News Commanders Team Notes

Vote for RB Bill Croskey-Merritt as the Pepsi Zero NFL Rookie of the Week for his performance in the win over the Chargers

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This week, Commanders running back Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt has been nominated for the Pepsi Zero NFL Rookie of the Week award for his outstanding play in the team’s Week 5 victory over the LA Chargers to move back above .500 and within a game of the division lead.

This is a great chance for Commanders fans to spread the love and show appreciation for the rookie 7th round draft pick who has been a sensation and fan favorite throughout OTAs, minicamp, training camp, preseason, and the first quarter of the regular season.



To cast your vote for Bill this week, CLICK HERE.

By the way, unlike political elections, you are not limited in the number of times you can vote, so feel free to press that “Vote Again” button repeatedly.



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Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt has had an exciting career for as short as it’s been. He, in fact, won this very Rookie of the Week award for his performance in his first NFL game against the Giants. In fact, that Week 1 performance against the Giants was historic.

Jacory Croskey-Merritt is the first player in NFL history drafts outside the top 200 picks with 75+ rush yards and a TD in their debut

— Michael F. Florio (@MichaelFFlorio) September 8, 2025

In the subsequent three games, Bill went on to add to his resume through consistent hard and effective running, and entered this week’s game against the Chargers with the league’s 2nd-highest yards per carry average. Following the Chargers game, he’s in first place. Not bad for a rookie!

It's Bill's world and we're just living in it 🌎#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/2cL2lOQLZU

— NFL GameDay (@NFLGameDay) October 6, 2025
Jacory Croskey-Merritt doesn't just lead the NFL in yards per carry. He also leads the NFL in some deeper-cut analytical areas as well.

He's the league's top RB in rushing yards over expected per carry (+2.2) and rushing success rate (60.5%) as well. pic.twitter.com/gN9rJaFe50

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) October 7, 2025

But he remained part of a running back by committee attack that limited his overall output to modest numbers.

That changed this week when he got 14 of the team’s 20 running back carries, and was targeted twice in the passing game. Bill turned those 14 carries into 111 yards and 2 touchdowns, adding 39 yards with his two pass receptions.

Bill’s 150 yards from scrimmage and the pair of touchdowns bring his season totals to:

  • 43 carries
  • 283 rushing yards
  • 6.6 yards per carry
  • 54 receiving yards
  • 10.8 yards per reception
  • 4 touchdowns

Against the Chargers, five of Bill’s 14 total runs were ‘explosives’ of 10 yards or more, with the longest being a 27-yard scamper.

🔟 of the best rookie performances from Sunday’s action 💥 pic.twitter.com/nh6DPGF3zb

— The 33rd Team (@The33rdTeamFB) October 6, 2025

Other awards and nominations for Week 5​


Bill has been nominated for the FedEx Ground Player of the Week for his accomplishments in LA.

Immediately after the game, he was awarded Tom Brady’s “Let’s F***ing GO” honor.

WHOLESOME: #Commanders rookie running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt was #NFL legends Tom Brady ‘LFG Player of the Game’ this week.

Really cool back and forth between Croskey-Merritt and Brady.

An awesome moment for a 7th round rookie running back.

🥹

pic.twitter.com/bGvAlp72Rh

— MLFootball (@_MLFootball) October 6, 2025

Here’s what it looked like on game day:​

Jacory Croskey-Merritt AKA "Bill" 16 TOUCHES, 150 YDS, 2 TDs, 7.9 YPC vs LAC Today, Week 5. https://t.co/G2bWb7uYAo pic.twitter.com/XPayJcnfdw

— Football Performances (@NFLPerformances) October 5, 2025
Jacory Croskey-Merritt is HIM!

He NEEDS to be the lead back moving forward 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/s86saVAm1q

— Matt FF Dynasty 🏈 (@MattFFDynasty) October 6, 2025
Jacory Croskey-Merritt through 5 weeks among RBs with 30+ rushes…

65.1% success rate (1st)
58.1% of runs gain 5+ yards (1st)
20.9% gain 10+ yards (2nd)
39.5% result in 1D/TD (1st)
4.4 yards after contact per rush (2nd)
51.2% of runs have been vs 8+ in the box (6th)

— Rich Hribar (@LordReebs) October 6, 2025
Huge praise from Daniel Jeramiah on Bill Croskey-Merritt via @MoveTheSticks Pod:

“He’s got a legit shot to be the Rookie Of The Year… in this offense, with the weapons they have, the QB they have, and the OL that’s upgraded, he’s gonna have an absolute monster year.”

— Eric Sully (@CommandersRealm) September 9, 2025


To cast your vote for Bill Merritt this week, CLICK HERE.

By the way, unlike political elections, you are not limited in the number of times you can vote, so feel free to press that “Vote Again” button repeatedly.





Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/general/3...-his-performance-in-the-win-over-the-chargers
 
All aTwitter: 8-Oct-25 – Dorance Armstrong tied for 2nd in the NFL in sacks

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The goal of All aTwitter is to give readers a detailed or quirky look, through the unique lens of Twitter, at the Commanders, the NFL, and sports in general, along with a smattering of other things.


Click here for Washington Commanders Beat Writers Twitter Feed


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Tip: If a tweet isn’t fully visible on your screen, clicking on the date at the bottom of the tweet will open it up individually in either the X app or your browser.

The Commanders worked out G Julian Good-Jones, who was on the team last year, and DE Drake Jackson, a 2022 second-round pick by the 49ers.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) October 8, 2025
On the call for Monday’s Commanders-Bears game on ABC: Joe Buck (play-by-play), Troy Aikman (analyst), Lisa Salters (sideline) and Laura Rutledge (sideline).

— Jake Russell (@_JakeRussell) October 7, 2025
A movie 🎥 pic.twitter.com/F8vzBCN7X2

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 8, 2025
WEAR BLACK #RAISEHAIL pic.twitter.com/zeW0ZQumxy

— Rio Robinson (@Rio_Robinson91) October 8, 2025
Before voting look at Bill’s ypc that game, his two TDs, and 150 total yards. If u just watch his highlights from this past week it’s crazy. Felt like he could’ve housed a run at any given time. Account for the fact he played the Chargers D and it’s a no-brainer. Look at this: pic.twitter.com/Ns6syNPoVS

— JD5_4_MVP (@Dean__1007) October 6, 2025
Who should be the @pepsi Zero Sugar Rookie of the Week for Week 5?

Vote now: https://t.co/aSx1vIATxP pic.twitter.com/wHe4zyTBmr

— NFL (@NFL) October 7, 2025
The Commanders now have the best rushing attack in football — 156 yards a game.

Bill leads the league at 6.6 a carry.
That's how you take Command 🫡 #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/hSNRkKIIh8

— Wizskins (@Itswizskins) October 7, 2025
Bill Croskey-Merritt is shining. Not only compared to rookies, but to all RBs.#RaiseHail https://t.co/muM7bG2TvV pic.twitter.com/4mgcA9uwH7

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) October 8, 2025
#Commanders RB Jacory (Bill) Croskey-Merritt has signed an “exclusive” deal with Nike, per his agency @paa_football.

A tremendous rookie season gets even better. Repped by agents Wyatt Mumfrey and Alex Styrt. pic.twitter.com/59muxPu71h

— Arye Pulli (@AryePulliNFL) October 7, 2025
“BILL” Croskey-Merritt with the GIGANTIC! East West Shine Bowl Offensive MVP Award.

How did this kid fall to the 7th round??
pic.twitter.com/o0GiXDcjPo

— MadHatter LJ 🎩🐷 (@MadHatter_LJ) October 8, 2025
Jayden Daniels is 3-0 in ‘homecoming’ games

at Cardinals (ASU): 26/30, 233 pass yards, 47 rush yards, 2 total TD (42-14 W)

at Saints (LSU): 25/31, 226 pass yards, 66 rush yards, 2 TD (20-19 W)

at Chargers (hometown): 15/26, 231 pass yards, 39 rush yards, 1 TD (27-10 W)

🎥pic.twitter.com/ZVu4ddDMlX

— Ethan Cadeaux (@Ethan_Cadeaux) October 7, 2025
GREAT effort and hustle from Johnny Newton vs. the Chargers.

More on him and the Commanders this week on my film breakdown show tomorrow on Commanders YouTube. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/tSgOWklkFV

— Logan Paulsen (@LoganPaulsenNFL) October 7, 2025
.@Commanders @chargers @Johnny5Newton was one of many defensive standouts in an impressive win Effort & Production. what more can you ask for. #BaldysBreakdowns pic.twitter.com/jlrwb7WtgZ

— Brian Baldinger (@BaldyNFL) October 7, 2025
Dorance Armstrong is number 2 in the NFL in sacks! Hope he keeps balling! #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/bpif8spGRh

— Emmanuel Chokuba (@MannyChokuba) October 6, 2025
Big shoutout to Dorance Armstrong this season

He’s got…

13 solo tackles
5 sacks
5 assists
15 stops
12 QB hurries
77.9 PFF grade
77.0 run defense grade

All in five games. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/U5fn0bjhKv

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) October 7, 2025
Commanders’ run defense has looked much more improved so far compared to last year — big reason is Javon Kinlaw.

He’s a beast in the middle. A lot of people had opinions on that signing but it’s looking good right now.

