Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Best Month Ever

What a great month. I can't recommend your team winning the Super Bowl highly enough.

Illinois Basketball: Best Since...?

When we went to Illinois, here were the win totals including tournaments:

26
25
26
37

Here were the conference wins by season:

11
11
13
15

Here was the peak in the AP poll by season:

2
7
11
1

And the NCAA Tournament seed by season:

4
4
5
1

Y'all, that's pretty good.

Since we graduated, the best season was...the very next year 2005-2006.
26 wins, 11 conference wins, 6th in the AP poll and a 4-seed in the tournament. But that team still had Dee Brown. So that doesn't really count for what I'm looking for.

Post-Dee Brown, the best Illinois basketball season was 2008-09.
24 wins, 11 conference wins, 18th in the AP poll and a 5-seed in the tournament. 
That was Bruce Weber's best season with his own players.

John Groce's best season was actually his first, 2012-13.
23 wins, 8 conference wins, 10th in the AP poll and a 7-seed.

- - -

This is Brad Underwood's third season at Illinois and his best so far. He's got 4 conference games left, the Big Ten Tournament and the big dance.

Here's where he's at.

18 wins, 10 conference wins, 19th in the AP Poll and a seed tbd.

2008-09 is within reach. 2 more conference wins and it's the best Big Ten season since 2004-05. Bracketology currently has Illinois as an 8-seed, but the remaining schedule is favorable.
Finish hot down the stretch including the Big Ten Tournament and could get a 5, 6 or 7 seed.

Trophy Hunting

I got my first Playstation Trophy on October 10, 2008 playing the precursor to Rocket League, Supersonic Rocket Powered Acrobatic Battle Cars. 

As of this moment, I've earned 1699 trophies.

Trophies are little achievement markers, signs of progress. And they're up to the game developers discretion. Often, you'll get a trophy for obvious things like completing Act 1 or beating the game, but there will usually be fun things like stun 5 enemies at once or 100 stealth kills or find all the hidden treasures, etc. They're not worth anything. It's not like you can redeem trophies for a new game or even new suits or gadgets. They're just for the video game player. Recognition that you've done something challenging or cool.

One of the things I like about video games is investing time in something and seeing progress. When I was younger, I loved sports games but didn't want to just play one-off games. I wanted to play a season and make it to the Finals. I also really loved when a game like NCAA 2005 gave you challenges, like playing historical classics. This game would check them off as you completed them, and it felt good to say I beat all the challenges. On the other hand, one of the reasons I never liked Mortal Kombat or really got into Goldeneye or Smash Bros. is because it's all designed around one-off matches. You play and either you win or lose. But no matter what you're back where you started.

Another example of progress, is in a game like Assassin's Creed or GTA or Far Cry, where you unlock the entire map starting from just a small space. A lot of these games give you opportunities to upgrade your player, unlock and upgrade gear, etc. By the end of the game, you're facing far more difficult enemies but you're a stronger character. Progress has been made.

So I've always liked trophies. When I get a game that I really like, I want to do everything in it. Whatever the developer thought was was worthwhile, I want to do it. It's a way of measuring, have I really mastered this skill or game. Another cool thing is that the game shows you what percentage of people that have played this game, have earned a specific trophy. The first trophy you get, will often be in the 90s. Like if you played for 15 minutes, you got this. By the end there are some trophies only 1 or 2% of players have earned. Always cool to feel like you did something most people didn't.

Trophies come in four varieties. Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum. Really the only thing I notice is platinum or not. Platinum means you've unlocked all the other trophies in the game. (More specifically, all the trophies in the main game at the time the game was released. Very often, games now release downloadable content that you have to pay extra for, but come with their own trophies. The platinum trophy doesn't hinge upon these new ones. Also, it's possible to earn a platinum and then the game add new ones so you have the platinum but are not at 100%.)

Here are my current stats.


Yep, out of the 1699 trophies I've earned, only 6 are platinum.

(Side note: very cool how trophies are seamlessly captured across PS3 and PS4. The fact that I can, from any computer, see the dates that I've played all games in the last twelve years across two different consoles is crazy.)


Platinum Trophies 

Here are all the platinums I've earned, by date.

Assassin's Creed II - PS3
 Tony Hawk's Pro Skater HD - PS3

Rocket League - PS4
Assassin's Creed Syndicate - PS4
 Far Cry 4 - PS4

Spider-Man - PS4


So because I said the platinum means that I got every trophy, you might assume I'm at 100% trophy completion for all those games. Nope. Four of them have released DLC.




A few notes:
One of the biggest reasons I don't get a platinum trophy for a game is that it requires multiplayer trophies. I don't like multiplayer. I don't pay for it. I'm not going to seek it out just for a trophy.

The other factor is some games require tedious amounts of boring things, like shooting all 100 of the hidden birds spread across the entire map—and the only way to complete is to find a guide and follow along and even then you end up with 98 out of 100 and you're not sure which two you missed and it's just annoying.

Assassin's Creed II was a game I truly got immersed in. And the trophy list didn't have any multiplayer requirements. There was some tedious feather hunting, but there wasn't much beyond what I had already done.

Tony Hawk only had 17 trophies so I'm surprised it considered it a platinum. (Smaller games don't even get platinums, just gold as the highest one.) But there was challenge that required advanced skill, and it took me a while to practice, so I do feel like I earned this one.

Assassin's Creed Syndicate was another good game. The one tedious thing was you had to crash into 10000 objects on a stagecoach so I remember driving in circles for an hour.

Once I did Syndicate, I went back to get the platinum for Far Cry 4, a game I had started 8 months prior. This one required a co-op trophy, so I actually had to post on a message board to find someone willing to help me get this.

Rocket League had 36 main trophies. It took me 7 months because one of them was play online with a friend. Though this one I didn't have to seek out, because I was doing a short-lived experiment with multiplayer at the time.

Spider-Man was the most recent and it was pretty straightforward. No multiplayer. The crimes got a bit tedious at the end, but at least they were missions. My kids liked finding the hidden backpacks and they were shown on the map so it wasn't bad at all.


Games That I've Beaten But Didn't Earn A Platinum Trophy


Grand Theft Auto IV - PS3

I beat this game in the summer of 2008, the first game I played on PS3. Trophies didn't exist yet. They would come out soon after and GTA IV would eventually get trophies added. But they weren't retroactive. So I'll never know how close I was and if I could have platinumed this one.

