Chargers and Chiefs will likely knock them further from the AFC wild-card race.

NFC

Let’s tip our cap to the Cardinals, who have traveled quite a journey since their last-minute loss in Week 8 to the Packers. Playing without quarterback Kyler Murray and wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins, they have gone 2-1 with wins at division rivals San Francisco and Seattle. The Cardinals have become the fourth team in NFL history to start a season 6-0 in road games and will get their MVP-caliber quarterback back sooner than later. FPI is calling them a virtual lock to make the playoffs and giving them a better than 90% chance to win the NFC West.

Next up: at Bears (Week 13)


In most scenarios, the Packers with Aaron Rodgers are a legitimate Super Bowl contender. But what should we say about a Packers team that is losing key players to injury on a weekly basis? They are still in really good shape in the NFC North, leading the Vikings by 2½ games, with a Week 17 matchup against Minnesota at Lambeau Field looming. But at the very least, the Packers’ depth is going to be tested during December football.

Next up: vs. Rams


The defending Super Bowl champions broke a mildly alarming two-game losing streak on Monday night with a convincing win over the Giants, a team that entered the game ranked No. 23 in the NFL with an average of 18.9 offensive points per game. The lane is there for a high seed in the NFC bracket, as their remaining schedule includes only two teams with winning records (the Colts and Bills).

Next up: vs. Colts


Uh-oh. The Cowboys were expected to take off once they got quarterback Dak Prescott back from injury. Instead, they have lost three of their past four games. Their lead in the NFC East is not yet threatened; the Eagles would still be two games behind in the loss column even if they beat the Giants on Sunday. But it remains an open question whether the Cowboys will head into the playoffs as a genuine contender or will be in the postseason simply because they’re the least-flawed team in a weak division.

Next up: at Saints (Week 13)

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A referee takes a fall as Tony Pollard takes the kick return 100 yards to the house.


It has been a quick tumble for the “all-in” Rams, who have fallen from the top spot in the NFC to the wild-card picture with two consecutive losses. Regardless, the Rams’ Week 11 bye came at a good time. They had two weeks to get newcomers Von Miller and Odell Beckham Jr. more acclimated to their program, in addition to figuring out why quarterback Matthew Stafford has thrown four interceptions during the two-game skid. They better hope they get it figured out, because their upcoming schedule includes not only the Packers but the Cardinals, Vikings, Ravens and 49ers. That will be a tough run.

Next up: at Packers


When you seem to play close games every week, the math says you should at least win some of them. The Vikings’ Week 11 victory over the Packers boosted their division and conference records. Both are key categories for tiebreakers, and their 4-2 NFC record is the reason they are ahead of the Saints and 49ers (whom they play next week) in the NFC playoff standings. Overall, the Vikings have played in seven consecutive games that have been decided by seven or fewer points, a stretch that either has hardened them for a playoff run or will ultimately cost them entrance into the postseason altogether.

Next up: at 49ers


The 49ers have won three of their past four, and they were able to leapfrog the Saints in the wild-card race following Thursday’s action. No one can say with certainty whether the 49ers are truly a playoff team, but sometimes these matters get decided in the postseason. Their remaining strength of schedule ranks No. 25 in the league. One caveat to keep in mind is that the Eagles, another NFC wild-card competitor, have the NFL’s easiest remaining schedule.

Next up: vs. Vikings


In the NFC hunt

Philadelphia Eagles (5-6)

The Eagles also have won three of their past four, all of which by more than 10 points. And when you see two games apiece against Washington and the Giants remaining, as well as a matchup against the Jets, you see a pretty favorable schedule for staying in the wild-card race. Philly has a road game against the Giants this week.

Carolina Panthers (5-6)

Can the Panthers really be a playoff contender with a quarterback they signed out of free agency and inserted into the starting lineup within two weeks? Cam Newton might be Superman, but he isn’t a magician. Carolina will travel to play the Dolphins on Sunday.

New Orleans Saints (5-6)

That’s now four consecutive losses for the Saints since starting quarterback Jameis Winston suffered a season-ending knee injury. Their offense had zero punch Thursday night against the Bills, and they’re now looking up at the NFC playoff field. They’ll play the Cowboys in Week 13, but the one bright spot is that four of their final six opponents have losing records.