— Jordan Asri (@wshingtontoday) October 7, 2025
Deebo Samuel this season through five weeks:

• 30 receptions
• 300 rec yds
• 3 rec TDs
• 7 carries
• 46 rush yds
• 1 rush TD
• 6 kickoff attempts
• 221 kickoff yds

Not bad for giving up only a fifth-round draft pick. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/HSsmJ3k642

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) October 7, 2025
Just as i suspected: Jayden was impressed with Luke McCaffreys 2-for-1 block on that run by Bill pic.twitter.com/ZeEBi9qHve

— PFT Commenter (@PFTCommenter) October 8, 2025
.@Commanders @chargers went WEST and whipped the Bolts at their own game….up front in the trenches and the ROOK….Dollar Bill is the real deal. #BaldysBreakdowns pic.twitter.com/mDWj0mG4ZW

— Brian Baldinger (@BaldyNFL) October 7, 2025
America's Game of the Week is lighting up screens everywhere! 🤩🏈 pic.twitter.com/rMGDZU4mhu

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX) October 7, 2025
#BoltUp star rookie RB Omarion Hampton was placed on IR after sustaining a L ankle injury against #RaiseHail , let’s break this down pic.twitter.com/JxQrOpj8Ov

— MEDspiration (@MEDspirationNFP) October 7, 2025
The issue for Washington with regard to tie-breakers is two losses to NFC teams (Packers; Falcons) while beating both AFC opponents (Chargers; Raiders).

Commanders need to get wins against the Bears and Cowboys in the next two weeks to improve tie-breaking position.#RaiseHail https://t.co/zoGXlPEFLN

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) October 7, 2025

Points per game allowed by every #NFL team through Week 5. pic.twitter.com/zKQz1fDohD

— Tyler Webb (@tylermwebb) October 7, 2025
There have already been 42 field goals attempted of 55+ yards this season. 28 have been made.

Almost as impressively, 23 different kickers have already been asked to try a kick from 55 yards or further. pic.twitter.com/MqwbiEkL8m

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) October 8, 2025

The Browns just released this week’s unofficial depth chart, which lists Shedeur Sanders as Dillon Gabriel’s backup in the aftermath of trading Joe Flacco pic.twitter.com/b7gD6Rb2th

— Daniel Oyefusi (@DanielOyefusi) October 7, 2025
After acquiring Joe Flacco, the #Bengals have cut Brett Rypien and Mike White https://t.co/HJZQkt7Bij

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) October 7, 2025
Of the 37 qualified NFL QBs, 6 currently have an F grade in PFSN’s QB Impact metric…

The Bengals now have two of them, Joe Flacco and Jake Browning. 🥴 pic.twitter.com/JecprbvYDc

— PFSN (@PFSN365) October 7, 2025
Jaxson Dart was a full participant today and told reporters he’s playing on Thursday. https://t.co/cSfeTJyNfR

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) October 7, 2025
Odell Beckham Jr. says he will serve a six-game PED suspension. https://t.co/2fVf1aSBA9

— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) October 7, 2025
The #Saints have a deal in place with CB Michael Davis. After not landing anywhere after his Commanders contract expired, Davis received interest from the Saints and #Lions https://t.co/xJQzy5i51Z

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) October 7, 2025
Michael Badgley has signed with the Indianapolis Colts..

He's a good kicker #PMSLive pic.twitter.com/OnqTASAubl

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) October 7, 2025
Chargers Signing WR Jalen Reagorhttps://t.co/JYN6wjf1Vv

— NFLTradeRumors.co (@nfltrade_rumors) October 7, 2025
Sources: Cardinals are fining HC Jonathan Gannon $100,000 for his sideline altercation with RB Emari Demercado, who dropped the football before crossing the goal line Sunday on what would’ve been a 72-yard touchdown run. There will be no further discipline for Gannon. pic.twitter.com/C1LVstrbdl

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) October 7, 2025
The #Titans have released former first-round WR Treylon Burks off IR, the team announced. @RapSheet reported yesterday Burks has received medical clearance. He’ll get a fresh start elsewhere soon. pic.twitter.com/pRPGsMPcqN

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) October 7, 2025
One of the most ridiculous Titans stories I’ve ever heard: Marcus Mariota and Ben Jones calling offensive plays for Terry Robiskie in 2017

Fans were right!! pic.twitter.com/C48yNt95qR

— Buck Reising (@BuckReising) October 6, 2025
So per @JarrettBell – The @NFLPA is looking into this situation on Jonathan Gannon. You can Not make negative physical contact in any way with your player. A suspension is worthy. As we've been discussing on @team980 https://t.co/7sIJIMZihW via @usatoday

— Chris Russell AKA the 🐓🐓! (@Russellmania621) October 7, 2025
If it seems like I was pre-occupied this morning, there is a good explanation for it.

In a brief five minute ceremony, Julie and I were married this morning. She wore a Titans t-shirt and I wore a Burgundy and Gold t-shirt. It took nearly 67 years, but I'm off the market.…

— Ken Johannesen (@BurgundyBurner) October 7, 2025
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Jayden Daniels: Hail Mary, Luke McCaffrey, and first home Monday Night Football game

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Jayden Daniels spoke to the media after today’s practice. He’s preparing for his first home Monday Night Football game, and is looking forward to a “packed out” crowd to get that primetime, home-field advantage. Washington hosted the Chicago Bears last season, and that game ended with a Hail Mary that Jayden Daniels isn’t interested in talking about. “That Hail Mary ain’t gonna help us with the game on Monday, so what’s the point?” He’s also not interested in comparison’s with last year’s No. 1 overall pick, and this week’s opposing QB, Caleb Williams. “He got drafted #1, I got drafted #2, nothing we can do to change that.”

Daniels was asked about WRs Deebo Samuel, Noah Brown, and Luke McCaffrey. Terry McLaurin and Brown’s absence due to injury has allowed him to get more reps with the other wide receivers. He connected with Deebo in training camp, and has worked on his timing with 2nd-year WR Luke McCaffrey and rookie Jaylin Lane. Daniels praised the work that McCaffrey has put in since his rookie year. He’s a former QB, which Jayden said helps him see the field like he does.

Jayden was asked about rookie RB Jacory Croskey-Merritt aka Bill, and when he knew he had the potential to be special. He said you could see it with his cuts in training camp, but you’re not facing a lot of live tackling. In the preseason you could really tell that he had “something to him” and he’s happy for his early success.

LIVE: QB Jayden Daniels speaks to the media after practice https://t.co/GTwxsRhENR

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 8, 2025

Hail Mary TD vs Bears last season:​

Jayden Daniels not interested in talking about the Hail Mary – “last year is last year” pic.twitter.com/k47JDRdN4Y

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 8, 2025
Jayden Daniels on the Hail Mary: "I don't know; I don't want to talk about it…. I'll leave it to last year… speaks for itself."

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 8, 2025
Daniels: “That Hail Mary ain’t gonna help us with the game on Monday, so what’s the point?” https://t.co/yIQfM85zj7

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) October 8, 2025

Luke McCaffrey’s growth from last season:​

Jayden Daniels talked about the improvements he's seen from WR Luke McCaffrey in Year 2. pic.twitter.com/nUPkQzhIjN

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 8, 2025
Jayden Daniels asked about WR Luke McCaffrey: "He sees it through the eyes of a QB." "He puts in the work" pic.twitter.com/8yR5Wgcu8b

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 8, 2025
Daniels likes McCaffrey’s growth as a receiver. “He puts in the work.”

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) October 8, 2025

Bill:​

Jayden Daniels on when he noticed Bill's potential to be special pic.twitter.com/YElWiE9AZS

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 8, 2025

Home Monday Night Football game/crowd:​

Jayden Daniels is looking forward to a "packed out" crowd and "everybody's out there in the black" for his first home Monday Night Football game pic.twitter.com/TfqKmApwyU

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 8, 2025

Comparisons to Caleb Williams, other QBs in his draft class:​

Jayden Daniels was asked about the other QBs in his draft class, including No. 1 overall Caleb Williams, who he faces again on Monday Night Football. pic.twitter.com/sJVw2ovr2e

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 8, 2025


Bill​

Monday Night Football:​

Bill in primetime!

It's happening on Monday night against the Bears.

I spoke with Commanders rookie RB Bill Croskey-Merritt about his MNF debut.

Bill told me, "this is stuff we dreamed of since we were little. I'm definitely excited. I'm ready to go out there and do my job." pic.twitter.com/AmSuR3ZxMU

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 8, 2025

Tom Brady:​

"I think I was a little starstruck"

Bill talked about his postgame interview with the 🐐and what's to come after his monster performance in LA.

"it’s just the beginning like I’m definitely not satisfied right now" #Commanders @wusa9 https://t.co/8F6R8d1BxV pic.twitter.com/CY893tNET6

— John Doran (@JohnDoranTV) October 8, 2025

Sam Cosmi

Return vs Cowboys?:​

Sam Cosmi. Will he play on Monday night?

I asked him.

⬇️⬇️ pic.twitter.com/tcgbdwFRS2

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 8, 2025
Sam Cosmi says if he doesn’t return this week he will vs Dallas

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 8, 2025

Bobby Wagner

Improving communication and tackling:​

Should be a fun matchup on MNF.

That Washington defense facing that Bears offense.