Supersonic Rocket Powered Acrobatic Battle Cars - PS3

Got 13 out of 14 trophies. There was one challenge I couldn't beat. But there was no platinum anyways.

The Saboteur - PS3

Man, I loved this game. Great concept and great levels that allowed for multiple ways to approach them. In the free roam, you can plant bombs to blow up Nazi radio towers. Cool. There's over 1000 of these, 425 just in one district.

Uncharted 2 - PS3
Heavy Rain - PS3
LA Noire - PS3
Uncharted 3 - PS3
Sherlock Holmes Crimes and Punishments - PS3
Uncharted 4 - PS4
Journey - PS4
Unravel - PS4

All of these games were story-driven, linear games. I played through them once. Didn't ever think about going back through and trophy hunting.

Assassin's Creed Brotherhood - PS3
Red Dead Redemption - PS3
Portal 2 - PS3
Assassin's Creed III - PS3
GTA V - PS3
Hitman Absolution - PS3
Assassin's Creed IV Black Flag - PS3
Driver San Fransisco - PS3
The Last of Us - PS4
Tomb Raider - PS4
Assassin's Creed Unity - PS4
Far Cry 5 - PS4
Watch Dogs 2 - PS4
Red Dead Redemption 2 - PS4
Burnout Paradise - PS4

All of these games I completed but didn't get the platinum because they had multiplayer trophies.

Just Cause 3 - PS4

Great game. Looking through it there weren't multiplayer trophies. Just a lot of tedious ones.

Firewatch - PS4

Completed it, loved it. Too small for a platinum.

Mafia III - PS4

Another one that I loved. Looked at getting a platinum. Turns out you have to beat the game twice and I wasn't interested.

Steep - PS4

Great snowboarding/skiing game. The reason I didn't platinum this is I wasn't good enough to get all the gold medals. These challenges are really tough and I did well enough to get some rare trophies but not all. This is what a platinum should be about. They should be hard. I wish that this was the reason for more of the absences, instead of I got every single-player trophy and that's why.

Assassin's Creed Origins - PS4

This is where the series seemed like it switched to focusing on combat and not stealth. Completed but not platinumed.

Hitman 2 - PS4

And then there's Hitman. The game I've put the most time into ever and called the best gaming experience of my life. Because it was released episodically, there's no platinum. I have completed all of the trophies for the standard levels. (Didn't do all the trophies for the sniper levels which is really a separate game mode and includes multiplayer trophies.)

How about that. That's a lot of games. 31 games that I've beaten in the last 12 years without getting a platinum. And the 6 where I did get a platinum. That's not even counting the various sports games like Madden, Fifa, and NHL where I've played a decent amount but the trophy lists are ridiculous and multiplayer heavy.


Rarest Trophies


There's this one in Steep...

But then I have a bunch in Hitman 2 that are deep cuts.


Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Becoming a Champion



Over 50 players, a coaching staff, and a GM woke up on February 2, 2020 as people pursuing a dream. By the end of the day, they all achieved that dream and became champions. They brought immeasurable joy to millions of Chiefs fans who had never experienced this before. As much as sports journalists like to boil a team down to one player, it took a true team effort from all of them to accomplish this goal. I wanted to take a moment and give honor and thanks to some of the people that made this possible.


Andy Reid

I'm old enough to remember when Reid coached the Eagles and people criticized him for not running the ball enough. This was a real thing. Turns out, Reid was operating ahead of the advanced stats era.

He inherited a team at the lowest point in the franchise. And immediately took them to the playoffs. Every years since then, the Chiefs have had a winning record. Because Andy Reid is a winner.

Reid is rightfully beloved in this city. He's embraced Kansas City and its barbecue. Kansas City has embraced him. One of the coolest things is that Andy Reid is ours now. This is where he'll be remembered as succeeding. His long tenure in Philadelphia becomes a stepping stone to his greatness with the Chiefs. One day he will be inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the lead highlight will be him holding the Lombardi Trophy in Chiefs red.

If the Chiefs had won with Joe Montana, it would have been cool, but Montana would still have been a 49er first and foremost. Same for Marcus Allen and Dick Vermeil. They made their bones elsewhere. But for Reid and basically everyone on the roster except Suggs, this is their breakthrough as Champions.

He's 6th in regular season wins.


In his KC tenure, Reid is averaging 12.8 wins a season. With 5 seasons of Mahomes, he will pass Landry and Lambeau. He'll be on the Mount Rushmore of most wins. Reid and Belichick become the top two of the 21st Century. One offense, one defense.

He's also 6th in playoff wins.


With Mahomes, Reid has gone from 11 playoff wins to 15 in two years. Entirely realistic that he passes Noll, Gibbs, Shula, and Landry. Belichick is the GOAT. But second all-time? That's a pretty good place to be.




Juan Thornhill

I feel bad for a lot of Chiefs. There are legends like Tony Gonzalez and Jamaal Charles who gave so much to this franchise and never even got to enjoy one playoff win here. Then there's players like Justin Houston and Eric Berry who were on the 2018 roster. They got to play alongside Mahomes and get so close to a Super Bowl without actually getting there. All four of those guys I just mentioned deserved glory more than guys like Reggie Ragland or Anthony Hitchens. But deserving is not how it works. It sucks for Houston who played so well for so long, to get cut right before the Chiefs make the jump.

Juan Thornhill is another one I feel bad for. He came in as a rookie and was an instant impact player. He was the best rookie safety in the league. By one metric he was the second best safety in the AFC. And then he tore his ACL in Week 17.

To be a part of something and have to watch from the sidelines as your teammates lift the trophy, it's just not fair. He'll get his ring and I hope he knows that he was a key part of this championship.


Alex Smith

Alex is another one that I feel for. He came in with Andy and brought this team back to life. Before Smith, the Chiefs had losing seasons in 5 out of 6 years. Brodie Croyle. Tyler Thigpen. Damon Huard. Matt Cassel. Tyler Palko. Kyle Orton. Brady Quinn. All of these players started games for the Chiefs. Fans paid good money to watch them play. Smith came in and reeled off 5 winning seasons in a row. 4 double digit win seasons. The Chiefs worst year with Smith was a 9-7 season finishing 2nd in the division.