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Thanksgiving Thursday top plays: Bills smash Saints, Raiders top Cowboys, Bears edge Lions

No league does Thanksgiving like the NFL!

In the first game of the day, the Chicago Bears kicked a game-winning field goal as time expired to upend the Detroit Lions. And in game No. 2, the Las Vegas Raiders won an overtime thriller against Dak Prescott and the Cowboys in Dallas. 

In Thursday’s finale, the Buffalo Bills dominated the New Orleans Saints at the Superdome.

Here are the top plays from Thursday’s matchups.

Buffalo Bills 31, New Orleans Saints 6

Bills eating early

Josh Allen hit Dawson Knox to start the scoring in the third Thanksgiving game.

Denied

In the second quarter, Buffalo’s defense continued to do what it does best:

Snatched!

After getting off to a hot start, misfortune struck the Bills when Allen was picked off by the Saints’ defense.

Then, in the final seconds of the first half, Allen’s touchdown pass to Knox was nullified by an ineligible downfield pass penalty. 

On the following play, Allen was picked off once again, as he attempted to connect with Emmanuel Sanders.

Headed into the break, the Bills led 10-0.

How ’bout that route!

Stefon Diggs got in on the action in the third frame, extending the Bills’ lead to 17-0 with this snag.

Double trouble

Knox reeled in his second TD pass of the night, this time on a 24-yard toss from Allen, as Buffalo jumped out to a 24-0 lead –– and the blowout was on.

Marching in

The Saints finally got on the board in the fourth when Trevor Siemian found a waiting Nick Vannett fox six.

When it rains, it pours

The Bills punched in their fourth TD of the night when Matt Breida broke out for 23 yards on this run, sealing the deal for Buffalo in the process.

Las Vegas Raiders 36, Dallas Cowboys 33 (OT)

Ready to feast

The Raiders were first to strike, as DeSean Jackson got things going with this monster 56-yard touchdown.

On that TD, Derek Carr became the first QB in Raiders’ history to pass for 30,000 career yards. What’s more, it was the 34th career touchdown of 50-plus yards for Jackson, good for the second-most all-time in NFL history behind only Jerry Rice. 

Recalculating

No CeeDee Lamb or Amari Cooper? No problem.

Prescott found tight end Sean McKeon for six to keep Dallas within arm’s reach.

What could have been

On the ensuing drive, the Raiders were this close to a big-time turnover. Initially, it looked like the Cowboys recovered the fumble, but it was ruled an incomplete pass after review.

The effort here from Dallas was A+, though.

Untouched

Raiders star back Josh Jacobs ran right past the Cowboys’ defense on his way to the end zone to make it a eight-point game headed into the second frame.

Zeke!

You know Ezekiel Elliott had to eat on Thanksgiving:

At the half, Las Vegas led 17-13.

Reinforcements

Backup QB Marcus Mariota checked in for the Raiders midway through the third, capping off a 75-yard drive with his first TD of the season. 

Keeping it 100

The Cowboys got a scoring boost when Tony Pollard returned the Raiders’ kickoff 100 yards to the house!

It is the third-longest TD in Thanksgiving history and was the first kickoff return TD allowed by Las Vegas since 2015. 

Right on the money

Prescott launched a 41-yard bomb to Michael Gallup to move the sticks and the ‘Boys into enemy territory. 

Dallas wasn’t able to capitalize on the big gain, however, and settled for a field goal to make it a five-point game early in the fourth.

Wide open

The Raiders saw a spark when Hunter Renfrow picked up this huge gain to move Las Vegas down the field. 

Tie game

After trading field goals, the Raiders led 30-22 midway through the final frame, but the Cowboys weren’t going away quietly. 

With 2:54 to spare, Dalton Schultz reeled in this pass, good for a 32-yard gain and a TD. After a successful two-point conversion, things were knotted up at 30.

It’s good!

On the Raiders’ next drive, Daniel Carlson nailed a 56-yarder to take a three-point lead in the final minutes of Thursday’s matchup.

Not so fast

The Cowboys capped off a 10-play, 48-yard drive with a field goal of their own to knot things up once again and send things into overtime.

OT

In overtime, the Raiders knocked it another field goal to capture a 36-33 win.

Chicago Bears 16, Detroit Lions 14

Is that legal? 