Commanders LB Bobby Wagner told me, "we just got to do a better job of communicating. We want to improve our tackling…we got to start faster. Stop shooting ourselves in the foot early in game." pic.twitter.com/rqSUDe0HTl

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 8, 2025

Von Miller

Caleb Williams:​

Von Miller says he’s a fan of Caleb Williams – “he’s a special quarterback” pic.twitter.com/fQ02sNoxTh

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 8, 2025

Javon Kinlaw

Monday Night Football:​

Commanders fans,

Here is your favorite weekly interview with Javon Kinlaw.

On this MNF game, the big fella told me, "first, it's at night. For two, we got a chance to stack another W and that's always the main goal. Playing consistent, not on this roller coaster." pic.twitter.com/Ca7G3RhYSl

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 8, 2025

Trey Amos​

Takeaways:​

I caught up with Trey Amos after today's practice.

The takeaways are starting to come for the Washington defense.

The Commanders rookie CB, "it makes us want the ball more and continue helping the offense get better field position. Just trying to help the team every which way." pic.twitter.com/vquNkFg723

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 8, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/381323/ja...day-night-football-game-washington-commanders
 
No surprise: RB Bill Croskey-Merritt has been named the Pepsi Zero Sugar NFL Rookie of Week 5!

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UPDATE:​

BILL!@JacoryMerritt15 has been named the @pepsi Zero Sugar Rookie of the Week. pic.twitter.com/YcTBvUTy02

— NFL (@NFL) September 11, 2025

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:​


This week, Commanders running back Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt has been nominated for the Pepsi Zero NFL Rookie of the Week award for his outstanding play in the team’s Week 5 victory over the LA Chargers to move back above .500 and within a game of the division lead.

This is a great chance for Commanders fans to spread the love and show appreciation for the rookie 7th round draft pick who has been a sensation and fan favorite throughout OTAs, minicamp, training camp, preseason, and the first quarter of the regular season.



To cast your vote for Bill this week, CLICK HERE.

By the way, unlike political elections, you are not limited in the number of times you can vote, so feel free to press that “Vote Again” button repeatedly.



temp-ROW-wk-5.jpg

Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt has had an exciting career for as short as it’s been. He, in fact, won this very Rookie of the Week award for his performance in his first NFL game against the Giants. In fact, that Week 1 performance against the Giants was historic.

Jacory Croskey-Merritt is the first player in NFL history drafts outside the top 200 picks with 75+ rush yards and a TD in their debut

— Michael F. Florio (@MichaelFFlorio) September 8, 2025

In the subsequent three games, Bill went on to add to his resume through consistent hard and effective running, and entered this week’s game against the Chargers with the league’s 2nd-highest yards per carry average. Following the Chargers game, he’s in first place. Not bad for a rookie!

It's Bill's world and we're just living in it 🌎#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/2cL2lOQLZU

— NFL GameDay (@NFLGameDay) October 6, 2025
Jacory Croskey-Merritt doesn't just lead the NFL in yards per carry. He also leads the NFL in some deeper-cut analytical areas as well.

He's the league's top RB in rushing yards over expected per carry (+2.2) and rushing success rate (60.5%) as well. pic.twitter.com/gN9rJaFe50

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) October 7, 2025

But he remained part of a running back by committee attack that limited his overall output to modest numbers.

That changed this week when he got 14 of the team’s 20 running back carries, and was targeted twice in the passing game. Bill turned those 14 carries into 111 yards and 2 touchdowns, adding 39 yards with his two pass receptions.

Bill’s 150 yards from scrimmage and the pair of touchdowns bring his season totals to:

  • 43 carries
  • 283 rushing yards
  • 6.6 yards per carry
  • 54 receiving yards
  • 10.8 yards per reception
  • 4 touchdowns

Against the Chargers, five of Bill’s 14 total runs were ‘explosives’ of 10 yards or more, with the longest being a 27-yard scamper.

🔟 of the best rookie performances from Sunday’s action 💥 pic.twitter.com/nh6DPGF3zb

— The 33rd Team (@The33rdTeamFB) October 6, 2025

Other awards and nominations for Week 5​


Bill has been nominated for the FedEx Ground Player of the Week for his accomplishments in LA.

Immediately after the game, he was awarded Tom Brady’s “Let’s F***ing GO” honor.

WHOLESOME: #Commanders rookie running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt was #NFL legends Tom Brady ‘LFG Player of the Game’ this week.

Really cool back and forth between Croskey-Merritt and Brady.

An awesome moment for a 7th round rookie running back.

🥹

pic.twitter.com/bGvAlp72Rh

— MLFootball (@_MLFootball) October 6, 2025

Here’s what it looked like on game day:​

Jacory Croskey-Merritt AKA "Bill" 16 TOUCHES, 150 YDS, 2 TDs, 7.9 YPC vs LAC Today, Week 5. https://t.co/G2bWb7uYAo pic.twitter.com/XPayJcnfdw

— Football Performances (@NFLPerformances) October 5, 2025
Jacory Croskey-Merritt is HIM!

He NEEDS to be the lead back moving forward 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/s86saVAm1q

— Matt FF Dynasty 🏈 (@MattFFDynasty) October 6, 2025
Jacory Croskey-Merritt through 5 weeks among RBs with 30+ rushes…

65.1% success rate (1st)
58.1% of runs gain 5+ yards (1st)
20.9% gain 10+ yards (2nd)
39.5% result in 1D/TD (1st)
4.4 yards after contact per rush (2nd)
51.2% of runs have been vs 8+ in the box (6th)

— Rich Hribar (@LordReebs) October 6, 2025
Huge praise from Daniel Jeramiah on Bill Croskey-Merritt via @MoveTheSticks Pod:

“He’s got a legit shot to be the Rookie Of The Year… in this offense, with the weapons they have, the QB they have, and the OL that’s upgraded, he’s gonna have an absolute monster year.”

— Eric Sully (@CommandersRealm) September 9, 2025


To cast your vote for Bill Merritt this week, CLICK HERE.

By the way, unlike political elections, you are not limited in the number of times you can vote, so feel free to press that “Vote Again” button repeatedly.





Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/general/3...een-named-the-pepsi-zero-nfl-rookie-of-week-5
 
Thursday Night Football: Philadelphia Eagles @ New York Giants

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Week 6 of the 2025 season kicks off with an NFC East battle between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New York Giants. The Eagles undefeated season ended last week with a loss to the Denver Broncos. Their offense has been disjointed, and disgruntled, but they were still winning until Bo Nix came to town. The Giants made the QB switch from Russell Wilson to first-round rookie Jaxson Dart two weeks ago, and that helped them win their first game. They came back to reality last week when the Saints got their first win, and Dart looked like a rookie. The Eagles are big favorites on the road, and a lot of things will have to go wrong for them to drop this one to the lowly Giants.

Matchup: Philadelphia Eagles (4-1) vs New York Giants (1-4)

Date/Time: Thursday, October 9th | 8:20 p.m. ET

Location: MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, NJ

TELEVISION: NBC

Mike Tirico (play-by-play)

Cris Collinsworth (game analyst)

Melissa Stark (sideline reporter)

RADIO: Sirius XM NFL

Philadelphia: Sirius 88, XM/SXM 226, Internet 825

New York: Sirius 83, XM/SXM 225, Internet 823

National: 88

Live Streaming: Peacock, NFL+, fuboTV

Odds: Philadelphia -7.5, 40.5 O/U

Eagles: -126

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/381796/thursday-night-football-philadelphia-eagles-new-york-giants
 
Washington Commanders vs Chicago Bears Week 6: Five Questions with Windy City Gridiron

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It’s week 6 of the NFL season, and the 3-2 Washington Commanders will be facing the 2-2 Chicago Bears at home in Northwest Stadium in Landover, MD this Monday at 8:15 pm EDT. After losing their first two games of the season against the Vikings and Lions, the Bears have found a bit of a groove winning their next two games against the Cowboys and Raiders before going into a week 5 bye.

On offense, the Bears are coached by offensive HC Ben Johnson, former OC of the Lions. Johnson’s background is primarily in the West Coast Offense, having worked under Adam Gase, Darrell Bevell, and Joe Philbin (a Mike McCarthy disciple), all of whom run variations of a West Coast Offense. At the same time, Johnson has added many of his own creative twists and seemingly borrowed a lot of the Shanahan outside-zone run concepts to develop a truly unique and multi-faceted offense that is difficult to predict. The Bears completely re-made the interior of their offensive line this past offseason, trading for All Pro LG Joe Thuney and Pro Bowl RG Jonah Jackson, as well as signing C Drew Dalman in FA. Bears WR and 2024 1st-round pick Rome Odunze is on pace for a 1,200 yard season based on his first four games, a major rebound from his disappointing rookie season.

On defense, the Bears are coached by DC Dennis Allen, former DC and HC of the Saints. Allen typically runs an aggressive 4-3 base defense utilizing heavy man coverage and a high rate of big nickel (starting 3 safeties, creating more of a 4-2-5 package on most downs). It’s actually a defense somewhat similar to what Washington’s coaches seem to want to run. Chicago has been without two of their top DBs due to injury: top CB Jaylon Johnson and nickelback Kyler Gordon, though Gordon will be making his return this week. Despite these problems, Chicago has managed the 5th-best pass defense in terms of yards allowed. However, Chicago has proven much leakier in run defense, with the 9th-worst run defense in terms of yards allowed. It should be noted that Kyler Gordon’s return could prove a major bolster to Chicago’s run defense given that he is a capable run-stopping nickel.

I asked Bill Zimmerman of Windy City Gridiron five questions to better understand the state of the Bears and what to look for in this game.