He brought stability and winning culture to this team. When you have stability at QB, you can draft Eric Fisher, Travis Kelce, Chris Jones, Tyreek Hill, Demarcus Robinson and more because you're not spending picks on QB. When you finish 12-4 in 2016, you have the luxury of saying, "let's go all in and trade up to get Pat Mahomes." It sucks to see your team do that when you're the QB thinking, if we get a little more pass rush or a honey badger, we could make the Super Bowl. But Smith came out in 2017 and mentored Mahomes.

The situation that Mahomes inherited was perfect not just because of Andy and not just because of the speedy receivers. Alex Smith was part of what it made it perfect.

Smith brought me the first Chiefs playoff win I ever saw and it was awesome. It's not his fault, he's not Mahomes. No one else is. So I'm forever grateful for what Smith was and what he did to create a Super Bowl winning team.


Eric Fisher

Fisher was the #1 draft pick in the 2013 draft. The Chiefs had the pick because they were the worst team in the league. I mocked the pick.


The year before, the Colts had the #1 pick and selected a franchise QB sure to anchor their roster for the next 15-20 years. And here the Chiefs are selecting a tackle that might be good to protect Alex Smith.

Throughout his first 5 years, he seemed mostly solid. Good enough to keep, but not exactly what you want out of the #1 pick in the league. He made the Pro Bowl for the first time in 2018. And then in 2019 when he was injured, he made the fans realize just how good he is. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. Especially when your absence is threatening the health of our franchise QB and his recently located kneecap.

Now it’s 2020. Andrew Luck is out of the league. You look back at the 2013 NFL Draft and there’s no obvious stars that the Chiefs should have taken. They got a tackle that’s protecting Patrick Mahomes in the Super Bowl from Nick Bosa. And yes, Eric Fisher is holding…the Lombardi.


Mitchell Schwartz

Fisher is the bookend on the left. Schwartz the bookend on the right.

Schwartz was drafted by Cleveland in the second round and was awesome for the Browns on bad teams. The Chiefs signed him as a free agent in 2016 and now he's made a case as the best tackle in football.  He didn't allow a single sack this entire season.


And then in the playoffs, he took his game to a higher level. Robert Mays said "Mahomes is the best football player in the world. In the playoffs, Schwartz was the best football player on the Chiefs." That sounds crazy, but here's some evidence to support it.



Also, he's Jewish. If you're looking for the best Jewish NFL player of all time, you might give the nod to Edelman, with three rings and a SB MVP. But Edelman has never been named the best of his position (All-Pro). Also he has a cooking blog called Mitch in the Kitch, so I think he takes this one.


Mecole Hardman

The 2019 Chiefs draft was clouded by the uncertainty of the Tyreek Hill situation. At the time it looked like Hill was going to get cut. I wanted the Chiefs to draft DK Metcalf. They drafted Mecole Hardman.

In the preseason vs the Bengals, Hardman won me over with a sweep run for a TD where he looked twice as fast as any other player. Mark told me preseason is meaningless. I agreed. But said you can’t teach speed.

In the regular season he scored 6 touchdowns, mostly of the long and very fast variety. He makes fast people look slow.

He played in the 2018 National Championship for Georgia, where they lost in overtime in the Tua breakout game. So he’s no stranger to big moments. And when the Chiefs couldn’t catch a single punt or pass in the Wild Card Round, Hardman’s big return was the spark the Chiefs needed. One season. One Super Bowl ring.




Tyrann Mathieu

I've been a fan of Mathieu since his LSU days. He's small but always plays big. He'd kinda defined what it means to be a playmaker. He can hit, read the play for picks, return punts, wrap up guys right before the first down marker, play in any position, whatever you need.

When I found out the Chiefs got him, he made my top 5 favorite players on the team before even seeing a snap. What I didn't know was he would be a transformative presence as a leader.



His signature chirp after making a play was "Too Smart", as in you can't run plays for success against him because he's too smart. That spread to other people on the defense and that's why Sorensen is pointing to his own helmet after making the tackle of his life.

Another signature phrase of his that spread throughout the team was Championship Swagger. He's been saying since an Arizona Cardinal, he said it with Houston. And as it turns out, the Chiefs were missing it in 2018. More on that in a minute.

Just like with Andy Reid, I love that Mathieu is ours now. He spent 5 seasons as a Cardinal. But when he retires, his highlight reel is talking about how he won a Super Bowl with the Chiefs.

He picked Rivers in the end zone in Week 17 with the bye on the line. When the Texans were still clinging to a 24-21 lead, Mathieu covered Hopkins and broke it up, forcing a punt. A playmaker and a leader. Everything you want in a Chief.




Frank Clark

The Chiefs gave up a lot and paid a lot to employ Frank Clark instead of Dee Ford. And for the first half of the season, it didn't seem like it was paying off. Clark wasn't getting to the quarterback.

But the second half of the season, he came on. Not all the time. Just in the biggest moments. Just in the 4th quarter when the Chiefs needed someone to seal the game. In fact, he sealed every playoff win with a sack.

Here's one of the best sacks I've ever seen where it took Clark's 3rd attempt to bring down Deshaun Watson.

When I mentioned that Mathieu brought Championship Swagger to the Chiefs, Frank Clark is where you can see it. When Derrick Henry had just ran the Patriots and Ravens out of the playoffs, Frank Clark was not afraid.


That's the kind of quote that gets you on Old Takes Exposed guaranteed. When I saw it, I got scared. But Clark's not scared. He believed in his team and carried in the confidence that his defense was going to shut Henry down. They backed it up. He delivered what the Chiefs never had with Bob Sutton's 2018 defense. Championship Swagger.




Matt Moore

I made a big deal of it at the time and it turned out to be even bigger than I imagined. Matt Moore wasn’t on the Chiefs roster in August. Chad Henne was the backup and that’s what the Chiefs were rolling with. Well, Henne got an ankle injury before they were cool. So the Chiefs signed Matt Moore, just in case. Well, just in case came in Week 7. Matt Moore came in and held on to the win. He almost outdueled Aaron Rodgers. And then in Week 9, Matt Moore was slinging dimes and beat the Vikings. That’s a win over a playoff team. A lot of teams lost to the Vikings this year with their starting QB. The Chiefs win that game and get to 12-4. If they’re 11-5, everything is different. The Titans can’t knock out Baltimore and New England. The Chiefs showed they were good enough to win the Super Bowl but they could have easily lost at Baltimore. Matt Moore doesn’t just get a ring. He earned a ring.