The game began with a confusing sequence before a play was even called. After Detroit deferred the opening coin flip, Chicago tried deferring back to the original deferrer. 

A unique coin-flip sequence took place between Chicago and Detroit where the Lions won the toss and deferred to the Bears, who tried deferring back.

You look familiar

The Lions scored first after coming up with a stop on defense. Jared Goff dropped back and found old Los Angeles Rams teammate Josh Reynolds for a 39-yard score.

To the moon!

Darnell Mooney = deep threat. 

He got behind the secondary to pull in this doozy of a deep catch.

The moonshot set up this dime to Jimmy Graham. It put Chi-Town up 10-7, and the Bears added a field goal to take a 13-7 advantage into the halftime break.

Keep matriculating

Don’t count Detroit out. In seven plays, Goff & Co. went 79 yards to pay dirt late in the third. 

T.J. Hockenson reeled in the go-ahead TD reception, which helped put the Lions up 14-13.

Beary Merry Thanksgiving

Andy Dalton is going to be eating good tonight. 

On the final drive of the game, Chicago sustained a whopping 18-play drive to run out the clock and put Cairo Santos in perfect position to knock home a game-winning 28-yard field goal.

This Bears team earned its turkey after collecting the first win of Thanksgiving Thursday.

The Chicago Bears won 16-14 as Andy Dalton led the offense on an 18-play, game-winning drive.


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Kanye West Talks Kim Kardashian, His Politics and Mental Health in Reflective “Thanksgiving Prayer” Video: Watch

Kanye West has posted a special video message to fans titled “Thanksgiving Prayer 🕊.” The five-minute video features Ye speaking about his family life, his marriage to Kim Kardashian West, his public relationship with Christianity, his mental health, being on medication, the period of time where he was supporting Trump and wearing a MAGA hat, his presidential run, financial mistakes he’s made, and more. 

“This Thanksgiving, I’m thankful for the family that my wife has given me, I’m thankful for the life God has given me, and I’m thankful for your time, attention, and patience,” Ye said. “In Jesus’ name, amen.” Watch it below.

Ye attended the Los Angeles Mission’s Thanksgiving event yesterday, where he spoke about his marriage to Kim Kardashian West, People reports. “I’ve made mistakes,” he said. “I’ve publicly done things that were not acceptable as a husband, but right now today, for whatever reason—I didn’t know I was going to be in front of this mic—but I’m here to change the narrative.” 

In the “Thanksgiving Prayer” video, Ye expanded on his feelings about his family and Kardashian. “All I think about every day is how I get my family back together and how I heal the pain that I’ve caused,” he said. “I take accountability for my actions.” He also noted that Kardashian was not a fan of his MAGA hat era and opened up about how his presidential run impacted their marriage.

“Good lord, my wife did not like me wearing the red hat. Being a good wife, she just wanted to protect me and our family. I made me and our family a target by not aligning with Hollywood’s political stance and that was hard for our marriage. Then I ran for president without proper preparation and no allies on either side. I embarrassed my wife in the way that I presented information about our family during the one and—thank God—only press conference. All my dad had to say afterwards was, ‘Write your speech next time, son.’”



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NYC crime: Investigation underway after man stabbed, killed near Penn Station

MIDTOWN, Manhattan (WABC) — Police are investigating after a man was fatally stabbed near Penn Station on Thursday evening.

The incident was reported near West 33rd Street and 7th Avenue around 6 p.m.

The 36-year-old victim approached MTA police after being stabbed in the chest.

MTA police requested an ambulance and transported him to Bellevue Hospital where he was later pronounced dead.

The MTA said the incident happened on the street and not in the transit system.

Police say it appears the victim was homeless and sources say a dispute led to the stabbing.

It is unknown what the dispute was about.

Just last weekend, there was a deadly stabbing on a 2 train near Penn Station. Police are still searching for that suspect.

A vendor across the street says 7th Avenue, as Penn Station undergoes its renovation, seemed more dangerous during the height of the pandemic.

He said in the last couple of months it’s actually seemed a little safer.

“The cops are like staying here 24/7, they take most of them away from here and they get arrested, but it was like, really hot spot for drug dealers,” vendor Samy Emech said.

The investigation is ongoing and no arrests have been made.

ALSO READ | Hundreds of FedEx packages found tossed into ravine, sheriff says

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