1) What do you think of Caleb Williams in his 2nd year of NFL play, and what has the new coaching staff done for him? On a scale of 1-10, how certain are you that he’s a franchise guy?

The growth of Caleb Williams this year has been really positive. He certainly didn’t light the world on fire as a rookie, but he had two head coaches and three offensive coordinators, not exactly the most stable environment for success. Even with all that, Williams still kept his turnovers way down and still threw for 3,500 yards and 20 touchdowns. His advanced stats weren’t good, but that’s where Ben Johnson comes in.

Williams has shown steady growth throughout the season. He was fantastic against Dallas and led a game-winning drive against Las Vegas. He and Johnson are definitely getting on the same page, and Johnson has gotten him operating much better in structure and, most importantly, Caleb is holding onto the ball a lot less; he’s getting it out quicker, and the offense is running at a much better rate.

Bears_Caleb.png

To answer your question about being the franchise guy. I am at a 10 out of 10 that Williams can be a top-half QB in the league, but I wouldn’t consider that a franchise guy. To be a franchise guy, I think you need to consistently be a top 10 QB in the league. I do think Williams gets there, but I can’t give that a 10 out of 10. I would put that confidence at a 7 or an 8, and that’s because I truly believe Ben Johnson is the right guy for the job, and he will get Caleb Williams where he needs to be and maximize his potential.



2) What do you think of Ben Johnson as a head coach so far, and what are his strengths and weaknesses?

Bears fans are elated with Ben Johnson so far. His passing scheme has been fantastic, and we’ve seen legitimate growth from Caleb Williams. The run scheme hasn’t looked as sharp, but the run blocking doesn’t look terrible; this may just be a D’Andre Swift problem. The Bears’ running back room is not stellar, as their RB2 is 7th-round rookie Kyle Monangai. The other pleasant surprise is that plenty of people in January said that Ben Johnson wasn’t a leader of men; he was just a math nerd who was a great offensive coordinator. They couldn’t be more wrong. Johnson has rallied the locker room, is changing the culture, and is a borderline psycho (which I say as a compliment). He is an intense guy and has great attention to detail.

At this point, his biggest weakness is inexperience. He’s made a couple of mistakes, but he’s been accountable about them in his press conferences. He’s going to make more mistakes as he gets comfortable on the sidelines on Sunday, but so far, the reviews have been great.



3) The Bears are coming off an early week 5 bye, which is typically when coaches review tape and make changes in scheme or player usage. What changes do you think the Bears need to implement after their bye?

The big thing the Bears are going to do is make a massive change at left tackle. Braxton Jones has been the team’s starting left tackle the past three seasons, but he broke his ankle in December and hasn’t looked himself recovering from the injury and in this new blocking scheme. The Bears hoped that second-round pick Ozzy Trapilo would be able to move from right tackle to left tackle, but he seems far more comfortable on the right side, and the Bears are no longer working him on the left side. 2024 3rd round pick Kiran Amegadjie, who is a natural left tackle, has been a debacle and isn’t in consideration to start. That leaves 2nd year UDFA Theo Benedet. Benedet has been a wonderful surprise as a UDFA, but it certainly doesn’t give you a ton of confidence. Benedet looked really good in the preseason against second and third stringers, but hasn’t been quite as strong against the 1s during the regular season. His length isn’t great, and if the Commanders are going to have success on defense, they will probably attack Benedet.



4) Who is one Bears player on offense and one player on defense that Washington fans probably don’t know much about, but should?

On defense, the guy is DT Gervon Dexter. He was a second-round pick a couple of years ago and has steadily improved since his rookie season. He still is inconsistent in stopping the run, but he has had a lot of success this year rushing the passer. He’s arguably been their best pass rusher, including Montez Sweat, and Dexter does it from the inside. He might make things uncomfortable for Jayden Daniels a couple of times on Monday.

Bears_Dexter.png

On offense, most of the Bears’ players are pretty well known. The most under-the-radar guy that is involved in the offense is former Commander Olamide Zaccheaus. He’s been getting a pretty big chunk of the offensive snaps, and Williams is comfortable looking for him under the defense. Also, something to look for, Zaccheaus took some snaps at running back during Wednesday’s Bears’ practice.



5) How should Washington go about gameplanning this matchup on both sides of the ball?

For the Commanders’ offense, it should be interesting because the secondary has improved over the last couple of weeks, and Kyler Gordon is making his season debut this year. Their coverage should be better, but their pass rush has been pretty much nonexistent so far. The Bears also haven’t been doing a great job of stopping the run, either. If I were Kingsbury, I would establish the run, which they should be able to do, and then use play action to open up the passing game, and Daniels should have plenty of time to throw.

On defense, the Bears have not been running the ball well, but the passing offense has been steadily improving. When Caleb Williams has time, his statistics are through the roof, but when he’s under pressure, his success drops significantly. I think the Commanders need to make sure they can get pressure on Williams. If they can do it with four, they will have success. If they need to blitz, it will be interesting to see if Williams and Ben Johnson can hurt the Commanders from the vacating spots.



A companion article to this with my answers to Bill’s questions will be linked as soon as it’s available.

Thanks again to Bill Zimmerman for taking time out of his day to answer our questions about the Bears.



Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/questions...eek-6-five-questions-with-windy-city-gridiron
 
Commanders vs Bears Friday Injury Report: RB depth could be tested on Monday night

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The Washington Commanders didn’t practice today, so they released an estimated injury report. They had practice the last two days, and will have another practice tomorrow to get ready for the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football.

Terry McLaurin hasn’t practiced since suffering a quad injury in Week 3. He would need to practice tomorrow to have a shot at playing this week. McLaurin’s trending towards missing his third game of the season.

Chris Rodriguez Jr is on the injury report with a new calf injury. He didn’t practice this week, and could miss his first game of the season. If he can’t go on Monday night, Washington could elevate either Chase Edmonds or Donovan Edwards from the practice squad to back up Bill Crosskey-Merritt and Jeremy McNichols.

Noah Brown missed the last three games due to a groin injury he suffered in Week 2. Brown practiced with the team the last two days, and is listed as limited in today’s estimated report.

Deebo Samuel Sr was listed with a vet rest day yesterday, but he’s also been dealing with a heel injury since last week.

John Bates missed two games with a groin injury, but returned last week. He’s now listed with a shoulder injury, and was limited yesterday.

Jayden Daniels is still wearing the brace he wore in his return to the field last week. He suffered a knee sprain in Week to and had to miss two games. He’s been a fill participant in practice and will be on the field Monday night. Sam Cosmi’s 21-day practice window was opened last week. He was excited to get a padded practice in this week, and is looking forward to his return to the field. He still has two more weeks to get activated, and could get another week to practice before going into a game.

Friday injury report#CHIvsWAS | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/keCakAOfIh

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 10, 2025
Bears Friday injury report

Darnell Wright (elbow) was upgraded to LIMITED. Kyle Monangai (thigh) and Jaquan Brisker (quad) went from DNP to FULL. Jonah Jackson (rib) upgraded to FULL.

Still no Grady Jarrett (knee). Did not spot Cairo Santos at practice but he is listed as a… pic.twitter.com/8IVtgwpLis

— Courtney Cronin (@CourtneyRCronin) October 10, 2025

DNP​


WR Terry McLaurin – Suffered a quad injury vs the Raiders, hasn’t practiced since

RB Chris Rodriguez – Still not practicing with a new calf injury

Limited


WR Noah Brown – Had dealt with a knee injury since June, Missed last three games with groin injury

WR Deebo Samuel – Had a new heel injury last week, vet rest day yesterday

Full


TE John Bates – Missed two games with a groin injury, now listed with a shoulder injury.

RT Sam Cosmi – 21-day practice window opened last week, returning from ACL surgery

QB Jayden Daniels – Returned last week after missing two games due to knee sprain

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/382081/co...port-rb-depth-could-be-tested-on-monday-night
 
Daily Slop – 11 October 25 – Deebo Samuel has been the linchpin of Commanders offense thru 5 games

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Commanders links

Articles​


ESPN

How Deebo Samuel became an instant hit in Washington


During a timeout before the Washington Commanders’ final play from scrimmage Sunday, quarterback Jayden Daniels and receiver Deebo Samuel were seen on camera passing the time by rehearsing their touchdown dance.

About a minute later, they were performing their skit in the end zone after Daniels connected with Samuel on a fourth-and-goal from the 8-yard line in Washington’s 27-10 win over the Los Angeles Chargers.

That moment highlights the strong connection Samuel and Daniels have developed. And it’s one reason why Samuel is off to such a great start in his first season with Washington following an offseason trade from San Francisco.

Samuel, who was exchanged for a 2025 fifth-round pick, leads the Commanders (3-2) with 30 receptions, 300 yards and three touchdowns heading into Monday night’s game against the Chicago Bears (8:15 p.m. ET, ABC). No other Commander has more than 14 receptions or 149 yards. He has also rushed seven times for 46 yards.

Samuel is also averaging 36.8 yards on six kick returns, though with McLaurin and Brown sidelined he hasn’t returned kicks since Week 3.

It helps that Samuel is versatile, just as he was in San Francisco for six seasons. There are some differences, though: In Washington, he has run more routes out of the slot (72) than outside (35). With the 49ers last year, he ran 118 routes out of the slot and 223 outside. He’s also averaging just 1.4 carries per game, which would be the fewest since his rookie season of 2019.