Damien Williams

More than any other position, running back has been the one area where throughout my lifetime the Chiefs have not only had success, they've been able to continually find new stars. TE has been a strength with 12 years of Gonzalez and 7 of Kelce, but that's just two people. Christian Okoye. Priest Holmes. Larry Johnson. Jamaal Charles. Kareem Hunt. Chiefs fans have been spoiled at RB.

At the start of 2018, Kareem Hunt was the starter and Spencer Ware was the backup. Hunt was the starter through Week 11, until he was cut from the team. Ware became the starter, Williams the backup.

By Week 15, Ware was banged up and Williams got the nod. Weird game where a player named Williams scored 6 of the 8 touchdowns in the game.

Three weeks later, the Chiefs are winning a playoff game with Damien Williams as the starter. It felt strange to have a key player be someone who came out of nowhere. This undrafted free agent who no fans know anything about is winning a playoff game for us. Cool?

In 2019, the Chiefs brought in LeSean McCoy and were set to roll with a two-headed rushing attack along with Williams. Well in Week 2, Williams got hurt. So McCoy is out there scoring on the Ravens and lateraling vs the Lions.

Williams topped 100 yards for the first time all year vs the Vikings, thanks to a 91-yard run. Then he got a rib injury and missed another three games.

Coming into Week 17, Damien Williams had 374 rushing yards this year. But in Week 17, with the bye on the line, he turned in two incredible rushing touchdowns. Both times it looked like he was about to go down, but he stayed up and turned them into game-winning points.

He entered the playoffs with fresh legs and it showed. He came up big in the playoffs and some thought he should have been Super Bowl MVP.

So now he's the most crowned RB since Mike Garrett and the 65 Toss Power Trap of Super Bowl IV.

All for the guy who is currently...42nd on the list of Chiefs all-time rushing leaders.

When it was 24-20 the Chiefs took over on the SF 42-yard line. Damien Williams got all 42 of those two yards to clinch the Super Bowl. 

So many running backs have ran for more yards for this team. But no running back has run for more important yards. I guess it's true. 42 is the answer to the universe.




P.S. Here's a fun little nugget.


A very innocent looking inactives list. It just happens to have two future Super Bowl Champions inactive for the game. They wouldn't be active in this game, but they would be active in Super Bowl LIV in Miami just two seasons later. 


Harrison Butker

Butker was the 6th most accurate field goal kicker this year. He made the most in the NFL this year. In the playoffs, the Chiefs got back to almost exclusively scoring touchdowns so they didn’t really lean on him. But he came through every time, not missing once in the playoffs. Some teams (Bears) know what it’s like to have a kicker you can’t depend on. Chiefs can’t relate.


Dustin Colquitt

For Eric Fisher, Travis Kelce and Anthony Sherman, this was their 7th year with the Chiefs. They’re all tied for 2nd place for longest current tenure on this team. Dustin Colquitt is in 1st place. This was his 15th year.
He was drafted in 2005. He shared a locker room with Priest Holmes, Tony Gonzalez, Dante Hall. He was there before the Chiefs drafted Tamba Hali. Hali played for 12 years with the Chiefs. Colquitt was there when Hali retired. Seven times Colquitt went to the playoffs and lost. He was there for the worst season in franchise history and the best. Dustin Colquitt crawled through a river of shit and came out clean on the other side.
Dustin’s dad was an NFL punter and won 2 Super Bowl rings. Dustin’s younger brother is a punter and won a Super Bowl ring with the Broncos. And now Dustin will get to show up at Thanksgiving with a Chiefs Super Bowl ring.


Sammy Watkins

He had the biggest salary cap hit on the team in 2019 and it’s not close. For that reason, many fans have been annoyed with his mediocre production in his time with the Chiefs. Hill and Kelce are the top two targets. Watkins is on the same tier with Hardman and Robinson. But then something funny happened. In the playoffs, Sammy Watkins balled out. 288 yards in three games.

He had the 38-yard catch where he beat Sherman one-on-one in the Super Bowl that set up the go-ahead touchdown. And he had the play I’ll always remember him for. The 60-yard touchdown that clinched the AFC Championship.

Just getting to the Super Bowl was such a breakthrough—something I had dreamed of but felt so out of reach. Hearing Jim Nantz shout “SAMMY WATKINS” will never get old.



Chris Jones

This man entered the league by going balls out at the combine. In his third year, he went second-team All-Pro. For some reason, the Chiefs didn't want to secure him to a second deal. I know you can't sign everyone, but Jones has been a star. He saw the Chiefs pay big money to Frank Clark while not giving him anything more than a rookie contract. He could have held out and missed time, ruining the chemistry in the locker room. Instead he focused on winning a Super Bowl. Clark and Chris weren't 100% for much of the season together. But that extra week before the Super Bowl helped. Jones came up huge, swatting down three passes in the 4th quarter. One of which, Kittle was wide open and changes the entire ending. Jones was a huge part of a Championship D.



Tyreek Hill

Hill's off-the-field actions make rooting for him a complicated issue. In April 2019, it seemed like he was about to be cut from the team. The NFL investigated and decided not to suspend him.

Quite simply, he makes plays that no one in the league can make. And when the Super Bowl is on the line, Mahomes calls Wasp. And the only reason it works is because Hill has the speed and the route running and the hands. People have called him a lot of names. Now they can call him Champion.



Demarcus Robinson

When Tyreek Hill was injured in the first part of the season, it could have derailed the offense. Week 3 was a game vs the Ravens that mattered quite a bit. Without Tyreek, Robinson stepped up and delivered a signature highlight.


Dan Sorensen

For the last few years, fans had been calling for Sorensen to be cut from the team. At the start of the year, he essentially got replaced. Juan Thornhill came in as a rookie and got over 84% of defensive snaps, often 100%. Sorensen didn't crack 30% of defensive snaps in the first six games. He worked his way back into the lineup and for the Chargers game in Mexico, he and Thornhill both played the whole game. Dirty Dan made the game-winning interception. When Thornhill got injured in Week 17, myself and others were concerned about the effect it would have on the defense. Sorensen made the stop on the fake punt and then 30 seconds later forced a fumble, completely shifting the momentum.

If the Texans' fake punt works, there's an entirely realistic scenario that the Texans go down and score and take a 31-14 lead into the half. With the momentum, Watson makes a few more plays and the Texans hold off the Chiefs comeback attempt. Mahomes becomes 1-2 as a playoff starter. Reid becomes 2-6 in the playoffs as Chiefs head coach. Questions start swirling if Reid/Chiefs are going to waste Mahomes' prime. The 49ers beat the Titans in the Super Bowl. Shanahan finds Super Bowl redemption. The story becomes how SF built the best team from the trenches out and every team is focused on replicated their strength. But the Texans' fake punt didn't work. Dan Sorensen made the tackle of his life and became a champion forever.


Travis Kelce

All those speed demons and Travis Kelce is the 2019 Chiefs leading receiver. And he's not even a receiver.

Down 24-7 in the divisional round, Kelce caught three touchdowns in a quarter and the Chiefs never trailed again.

When he first entered the league he was a hot head, famed for throwing towels at refs and doing other things at refs. This year he's telling Norma Hunt, "Look how many people are happy because of Lamar."

By the way, the all-time stats for tight ends, yards per game. 1 is Gronk with 68. 2 is Kelce with 67. 3 is Kittle with 65. With Mahomes, Kelce is averaging 80. He can break quite a few of Gronk's records at this rate.

Kelce has been in KC with Reid since coach got here. It's been awesome to watch him develop and grow. From a hot-head to a Champion.




Steve Spagnuolo

On January 20, 2019, the Chiefs came up four inches short of the Super Bowl. By January 24th, Steve Spagnuolo was now in charge of the defense.

It's a high-pressure situation. On the one hand, you inherit the third-best offense the league has ever seen. On the other hand, this team has Super Bowl or bust expectations. Oh and Veach is about to overhaul your roster too. So you better hit the ground running. When the Chiefs lost two in a row to the Colts and Texans, it seemed like the defense had fatal flaws. The run defense in particular looked horrible. Imagine facing someone like Derrick Henry in the playoffs when everything gets more physical with that run defense.

Something changed. Maybe it was that the defense had to step up to respond to Mahomes knee injury. Maybe Frank Clark's nerve damage was holding him back in the first 6 weeks and once he got healthy he improved. Maybe it took a bit of time for the roster to gel together. Or maybe it just takes a few games for Spagnuolo's system to take effect.

When I first wrote about Spags, I was hoping he could get them from the 24th defense to 16th. That would be enough. The defense went from 24th to 7th. And down the stretch, they were top-5.

Spagnuolo was the DC that beat the 18-0 Patriots in the Super Bowl.
And now he's the DC that changed the narratives for Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes and an entire city.


Brett Veach

Veach was a scout that followed Reid from Philadelphia to Kansas City. On Draft Night in Philadelphia, the Chiefs traded up to get their guy. Lots of people will want to claim that they were in on Mahomes from the beginning. Veach is the one who can prove it.

The icing on the cake with getting Patrick Mahomes is how the Chiefs got him. He wasn't the slam dunk #1 pick like Andrew Luck, that any team would have taken. He wasn't someone that was an afterthought like Tom Brady, who was the 7th player drafted by the Patriots in 2000. Everyone had the tape and combine on Mahomes and Brett Veach was the one who entered the Draft and said Patrick Mahomes No Matter What. The Chiefs had the 27th pick. Veach has said they knew they couldn't move up to the top 5, they didn't have the draft capital. They moved up as far as they could, #10. At #12, the Texans selected a very good QB. If the Chiefs don't get to 10, who knows what happens.

Veach convinces Reid and then GM Dorsey to get Pat. And then in June, Dorsey is out. Veach is in as GM.

While drafting Mahomes is the biggest transaction in Chiefs history, do we have proof that he can be a GM and not just a scout? His 2018 draft was kind of a letdown. And after the 2018 season, with Bob Sutton and a defense that couldn't get Mahomes the ball, something had to be done.

Veach was not complacent. He turned the entire defense over. He cut popular players who still had something in the tank. He made tough calls, risky calls. Here's a cheat sheet to what Veach did this year. Spoiler alert: they all worked.


It's hard to stay a popular GM for a long time. A few draft busts or bad signings and fans will call for your head. But Veach has earned some leash for *quite* a while.


Patrick Mahomes

Andy Reid resurrected the Chiefs. Patrick Mahomes took them to the promised land.

There are so many things that seem impossible.
Before Mahomes, I'd never seen the Chiefs in the AFC Championship. He's never not been there.
Before Mahomes, the Chiefs had never had a MVP. He did it his first year.

The debate used to be Brady vs Manning. Now the conversation is going to be Brady vs Mahomes.

It shouldn't be this simple. We're used to stories of Elway finally making it at the end of his career. We're used to the idea that Favre and Brees and Rodgers win one Super Bowl and it is a crowning achievement. (We'd be more used to it if it weren't for Brady, king of outliers.) We're not used to seeing someone come in and be the best player in the league right away.

Winning in the playoffs is hard. I mean first you have to get there. But even once you do, I saw the Chiefs lose 8 in a row.

Having a winning record in the playoffs is almost impossible. 11 out of 12 teams are guaranteed a loss every year. Mahomes has the best playoff winning percentage among active QBs.

(With a minimum of 3 games, the only QB with a better all-time playoff record than Mahomes is Dilfer who went 5-1.)

The reason he was overlooked coming out of college was people thought he was just a big arm in a Big 12 system. He's shown he can make throws no one else can make. He also makes less mistakes. He also knows the game. Mahomes was the one who asked to run Wasp on the biggest play of the Super Bowl.



Mahomes was the first time I've seen the Chiefs draft a QB in the first round. I was optimistic from the beginning.

His first NFL touchdown is a throw that should be talked about more because I don't think I've ever seen anyone make a throw that fast at that angle that quickly after the snap with a defender in your face.

Within two weeks, he was in the top two sports things ever for me.


Mark tried to get me to pump the brakes. It's been two games. Yep.

I called him an All-Pro before he became the starter. And he got there in one year.

He's the face of Madden and the face of the NFL. No one's overlooking him now.

Kansas City has always been a Chiefs town and now we have a hero to call our own.




My whole life I've imagined what it would feel like to see a team that I love win a championship. I imagined it as jubilation. I pictured myself running out of the house, through the streets, screaming, jumping and hugging strangers. But it wasn't like that.

I hugged my oldest son and screamed and we rolled on the floor for a moment in shock. But mostly, it's been...a relief. A sense of peace. No longer would I have to worry about each loss or each moment that this could cost me witnessing history. No longer would I have to be jealous of other fans. No longer would I have to wonder what sports is like for them or wonder what they're feeling. No longer will a playoff loss mean the collapse of a dream. Because no one or nothing can take this away.