Samuel has a target rate of 30.2% this season — the highest of his career and fifth among receivers who have run at least 100 routes. Last year it was 21.3%; his career best was 26.3% in 2021 when he also finished with a career-best 1,405 yards receiving.

Some of this stems from missing McLaurin and Brown, as well as third-down back Austin Ekeler, who is out for the year with a torn right Achilles. But even in the three games with McLaurin, Samuel’s target rate was 28% — and he led the team with 16 receptions.

Samuel is on pace for 1,176 yards from scrimmage, which would be the second most in his career. That is, if he plays a full season, which he has yet to do in his career. Still, he’s averaging 16 more yards per game than in 2024.



The Athletic (paywall)

The next McCaffrey brother is ‘just a football player,’ and he’s starting to turn heads


He arrived at Rice in 2021 and again competed for the starting job at quarterback. After nine games and three starts, he decided another change was needed — but not the school.

He asked to switch to receiver.

“For me, I really saw a difference in Luke when he came back,” said former Rice receivers coach Mike Kershaw, who is now the GM at Kennesaw State. “I think when he came in initially to take over the program to kind of be the so-called savior of the program by being the quarterback, he just had a lot of pressure on his shoulders. Not to say that it weighed him down, but once he decided to make that change, he could just go be a football player, and I think that’s what he loved doing.”

But McCaffrey’s minimal experience at the position posed a new challenge to Kershaw. Hence, they started from the beginning, spending hours poring over game film of roughly 15 receivers who had a similar body size to McCaffrey. Cooper Kupp was the lead comp.

“There are a lot of great, athletic quarterbacks who can’t catch,” Kershaw said. “So you’re like, ‘Well, I hope he can catch.’ Obviously, that wasn’t a problem. … He probably burned out the JUGS machines at Rice several times because he was using them so much.”

Luke had about six months to morph into a receiver when most wideouts his age had years of experience learning the nuances of the position. His primary advantage, however, was his family.

“My dad helped a lot, my brother Max helped a lot,” Luke McCaffrey said. “I think they’ve been super instrumental. I mean, that’s the biggest blessing that I never earned.”

McCaffrey finished the 2022 season at Rice with 723 receiving yards and six touchdowns off a team-high 58 catches. The following season, he was voted first-team all American Athletic Conference after recording 992 receiving yards and a conference-best 13 touchdowns. He was also a team captain.



Washington Post (paywall)

With Jayden Daniels, the extraordinary seems fairly likely


Daniels was out for two weeks, during which his Washington Commanders went 1-1. He returned Sunday against the Los Angeles Chargers, and an entire league remembered: “Oh, yeah. He can do that.”

Daniels’s return to the lineup reassured his team and his town that he is nothing short of an elixir. He will take the field Monday night against the Chicago Bears, the team he beat a year ago this month with the ultimate he-can-do-that play, a walk-off Hail Mary at Northwest Stadium.

Daniels hasn’t played his best football of 2025. Not close. He hasn’t thrown for even 250 yards in a game. He hasn’t run for a touchdown. His start against the Chargers mimicked that of his team. He looked rusty.

“One of the statistics that we look at that directly correlates with winning is explosive plays,” second-year wide receiver Luke McCaffrey said. “When you have someone like him, it’s always a threat and it’s always a possibility. And not just that: It happens quite a bit.”

On any given play, Daniels could do just about anything. That’s as a passer. It’s also as a runner. They’re related.

That ability has changed Washington’s offense from one of the least explosive in the league to one of the most. In the four-season Ron Rivera era that immediately preceded Daniels’s arrival, Washington managed 10 plays of 50 or more yards in 67 regular season games. During that 2020-23 span, only New England had fewer, according to Pro Football Reference. In the 22 regular season games of Daniels’s career — which include the two September games started by Mariota — Washington has 11 plays of at least 50 yards, or one every other game. Only Baltimore has more, with 12.



Commanders.com

Smoot: Dorance Armstrong ‘gets after the passer relentlessly’


“Nobody gives him [Armstrong] respect,” Smoot said. “He gets after the passer relentlessly all the time. At one point, we’re going to have to give this man his props.”

Leading the team in sacks this season, Armstrong made an impact in the Week 5 matchup against the Los Angeles Chargers with two sacks on quarterback Justin Herbert. He’s in his eighth season in the league and second with Washington.

Armstrong currently ranks in the top five in the NFL for sacks. He’s tied for second among names like New York Giants linebacker Brian Burns and New Orleans Saints defensive end Josh Sweat.

“This guy, he’s a top-tier pass rusher. He’s starting to be that,” Smoot said.



Heavy.com

John Bates : Logs full practice Friday


Bates (shoulder) was a full participant in Friday’s practice. Bates likely tweaked his shoulder during the Commanders’ Week 5 win over the Chargers. He opened the week as a limited practice participant Thursday, but his ability to participate without restrictions Friday indicates that he should be good to go against the Bears on Monday. Bates played 41 snaps (30 on offense, 11 on special teams) and caught his first pass of the regular season for nine yards in Week 5.



Riggo’s Rag

David Raih is one of the many under-the-radar assistants helping the Commanders


Raih’s name probably wasn’t familiar to many fans. However, he was very well known to Washington’s new offensive coordinator, Kliff Kingsbury.

He was one of the assistants that Kingsbury tried to hire in Arizona when he became the Cardinals’ head coach in 2019. Raih served as their wide receivers’ coach for two years before accepting the offensive coordinator job at Vanderbilt.

Tight end coaches typically have backgrounds either in coaching offensive lines or wide receivers. Despite his youth, Raih offered both.

The former college quarterback had served as both a line coach and a receivers coach with the Green Bay Packers for five years before joining Kingsbury in Arizona. Raih even held the title of offensive perimeter coach for one season – something I have never seen before.

Raih had left the Cardinals by the time Zach Ertz arrived, but during his first season in Washington, he helped the veteran have his best year since 2021. That may have as much to do with the Pro Bowler’s ability to stay healthy as anything his coach provided. With a veteran, it’s always unclear how much a position coach really helps.

But in his second season with the Commanders, Raih’s work with the younger tight ends is beginning to pay dividends. It isn’t yet apparent on the stat sheet, but anyone watching the games can see the improvement.

John Bates had looked like a promising young blocking tight end with the ability to make a few catches during his rookie season. But his progress since 2021 had stalled. It was not even certain that he would retain a roster spot under the new regime.

This season, Bates has returned to form. Despite an injury that has cost him a couple of games, he once again looks like a dominant blocker who can still serve as the occasional safety valve for Jayden Daniels. He is now looking like the closest thing Washington has seen to franchise legend Donnie Warren in several decades.



Commanders Wire

Bears to get star defender back for Monday night vs. Commanders


Chicago’s defense could get some major help against the Commanders and Daniels. Cornerback Kyler Gordon said he will be back in the lineup on Monday night. Gordon, the 25-year-old fourth-year cornerback, is considered one of the NFL’s better slot/nickel corners. He has yet to play this season, as he suffered a hamstring injury in training camp.

Johnson explained what he’ll bring to the Bears’ defense.

“Shoot, hopefully it allows us to unlock a few things on defense,” Johnson said, via Alyssa Barbieri of Bears Wire. “He’s one of the bigger playmakers. I’ve got a lot of experience being on the opposing sideline from him and [have] a ton of respect of how he can impact a game. There’s only a handful of nickels in this league that you really have to account for, both as a coverage player but also as a guy who likes to be nosy in the run game, and could be part of the solution for us here in shoring up our run game as well.”



A to Z Sports

Thinking out loud: The Commanders could trade Brandon Coleman


I didn’t expect to be saying this after the first few weeks of the 2025 season, but there’s a strong possibility Brandon Coleman won’t be a Commander by the time the trade deadline approaches.

He made the move from left tackle to left guard going into his second season, and it didn’t go well at all. In fact, he was benched after just two games, and he’s been a healthy scratch since. Chris Paul took over and has been flawless. There’s no reason for Coleman to just be inactive when the Commanders have options.

Coleman was a third-round pick in 2024, and some teams might be willing to take a swing on him. He has the versatility teams need, with the ability to play tackle and guard. Coleman’s rookie contract is also enticing for a team and leaves no financial burden on the Commanders.

I already mentioned how Paul is the starter at left guard now, but the Commanders are getting right guard Sam Cosmi back as soon as this week or next, which makes the trade even easier. The Commanders would still have Andrew Wylie and Nick Allegretti as depth pieces, and Coleman would continue to be inactive.

Coleman is healthy and under a rookie contract until 2028, and teams need premium positions like offensive linemen. We’ve already seen Cam Robinson be traded from the Houston Texans to the Cleveland Browns after he was inactive. The Commanders should reach out to the Cincinnati Bengals, who are already buyers, the Tennessee Titans, and the Houston Texans as teams that need help on the offensive line.

The Commanders could get a late fifth-round pick for Coleman, or add their seventh-round pick for better compensation. They have a first, a third, a fifth, two sixths, and a seventh-rounder. The trade for Laremy Tunsil took the second and fourth round picks for 2026, but they also got the extra sixth from the Brian Robinson Jr. trade.

Commanders general manager Adam Peters is known to make moves before the trade deadline, like he did last season when he traded for corner Marshon Lattimore, and it shouldn’t be surprising if he is active once again.