There's a great joke that has been recycled too many times already: A Cleveland man passed away and requested Browns players to be the pallbearers, so the Browns can let him down one final time.

This was an actual request in 2013 and it's funny because it's true. Some fans get to see ten championship parades in their city in one decade. And fans of certain teams in certain cities die without ever seeing one. You don't get to pick where you're born. I was born in Kansas City and up until Damien Williams got the edge there was a chance I'd die without seeing the Chiefs lift the Lombardi Trophy. Before the Chiefs drafted Mahomes, that chance seemed ominously large.

And now I don't have to ever wonder or worry or think about that ever again.

For so long, I just wanted one. Just let me have one championship. And I worried what would happen if it did. Because neither of the two options seemed great. Either, I'd be content with that one and lose interest in the Chiefs, something that's been a big part of my life. Or I wouldn't be content with one and become like the arrogant Patriots fans that I hate.

But after taking over two weeks to reflect and absorb it, here's where I'm at. I'm content with one. But I haven't lost interest in the Chiefs. I'm simply playing with house money forever. I'm in a casino and all the money I brought with me is safely in my pocket and it's not going back on the table. No loss can put me in debt. No fumble to a rival in the final minute can take everything I own. That trophy is ours. And for the rest of my life, I can root for them and hope they win another without it defining me as a sports fan. There will come a time in my life when the Chiefs go 3-13 again. And all I'll have to do is watch Super Bowl highlights, put on a Championship shirt, read Hoagie Central, or simply close my eyes and remember the moment that everything changed.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Most Valuable Player on Each NFL Team

You often hear this discussion: If you could start an NFL team with one player, who would it be? Or if you could pick one player on offense and one player on defense who would it be? Well, I started thinking about that and realized the context for that is essentially an expansion draft. But here's the thing that no one ever mentions in this context—teams get to protect players in an expansion draft.

So I thought it would be a fun exercise to see, if each team could protect one player, who would it be? I'm not the biggest roster expert in the world, so you might quibble with some of my choices, but that's part of the rub.


Chiefs: Mahomes
Chargers: Joey Bosa
Raiders: Eesh, not much talent here. I'd probably protect Waller, but he's not even a top-3 TE.
Broncos: It's still Von Miller. Too early to say Drew Lock.

Texans: Watson
Titans: Henry
Jaguars: You probably don't protect Fournette. Calais Campbell over Myles Jack I guess.
Colts: I think it's Quenton Nelson.

Ravens: Jackson
Browns: I'd pick Myles Garret over OBJ or Chubb.
Steelers: TJ Watt
Bengals: The rights to Joe Burrow

Patriots: It can't be Brady at this point in his career. So Gilmore then.
Dolphins: Devante Parker I guess.
Bills: This is an interesting one. Would you protect a shutdown corner in White or your QB if he's not a top-10 guy? I'm going White.
Jets: Jamal Adams



Rams: Aaron Donald
49ers: Nick Bosa, though they have a bunch of talent
Seahawks: Wilson
Cardinals: Murray

Saints: Michael Thomas. Love Brees but he's 41.
Bucs: Mike Evans is only 26. Feels like he's been around forever.
Falcons: Julio is 31 but he's still the best choice I think.
Panthers: McCaffrey

Bears: Mack
Lions: I swear this whole thing wasn't a setup just to make this comment...but it has to be Darius Slay, right?
Packers: Rodgers is 36. Adams is 27, Jones is 25. But Rodgers is still harder to replace.
Vikings: Since you have Thielen and Diggs, I'd protect Cook.

Cowboys: Dak
Eagles: Wentz
Giants: Barkley
Wash: Terry McLaurin I guess.

- - -

Since this is a passing-driven league, let's see how many QBs I picked.

4 AFC QBs. The three Pro Bowl QBs this year plus Joe Burrow.
5 NFC QBs. Wilson and Rodgers who have won rings. Dak, Wentz and Murray as the up and comers.

Since QB matters so much, I think you're feeling pretty good if you're a fan of one of those teams. Though too soon to feel great if you're an Arizona fan.

- - -

That exercise was the main point of this...but let's go back to the original question. What would your expansion team look like if you could draft from the entire NFL except for those 32 players protected above?

QB: Slim pickings. Either Tannehill, Cousins, Ryan, Garoppolo, Stafford or 41-year-old Brees. I guess Tannehill based on 2019 but I don't feel great about it
RB: Chubb and Zeke
TE: Kelce and Kittle
WR: Hill, Adams, Godwin, Hopkins.
O-Line: Schwartz, Tunsil, Martin

D-Line: Ingram, Jones, Jordan
LB: Barrett, Leonard, Judon, Jones, Wagner
Secondary: Lattimore, Mathieu, Ramsay, Fitzpatrick

You can essentially draft Pro Bowl rosters with the exception of QB. Brees made the Pro Bowl this year and Cousins was an injury replacement, but neither one is a long-term solution you feel great about.

Monday, February 17, 2020

Boujee Bowling

I had free passes to this yuppie bowling place nearby so Grant and I went. Leather couches, small number of lanes, a real restaurant attached. Not your classic dive bowling alley.

I rolled a 113, 138, 109.

Got a few strikes, left a lot of single pins open. I didn't like the lane. It felt like the ball drifted off line easily. Or maybe that's just human error.

In my best game, I had a strike, spare, spare, strike in frames 5-8...and then after the strike, there was a lane malfunction that took 10 minutes to get repaired. Left two open frames after that. Totally ruined my flow.

I think I'll stick with my normal alley in the future.

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Cast Iron Breakfast Potatoes


This was a special request by my oldest son. I made these for him last year and every so often he'd ask for them, usually when we didn't have time or potatoes.

We even made a trio of flavored ketchups: garlic, salt, pepper / everything bagel seasoning / habanero. Very delicious.

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Friday, February 07, 2020

I can't remember what I used to post about. So here's a picture of a hoagie just to mix it up.


I've got one more Super Bowl post to do, profiling the key contributors to this Super Bowl championship. But I'm going to take a break, because even for me, it's been a lot of Chiefs and nothing else. So for a while, this concludes the Super Bowl 54 coverage. Resume normal programming.

The Best Moments of Super Bowl LIV

I just did the best 15 moments that put the Chiefs in the Super Bowl. Now let's look at the final game itself. Too many moments for a Top Ten. In honor of the Super Bowl MVP, let's do 15.


15. In the first quarter down 3-0, Chiefs had 4th and 1 from the 5. All year, some fans had thought Reid was too conservative. But he decides to go for it. Busts out a secret play they've been working on all year but never used. "Shift the Rose Bowl Right Parade."

14. The very next play, Mahomes runs the option and keeps it. Chiefs take their first lead.

13. In the second quarter, Chris Jones gets to Garoppolo and causes an errant throw. Bashaud Breeland snags and gets two feet in.

Alright, so far I've gone chronological. But now the rest of these are in the second half and I've got to sort them by best, not strictly the order they came in.

12. The Chiefs break their scoring drought as Mahomes finds Kelce in the back of the end zone. This pass makes the score 20-17.

11. With 10 minutes to go and up 20-10, the 49ers have had all the momentum for the last 30 minutes of game time. They've gone on a 17-0 run, scoring on every possession, except for the one before the half where they didn't try to score. The 49ers haven't punted all game. On 1st down from the SF 38, the Chiefs held Mostert to one yard. Hitchens rush forced a high throw on 2nd down. And on 3rd down, Clark and Suggs chase Garroppolo to the sideline and Fenton hits him out of bounds. Chiefs force the first punt of the game. If the Niners score or even get two more first downs, they could have closed the door.

10. 49ers are up 20-17. 3rd and 5. Ben Niemann breaks through and has Jimmy G under pressure. The difference in this game was the Chiefs pass rush got home in the 4th quarter.

9. Down 31-20, the 49ers needed a miracle in the final minute. This interception by Fuller allowed everyone in Chiefs Kingdom to start celebrating. (Would have ranked higher but it was a two-possession game with a minute to go.)

8. Down 17-20, Sammy Watkins beats Sherman one-on-one to put the Chiefs in field goal territory at the very least.

7. The Chiefs have a 24-20 lead and need their D to come up with a 3rd consecutive stop. On first and 10 with 1:44 to go, Jimmy G fires a pass and Chris Jones gets a hand on it, popping it into the air.

6. The very next play, 2nd and 10 with 1:40 to go. Fuller makes a diving stop to break up the pass. Upon the replay you can see that Jones tipped the ball on two straight plays.

5. The Chiefs were trailing 17-20, with just over 5 minutes to go. The 49ers call a play that gets Kittle in space, one on one against Terrell Suggs. Obviously that's a great matchup for the TE. He gets wide open in the middle of the field. He makes that catch and it's a 1st down and more. But he doesn't because Chris Jones swats it down. Absolute beast with game-saving plays.

4. 3rd and goal from the 5. Chiefs trailing 17-20. Mahomes floats the ball over Dee Ford's head and finds Williams. He catches it at the 4 and it's a race to the pylon. If they rule he's out at the one-inch line, that sets up a 4th and Goal for the ages. But Williams muscles the ball across the plane just as he steps out. To quote the ref, this review is "tighter than a gnat's ass stretched over a rain barrel."

3. It's 24-20 Chiefs. 49ers are in KC territory with 1:25 to go. 4th and 10. The 49ers had scored three drives in a row and now the Chiefs D was being asked to stop them for the 3rd time in a row. Jones helps make a path for Clark to get the QB. Clark wraps him up and doesn't let go. This gives the ball back to KC, just one first down away from sealing it.

2. 3rd and 15. Down 20-10 with 7:13 to go from the KC 35. The 49ers had shut down the Chiefs offense for over 30 minutes of game time. They'd picked him off two drives in a row. It looked bleak. Given extra time by the replay review on the previous play, Mahomes asks to run Wasp. It's the turning point of the game.



1. The Chiefs needed a first down. They're up 4 with 1:20 to go. 2nd and 6. Six yards from glory. Mahomes tells Williams, "Cover that ball. Stay in bounds. Go get that shit." And boy did he. Joe Buck absolutely butchers this call. At least Mitch Holthus was ready to do justice to the play that sealed the win.


Thursday, February 06, 2020

The Best 2019 Chiefs Moments Leading to Super Bowl LIV

I started making a list and realized a top ten wouldn't be enough. I was trying to think of what number to use and then it hit me.


The NFL doesn't allow videos to be embedded, so I had to switch these all to links, especially for the timestamped ones.

15. In the first two minutes of the season, Sammy Watkins takes it to the house. Letting everyone know that the 2019 Chiefs were starting right where the 2018 Chiefs left off.

14. In a moment of improvisation, Kelce laterals it to McCoy.

13. The Chiefs had to face the Ravens without Tyreek Hill. Demarcus Robinson made a one-handed catch to give them half of their regular season losses.

12. On 3rd and 21, Hill goes up to get one and then makes the extra effort to score.

11. I could have chosen Hardman's first NFL TD vs the Raiders or his 83-yard go route vs the Ravens, but I'm going with this one. On 3rd and 9, Mahomes does a jump pass that looks like a normal completion. And Hardman puts on the afterburners. YAC monster.

10. 4th and 8 vs the Lions. Chiefs were rarely in this position this late in the game. But Mahomes said, "Not today."

9. Matt Moore + Damien Williams + Tyreek Hill + Harrison Butker eke out a win over the Vikings. Without this win, Chiefs don't get a bye. The most incredible play was when Moore recovered the ball on a sack fumble with no blocking. Matt Moore earned his ring.

8. It came in a loss, but I have to include this one because not only was I there, it's the best play I've ever seen in person.

7. When Mahomes dislocated his knee in the red zone, the Chiefs were up 10-6. They got the field goal to make it 13-6. The game was very much in doubt. But the defense had a fire lit and was the turning point of the season. The second play for the defense after Mahomes got injured was a sack-fumble-scoop and score.

6. The Chiefs started the playoffs by going down 24-0. They couldn't do anything right. They needed a spark. They got it from their first pick in the 2019 draft, rookie Mecole Hardman.

5. In Week 14, the 8-4 Chiefs traveled to Gillette Stadium to face the 10-2 Patriots. The team that prevented the Chiefs from going to Super Bowl LIII. In last year's AFC Championship the Chiefs defense couldn't get a stop in overtime. This year Bashaud Breeland made the game-winning stop.