Podcasts & videos

Javon Kinlaw on Commanders’ Defense & Bears on Primetime + Mark Moseley’s MVP SZN 🏈🔥 | Next Man Up​


Commanders’ Bill Croskey-Merritt “The journey has been good” | The Player’s Club | NFL​


COMMANDERS SQUAD | MNF vs. Bears BREAKDOWN | Jayden Daniels & Washington Ready for Primetime​


The latest ‘Bleav in Commanders’ episode @BenStandig joins me to breakdown the first 5 weeks and look ahead to Monday Night’s matchup v Bears! 🏈 #RaiseHail @BleavNetwork @FanDuel https://t.co/bZmgeoE1Li

— Scott Jackson (@JacksonSports) October 11, 2025

NFC East links


The Athletic (paywall)

Eagles face harsh reality after humiliating loss to the Giants


“We’re just not very good right now,” right tackle Lane Johnson said.

Johnson seemed to be discussing the running game in particular, although it could be said about the entire team. The Eagles are a legitimate Super Bowl contender brimming with unrealized potential, yet there’s nothing they’re especially good at after six weeks. Their offense is inconsistent. Their defense displayed vulnerabilities. And even those intangible areas that coach Nick Sirianni emphasizes — his motto is “tough, detailed, together” — are falling short of the standard.

They were not the tougher team. They were not the more detailed team.

Time will tell whether they’re together.

“I don’t think we played our brand of football or coached our brand of football today,” Sirianni said.



Philadelphia Inquirer (subscription)

Lane Johnson calls out predictability of Eagles offense. Can Nick Sirianni and Kevin Patullo


Something needs to change with the Eagles on their mini-bye, even if the solution may not come specifically on the ground.

Asked what’s wrong with the run game, Johnson’s initial answer was brief: “A lot.” But he uncharacteristically made a public suggestion for Sirianni and offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo.

“I don’t know if we’re predictable, but it seems a lot harder than what it needs to be,” he said late Thursday night. “Maybe moving forward have a little bit more variety, hitting the perimeter some and doing a little bit more of that.”

Johnson used predictable, or some variant of the word, three other times during his postgame interview at MetLife Stadium. It’s a term often used for offenses that have gotten obvious. Johnson was around when it became the buzz word for the ineffectiveness of former coach Chip Kelly’s scheme.



Big Blue View

NFL investigating the Giants’ application of the concussion protocol


The NFL has initiated a review of how the Giants applied the NFL’s concussion protocol with respect to quarterback Jaxson Dart.

In particular, the review seems to stem from Giants’ head coach Brian Daboll and RB Cam Skattebo ducking into the blue medical tent while Dart was undergoing the protocol.

As Dan Duggan of The Athletic explained at the time, the local media was taken on a tour of the facilities and explicitly told that coaches aren’t allowed in the tent.

The NFL and Players’ Association have made a concerted effort to cut teams out of the process of clearing players of brain injuries. The temptation is there to put players back into games if an injury isn’t readily apparent, and that can quickly lead to life-altering injuries. By leaning on independent professionals, the NFL and NFLPA hope to remove the temptation to put players at undue risk.

Giants joint owner John Mara issued a statement Friday afternoon, saying that the team will cooperate fully with the investigation and review.

Mentioned that the NFL and Giants provided a pregame health and safety tour to provide an inside look at the medical protocols inside the stadium. Took a quick video inside the blue tent. Quite the timing to capture this message from NFL chief medical officer Dr. Allen Sills: pic.twitter.com/J9YE6ncGwz

— Dan Duggan (@DDuggan21) October 10, 2025


Big Blue View

‘Things I think’: Jaxson Dart, Cam Skattebo might be leading Giants out of the wilderness


In rookies Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo the Giants might — finally — have the players not only with the talent but with the attitude, energy and will to pull them up from the depths and set them back on a better course.

That was certainly the case on Thursday night when the Giants, 1-4 and coming off a loss to the previously winless New Orleans Saints, defeated the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles. Check that. The Giants not only beat the Eagles, they demoralized them in a shocking 34-17 beatdown.

Players who have been through some of the recent losing seasons with the Giants, and the public flogging from the media and the fan base that has come with it, recognize what the dynamic rookie duo bring to the table.

“Their energy is contagious – Skatt and Dart, they’re playing fearless. And that’s something I really respect,” edge defender Brian Burns, who has played the best football of any Giants defender this season, said after Thursday’s game. “I hope that as they get older, they age well in this league and they’re going to make more calculated decisions. But right now? Hey man, balls to the wall.”

Cor’Dale Flott, who made one of the biggest plays of the game with a fourth-quarter interception that he returned 69 yards to set up the Giants’ final touchdown, also used the word “contagious” when talking about Dart and Skattebo.



Blogging the Boys

Cowboys near bottom of league in 4th down go percentage


It’s kind of interesting tidbit on Schotty’s tendencies. I’m not sure if it’s a firm philosophy on his part or just showing some nerves as a first time HC. Given how well the offense is performing, and how many struggles the defense has had, I’m a little surprised. Sample size is still small, so I will probably check back on this stat later in the year.

You can see a full breakdown of each 4th down call at rbsdm

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Upcoming opponent


Windy City Gridiron

Fan Confidence in the Bears drops with the Commanders game looming


After Chicago Bears fans checked in with a season high 88% confidence in the direction of the franchise last week, this week saw a slight dip from our fans to 81%. The Bears are coming off a bye, so there’s no loss that cut into the results. They’re also relatively healthier off the bye week, so there should be no angst over injuries.

So why the dip?

My guess is it’s a preemptive negative vote from fans expecting a poor Monday night performance against the Washington Commanders.

Which is certainly possible. The Commanders are favored in the game, they are coming off of an NFC Championship game appearance last season, and they are a win away from having a share of the NFC East lead.

On paper, this will be a tough matchup for the Bears because what Chicago is really bad at (stopping the run) plays into the strength of what Washington does really well (run the ball).

The revenge factor has been played up quite a bit because of the Hail Mary and how that game torpedoed the Bears’ 2024 season, but there’s another revenge factor that may come into play.

The Commanders ended the 2024 season of the Detroit Lions with a 45 to 31 win in the Divisional round, which has to sting for Bears head coach Ben Johnson, who was Detroit’s offensive coordinator, as well as current Chicago assistants and former Lion staffers J.T. Barrett and Antwaan Randle El.


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

NFL Week 6 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips

Cowboys at Panthers​


1 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 43.5/100
ESPN BET: DAL -3.5 (49.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Cowboys: Panthers RB Rico Dowdle said his former team is going to have to “buckle up” on Sunday. It’s a comment that the Cowboys are very well aware of. Although the Dallas run defense has improved, it ranks 23rd in the league and is allowing 4.4 yards per carry. “It’s going to be a battle in the trenches for sure,” DT Kenny Clark said. “Trenches going to win this game.” — Todd Archer

What we’re hearing on the Panthers: Buckle up. That has been the mantra since Dowdle said the Cowboys better be ready for a physical game after rushing for 206 yards against Miami. The same could be true for Carolina, as it faces the league’s No. 1 offense with an improving defense that still struggles to pressure the quarterback and cover tight ends. — David Newton

Stat to know: The Cowboys are the only team in the NFL this season scoring and allowing 30.0 points per game. They are the first team to do that through five games of the season since the 2021 Chiefs. — ESPN Research

Bears at Commanders​


8:15 p.m. ET | ABC | Matchup rating: 60.6/100
ESPN BET: WSH -4.5 (50.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Bears: Lost in the chaos of Washington beating Chicago on a tipped Hail Mary pass last season was QB Caleb Williams leading what would’ve been a game-winning drive in the two-minute drill. That’s an area where Williams shines the most, and the last impression of him and the offense before the bye was him marching his team down the field in Las Vegas to take the lead back. “[Williams] lives in that world,” WR DJ Moore said. “If he could get in that world and play off-schedule and two-minute mode, it’s tough. We’re just playing off of him and going out there and playing backyard football with him.” — Courtney Cronin

What we’re hearing on the Commanders: The pregame storyline will involve QB Jayden Daniels’ Hail Mary pass that beat Chicago last season, but it’ll be Washington’s run game that could make the difference this time. Washington leads the NFL with 156.4 yards rushing per game and 5.9 yards per carry. Meanwhile, Chicago ranks 31st in rushing yards allowed per game (164.5) and last in average per carry (6.1). The Commanders use a varied rush attack, but rookie Jacory Croskey-Merritt has started to emerge with a career-best 111 yards in Week 5. “He just has to keep working to become a complete back, but since day one when [he] touches the ball, he does good things with it,” offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury said. — John Keim

Stat to know: This is the first starting QB matchup in “Monday Night Football” history between the top two picks from the same draft class. (Williams was taken No. 1 by the Bears, and Daniels was taken No. 2 by the Commanders.) — ESPN Research

Injuries: Bears | Commanders

Betting nugget: The Bears are 8-15 ATS in their past 23 games as a road underdog. This is their 31st consecutive road game as an underdog, the longest active streak in the NFL. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Commanders 23, Bears 14
Moody’s pick: Commanders 31, Bears 28
Walder’s pick: Bears 40, Commanders 28
FPI prediction: WSH, 65.3% (by an average of 5.9 points)


aBit o’Twitter

Under the lights at @NWStadium pic.twitter.com/XoYHeWOPgA

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 11, 2025
what Mikey said 🗣️ pic.twitter.com/rwuxgmcGOo

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 10, 2025
Laremy Tunsil is known for his pass protection but he's helped out a lot in the run game too #RaiseHail https://t.co/TX2uX8gX5B pic.twitter.com/s93CtVQJ8D

— Mason Kinnahan (@Mason_Kinnahan) October 8, 2025

"I don't recall a player or a coach going into the blue tent other than to be checked..

The league takes these issues very seriously & we've seen some fines handed out this week..

There's gonna be some sort of discipline that comes from this" ~ @AdamSchefter #PMSLive https://t.co/93FqDDIKBz pic.twitter.com/HlXmxCHWzY

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) October 10, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...e-linchpin-of-commanders-offense-thru-5-games
 
Commanders vs Bears Saturday Injury Report: Two players questionable

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The Washington Commanders held their final, full practice of the week today. They will be hosting the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football, and they won’t know the status of two players until gameday morning. WRs Terry McLaurin(quad) and Noah Brown(groin) were ruled out earlier today by head coach Dan Quinn who said they just weren’t there yet. McLaurin is missing his third straight game, while Brown has now missed the last four.

Deebo Samuel didn’t practice all week due to a vet rest day and a heel injury he’s been dealing with since last week. Quinn said they would take it to Monday to determine whether he’s good to go for their primetime game. Samuel missed two practices and still played last week. Quinn said he didn’t think this would be a season-long issue, but they needed to manage it for now.

Chris Rodriguez Jr hasn’t practiced all week due to a new calf injury. If he can’t go on Monday night, Washington could elevate either Chase Edmonds or Donovan Edwards from the practice squad to back up Bill Croskey-Merritt and Jeremy McNichols.

Jayden Daniels(knee) and John Bates(shoulder) both returned from injuries last week. They’re still on the injury report, but don’t have an injury designation. Daniels will continue to wear the knee brace that he started wearing when he returned to practice last week.

Sam Cosmi’s 21-day practice window was opened last week. He is listed as doubtful, and he hasn’t been activated from the Reserve/PUP list yet. He will have two more weeks to return to play, or he’d have to go to injured reserve, ending his season. Cosmi is expected back soon, but he has talked about getting his football conditioning back up to game levels.

#CHIvsWAS game status

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 11, 2025
Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/CBSvYAm1Xh

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) October 11, 2025

OUT​


WR Terry McLaurin – Suffered a quad injury vs the Raiders, hasn’t practiced since. Misses third straight game

WR Noah Brown – Had dealt with a knee injury since June, Missing fourth straight game with groin injury

Doubtful


RT Sam Cosmi – 21-day practice window opened last week, returning from ACL surgery

Questionable


RB Chris Rodriguez – Didn’t practice all week with a new calf injury

WR Deebo Samuel – Had a new heel injury last week, didn’t practice today, and will be evaluated on Monday

No Injury Designation


TE John Bates – Full practice the last two days, listed with a new shoulder injury.

QB Jayden Daniels – Returned last week after missing two games due to knee sprain

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/382117/commanders-vs-bears-saturday-injury-report-two-players-questionable
 
Bears at Commanders: Previewing tonight’s Monday Night Football game

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Before we get to talking about tonight’s game, let’s get two of the ESPN ‘storylines’ behind us​


No. 1 – Last year’s Hail Mary play

The key words in that sub-titles are “last year’s”. As Jayden Daniels so eloquently put it earlier this week, “That Hail Mary isn’t going to help us win a game on Monday.“

Okay. That’s behind us.

No. 2 – Caleb vs Jayden

The Bears fans are the only ones who are filled with angst here because it was the Bears who had the choice to make. Bears fans, of course, fear that their team chose the wrong guy and so, twist themselves around in a constant battle to reassure themselves that Caleb was, in fact the right choice.

Washington fans are perfectly happy with the outcome of the draft, and, for the most part, are happy to cheer for Caleb’s success whenever he isn’t playing against the Commanders. He is, after all, a hometown kid from Gonzaga high school in DC.

There’s room in the NFL for each to achieve his potential as professional players.

No. 3 – The Ben Johnson affair last year

This is less of an issue because, unlike the Hail Mary and the draft, this simply didn’t matter.

National and most local beat reporters got out over their skis during the coaching search last year by declaring that (a) Ben Johnson was the top candidate, and (b) Washington was the most attractive head coaching opening. A lot of people drew a conclusion and reported it daily as if it were a fact — that is, that BJ was at the top of Adam Peters’ list in the coaching search.

I’m here to suggest that no one making those reports had a clue about what Adam Peters was thinking.

Remember all those reports about the Laremy Tunsil trade in the days and weeks before it happened? No, I don’t either because the front office didn’t leak a hint that it was in the works. It was a complete surprise — so much so that a lot of people later commented that they didn’t realize that Tunsil was even available for trade.

Remember how natural it seemed when Brandon Coleman was benched recently in favor of Chris Paul? Yeah — again, me neither. Despite all the discussion of a re-worked offensive line at the time, everyone was talking about the right guard position, and no one had a clue that there would be a change at the left guard position until it was announced by the team.

The same pattern held true with the Terry McLaurin contract situation this offseason. LOTS of “reporting”, including one national ‘insider’ who stated that the two sides were far apart — making that final report about an hour before the new contract agreement was announced by Terry’s agent. They were all guessing.

Speaking of McLaurin, he’s about to miss his 3rd game due to injury, and I don’t think anyone outside the team even knows what his injury is, aside from the fact that it’s somewhere between his belly button and his ankle. I’ve heard speculation about a hip flexor and sports hernia, while the team’s official report says it’s a quad. No one in the Commanders organization is rushing to clarify the situation.

Other injury situations seem equally opaque. You wouldn’t want to be betting money on dates for returns from injury for Commanders players, including players like Sam Cosmi and Noah Brown, based on reporting from local and national sports writers.

So, if nobody knows about trades, starting lineup changes and injuries to players, why would I believe that any of them had any insight into the coaching search being carried out by Adam Peters last year?

The only guy that had any credibility with me last year was ESPN’s John Keim, and that’s because he’s an old-school journalist who only reports based on multiple reliable sources or firsthand knowledge. Keim said daily, weekly, and consistently during the head coaching search in 2024 that he didn’t personally know who would get hired, but that his understanding was that Ben Johnson was not necessarily at the top of the list, and that the two names he (Keim) kept hearing were Raheem Morris and Dan Quinn.

Personally, I think Ben Johnson “withdrew” from a process when the Commanders and Seahawks were the only teams left because the Seahawks had already decided on Mike Macdonald and Johnson knew he wouldn’t get the job with Washington. He attempted a gutless and transparent move aimed at saving face in the classic “you can’t fire me because I quit” message when he notified the Commanders brass at the last minute that he would not meet with them for a final interview because he had decided to remain with the Lions. I’ll never be able to prove the truth of my belief because Adam Peters is never gonna say another word about that hiring process. We might as well nickname Washington’s GM ‘the Sphinx’ based on the amount of information that leaks from his organization. — which is how it should be.

Okay, with the ESPN narratives out of the way, let’s focus on Bears & Commanders football


Series history

These two teams have a long history of competition that dates back to a 7-7 tie in the burgundy & gold’s first year of existence as an NFL team, back when they were known as the Boston Braves.

The Washington / Chicago rivalry has been played out on the field 54 times (including 7 postseason games), with Washington winning 28 games and the Chicago Bears winning 25 games. They have also, as mentioned, tied one time.

  • 2025 is the 4th consecutive year the two teams have played, with Washington winning 2 out of 3 from ‘22 to ‘24.
  • Washington leads 9-2 since 2004; the burgundy & gold have a 9-4 record in this century.
  • The Redskins closed out the 20th century by winning 6 straight, and 8 of 9 between ‘87 & ‘99.
  • The Redskins and Bears played each other in 4 league championship games, splitting 2-2
  • They also played each other in 3 NFC playoff games, with Washington winning 2 out of 3.

Both teams competed regularly for championships in the late 30s and 40s. Both were consistent playoff teams in the 80s and early 90s. Both have had sporadic success this century (Chicago more so than Washington) amidst a lot of losing seasons, with neither team winning a playoff game between 2011 and 2023.

Washington has enjoyed more immediate success since the 2024 draft, but both fan bases feel a sense of optimism that comes with new coaching staffs and exciting young quarterbacks.

Week 5​


Washington went on the road to Los Angeles and came home with a victory that not many NFL fans predicted, 27-10 over the Chargers. It was not a perfect game by the Commanders, but it was the first time in the 2025 season when the offense and defense looked, for significant chunks of the game, like the team that won 2 playoff games against two division-winning teams in January.

The Bears enjoyed a BYE week, but they went into it riding a 2-game winning streak (after opening the season 0-2).

Common opponents​


The Commanders will have to play, at some point in the 2025 season, every team that the Bears played in the first four weeks of the season, but the only one that both the Bears and Commanders have already faced is the Las Vegas Raiders.

The Bears beat the Raiders in Week 4, just before going on their bye week. Chicago closed out that 25-24 win with a blocked 54-yard field goal attempt with about 30 seconds left in the game.

Washington had beaten the Raiders a week earlier, with Marcus Mariota at quarterback, by a score of 41-24.

Running the ball​


Based on a few basic metrics, it seems like an obvious game plan would be for the Commanders to plan on running the ball a lot on Monday night.