4. This moment was really two separate plays by Dirty Dan in the Divisional Round vs the Texans. The first with 8:30 left in the 2nd quarter, stopping a fake punt. The second with 8:02 left in the 2nd quarter, forcing a fumble on the kickoff. Within 30 seconds of game time, Sorensen flipped the momentum forever.

3. I've never seen anything like this. Under 3 minutes, Damien Williams refuses to go down and seals the win over the Chargers. And then... as the Chiefs line up to kick the extra point, Kevin Harlan starts announcing a different game—the Dolphins comeback win over the Patriots, giving the Chiefs the first-round bye.

2. The Chiefs never had the lead in the AFC Championship until this play. The Titans were in man  with double coverage on Hill and Kelce. So Mahomes scrambles left to buy time, head fakes, gets the edge for the first down. But there's a Super Bowl on the line. He doesn't go out of bounds. He cuts it back, absorbs a hit, spins, and knifes through two defenders to score. I called it an all-time highlight immediately and I wasn't kidding. The NFL updated their 100 all-time playoff highlights and included this at #85.

1. As we know, 10 point leads with 7 minutes to go are not safe. On 3rd and 6, I knew the Chiefs needed to pick up more first downs and bleed clock before I could feel comfortable. Except my quarterback is Patrick Fucking Mahomes. So on 3rd and 6, he heaves a 50-yard bomb. This is the first moment I allowed myself to believe I was going to see the Chiefs in the Super Bowl. Every time I hear Jim Nantz scream "SAMMY WATKINS for the touchdown!" I cry tears of pure joy.


Next up: Best Moments of Super Bowl LIV

2019 Sportsbook Recap

Back in August I published my NFL Futures bets. Here's how I did.


I started with 10,000. Can I turn a profit?

2000 on Chiefs to win division at -150 WIN. PAYOUT = $3334 (includes original 2000 staked)
1000 on Ravens to win division at +300 WIN. PAYOUT = $4000
800 on Colts to win division at +500 LOSS.
200 on Bills to win division at +950 LOSS.
1000 on Eagles to win division at -110 WIN. PAYOUT = $1909
1500 on Patriots to make the Super Bowl at +325 LOSS.
1500 on Chiefs to make the Super Bowl at +350 WIN. PAYOUT = $6750
1000 on Mahomes over 4650 passing yards at -110 LOSS.
800 on Chiefs over 10.5 wins at -110 WIN. PAYOUT = $1527.20
200 on Chiefs to win Super Bowl at +800 WIN. PAYOUT = $1800

Total: 19,320

Last year, I turned 10,000 into 19,199.

Did even better this year.


The Skip Bayless Bad Take Hall of Fame

I blocked Skip Bayless on Twitter a long time ago because he's a professional troll. I get it. But I'm still going to make fun of him.

Before the Chiefs-Texans game, Skip served up this gem:



Skip claimed that he'd rather have Watson than Mahomes because Deshaun has "stronger winner's intangibles and makes more plays happen"

Okay, well that one didn't work out perfectly for him. Watson hasn't yet won a playoff game. Mahomes had won 2 after this one.

So before the Chiefs-Titans game, would Skip see the light?


That one didn't work out so great either. I mean, one was already the reigning MVP, but bold take I guess. 

So now that Mahomes is 3-1 in the playoffs and is appearing in the Super Bowl, would Skip come around on Mahomes or insist that Jimmy G is better?



Now that's a hot take I didn't see coming. First by not even comparing Mahomes to a 49er who's in the Super Bowl is unusual. And then second, by picking a QB who has won 1 playoff game, who missed the playoffs this year. Just wow. 

Well, Mahomes went out and not only won the Super Bowl but was crowned Super Bowl MVP. 

So surely, after all this, the only option is for Skip to admit he was wrong and acknowledge how great Mahomes is. 


It almost makes me want to appreciate how consistently bad he is. But nah.

Cases Made

Before the playoffs started, I made the case for and against all 12 teams. Here are the 12 correct cases.


Buffalo Bills

AGAINST

They're not ready yet.
Winning one game would be a success.


New England Patriots

AGAINST

They finished 4-4.
This team lost at home to Miami when they really wanted to win.
Brady really doesn't have anyone to throw to.
Brady's numbers from this year are average to below average.
The Chiefs and Texans and Ravens all beat the Patriots.


New Orleans Saints

AGAINST

Calls and breaks seem to go against them.


Philadelphia Eagles

AGAINST

They've played like dogshit most of the year.


Minnesota Vikings

AGAINST

Minnesota Miracle revenge game likely to be one and done.
Tough draw.
Kirk Cousins.


Baltimore Ravens

AGAINST

Lamar Jackson is 0-1 in the playoffs.
Lamar Jackson's Ravens are 0-2 vs the Chiefs.
If you're making parallels to last year, this year's Ravens are last year's Chiefs. Young QB takes the league by storm and gets crowned the MVP. A team that had so much success and didn't have to face that much adversity. And last year the MVP came up one defensive stop short of getting to the Super Bowl.
Perhaps they peaked in November?


Houston Texans

AGAINST

Their coaching is suspect.
JJ Watt was injured and even if he comes back is unlikely to be at full strength.
Got blown out by the Ravens.
Doesn't seem to be on same level as the three teams above them.


Seattle Seahawks

AGAINST

Still a tough road to win four games.
Seemed like they lost a bit of their magic.


Tennessee Titans

AGAINST

Their path is brutal. On the road at New England. On the road at Baltimore. On the road at Kansas City.
At some point, everyone's going to see that he's still Tannehill.
They couldn't beat the Texans in week 15 when they had a chance to win the division.


Green Bay Packers

AGAINST

Haven't seemed that impressive.
Never had the lead in both Lions games.
Got blown out by 49ers.


San Francisco 49ers

AGAINST

They lack playoff experience.
Their QB isn't a top-5 QB.
A lot of their games were close and could have swung either way. Only takes one fluky play to knock a team out of the playoffs.


Kansas City Chiefs

FOR

They were one play away from the Super Bowl with a crappy defense and over the last month, their defense has been a top 5 unit.
They're peaking at the right time, entering the postseason with a 6-game winning streak.
They beat the Ravens and Patriots this year.
They've won in heat, snow and at altitude.
They have the reigning MVP, Patrick Mahomes.
Earning the bye and a week to rest + prepare, plus getting a home game is a big boost.
They've seemed like the only team that can handle Lamar Jackson.
Damien Williams has fresh legs.