The Commanders lead the NFL in rushing yards per game and yards per attempt. Unlike last season, the rushing success is not due to Jayden Daniels’ scrambling; rather, it is based on strong rushing performances by all of the Commanders’ running backs, but especially Bill Croskey-Merritt, who, so far, has averaged 6.6 yards per carry on 43 carries.

The Bears defense ranks 31st in rushing yards allowed per game and dead-last in yards per attempt allowed to opposing runners, at 6.1 ypc. Chicago will be without DL Grady Jarrett on Monday night, which won’t make it any easier for the Bears defense to improve on this season-long trend.

When the Bears are on offense, they rank 24th in rushing yards. The Commanders defense is ranked 12th against the run.

The passing game​


On offense, Chicago ranks 13th in passing yards per game; Washington ranks 25th. Caleb Williams averages 7.1 yards per attempt; Jayden Daniels averages 6.8.

Defensively, the Bears give up 215 yards per game while the Commanders have given up 235 yards per game.

The Commanders will be without their top receiver, Terry McLaurin, for the 3rd straight game. Likewise, Noah Brown, another top receiver for Washington, will miss his 4th consecutive game. Their absences will only magnify the difficulty of producing more in the passing game than they have to date against a statistically better-than-average Bears pass defense.

The numbers that seem to favor the Bears in the passing game extend to sack numbers (Jayden, 8 sacks in 3 games; Caleb, 7 sacks in 4 games), but not interceptions (Jaydan, 0 INTs; Caleb, 2 INTs in 4 games).

Turnovers​


Chicago is succeeding at doing what Joe Whitt and Dan Quinn say they are always striving for: forcing turnovers. The Bears defense has forced 9 turnovers in 4 games (2.25 per game avg), and the Bears have a +5 margin on the year.

The Commanders defense has forced just 3 turnovers on the season, and the offense has given away 3 turnovers (2 charged to Marcus Mariota in his two starts).

Washington can make it much harder for the Bears to win tonight by taking care of the ball on offense — one of Jayden Daniels’ strengths — and forcing one or more turnovers when playing defense. That will require breaking the trends established in the first 4 or 5 games of the season.

Standings​

temp-standings-nfce-and-nfcn-1.jpg

Washington

With a win, the Commanders will achieve the same 4-2 overall record as the Eagles, but would take at least temporary possession of 1st place by virtue of being undefeated in division play, while Philly lost to the Giants on Sunday.

A Washington loss would leave the Commanders in second place in the division at 3-3.

With the Cowboys up next on Washington’s schedule in Week 7, a loss against the Bears wouldn’t be catastrophic by any means, but a win tonight sets up a situation where the Commanders could remain in first place in the East and open a 2.5-game lead over the Cowboys in the division by putting together back-to-back victories vs Chicago and Dallas.

Chicago

A loss on Monday night would drive the Bears further into last place in the NFC North and mire them at the bottom of the NFC with the 5 other teams with 2 or fewer wins, leaving them with a big hole to dig out of, but a surprising opportunity with the Saints, Ravens, and Bengals on tap in Weeks 7 to 9. What appeared to be a brutal pair of games back in August now looks like part of a very winnable set of games for Chicago.

A win tonight, then, would keep the Bears competitive in the NFC North at 3-2, just a half-game behind the Packers, with a 3- or 4-game stretch in front of them that provides the opportunity to build some mid-season momentum before resuming divisional play against the Vikings in Week 11.

The point spread​


Fan Duel has the Commanders as 5.5-point favorites. The Bears look vulnerable in the run game (on both offense and defense) and the Bears’ opponents in their two wins (Cowboys and Raiders) sport a combined record of 4-7-1, and a combined point differential of -56 for the season.

I thought Bears fans might see this as a bit of slap in the face to a team on a 2-game win streak coming off a bye week, but I listened to a Bears beat writer on a podcast this week who said that he thought Chicago’s ceiling was likely to be 8 wins — maybe 9 if they got lucky with Lamar Jackson’s injury in two weeks. He scoffed at the idea that the Bears would be a playoff team this year.

In the end, the Commanders are a year further along on their rebuil…er recalibration, and they are at home and coming off a good win against the Chargers. Most importantly, Jayden Daniels is healthy and has a career record of 16-7 as an NFL starting QB. There’s a lot for Commanders fans to be confident about heading into tonight’s game.



Join our partner FanDuel for all your betting needs



Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/previews/...reviewing-tonights-monday-night-football-game
 
Game Recap: Turnovers doom Commanders in home loss to Chicago Bears

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Series history


These two teams have a long history of competition that dates back to a 7-7 tie in the burgundy & gold’s first year of existence as an NFL team, back when they were known as the Boston Braves.

The Washington / Chicago rivalry has been played out on the field 54 times (including 7 postseason games), with Washington winning 28 games and the Chicago Bears winning 25 games. They have also, as mentioned, tied one time.

  • 2025 is the 4th consecutive year the two teams have played, with Washington winning 2 out of 3 from ‘22 to ‘24.
  • Washington leads 9-2 since 2004; the burgundy & gold have a 9-4 in this century.
  • The Redskins closed out the 20th century by winning 6 straight, and 8 of 9 between ‘87 & ‘99.
  • The Redskins and Bears played each other in 4 league championship games, splitting 2-2
  • They also played each other in 3 NFC playoff games, with Washington winning 2 out of 3.

Both teams competed regularly for championships in the late 30s and 40s. Both were consistent playoff teams in the 80s and early 90s. Both have had sporadic success this century (Chicago more so than Washington) amidst a lot of losing seasons, with neither team winning a playoff game between 2011 and 2023.

Washington has enjoyed more immediate success since the 2024 draft, but both fan bases feel a sense of optimism that comes with new coaching staffs and exciting young quarterbacks.

Week 5​


Washington went on the road to Los Angeles and came home with a victory that not many NFL fans predicted, 27-10 over the Chargers. It was not a perfect game by the Commanders, but it was the first time in the 2025 season when the offense and defense looked. for significant chunks of the game, like the team that won 2 playoff games against two division winning teams in January.

The Bears enjoyed a BYE week, but they went into it riding a 2-game winning streak (after opening the season 0-2).

Common opponents​


The Commanders will have to play, at some point in the 2025 season, every team that the Bears played in the first four weeks of the season, but the only one that both the Bears and Commanders have already faced is the Las Vegas Raiders.

The Bears beat the Raiders in Week 4, just before going on their bye week. Chicago closed out that 25-24 win with a blocked 54-yard field goal attempt with about 30 seconds left in the game.

Washington had beaten the Raiders a week earlier, with Marcus Mariota at quarterback, by a score of 41-24.

Running the ball​


Based on a few basic metrics, it seems like an obvious game plan would be for the Commanders to plan on running the ball a lot on Monday night.

The Commanders lead the NFL in rushing yards per game and yards per attempt. Unlike last season, the rushing success is not due to Jayden Daniels’ scrambling; rather, it is based on strong rushing performances by all of the Commanders’ running backs, but especially Bill Croskey-Merritt, who, so far, has averaged 6.6 yards per carry on 43 carries.

The Bears defense ranks 31st in rushing yards allowed per game and dead-last in yards per attempt allowed to opposing runners, at 6.1 ypc. Chicago will be without DL Grady Jarrett on Monday night, which won’t’ make it any easier for the Bears defense to improve on this season-long trend.

When the Bears are on offense, they rank 24th in rushing yards. The Commanders defense is ranked 12th against the run.

The passing game​


On offense, Chicago ranks 13th in passing yards per game; Washington ranks 25th. Caleb Williams averages 7.1 yards per attempt; Jayden Daniels averages 6.8.

Defensively, the Bears give up 215 yards per game while the Commanders have given up 235 yards per game.

The Commanders will be without their top receiver, Terry McLaurin, for the 3rd straight game. Likewise, Noah Brown, another top receiver for Washington, will miss is 4th consecutive game. Their absences will only magnify the difficulty of producing more in the passing game than they have to date against a statistically better-than-average Bears pass defense.

The numbers that seem to favor the Bears in the passing game extend to sack numbers (Jayden, 8 sacks in 3 games; Caleb, 7 sacks in 4 games), but not interceptions (Jaydan, 0 INTs; Caleb, 2 INTs in 4 games).

Turnovers​


Chicago is succeeding at doing what Joe Whitt and Dan Quinn say they are always striving for: forcing turnovers. The Bears defense has forced 9 turnovers in 4 games (2.25 per game avg), and the Bears have a +5 margin on the year.

The Commanders defense has forced just 3 turnovers on the season, and the offense has given away 3 turnovers (2 charged to Marcus Mariota in his two starts).

Washington can make it much harder for the Bears to win tonight by taking care of the ball on offense — one of Jayden Daniels’ strengths — and forcing one or more turnovers when playing defense. That will require breaking the trends established in the first 4 or 5 games of the season.

Standings​

temp-standings-nfce-and-nfcn.jpg

Washington

With a win, the Commanders will achieve the same 4-2 overall record as the Eagles, but would take at least temporary possession of 1st place by virtue of being undefeated in division play, while Philly lost to the Giants on Sunday.

A Washington loss would leave the Commanders in second place in the division at 3-3.

With the Cowboys up next on Washington’s schedule in Week 7, a loss against the Bear wouldn’t be catastrophic by any means, but a win tonight sets up a situation where the Commanders could remain in first place in the East and open a 2.5-game lead over the Cowboys in the division by putting together back-to-back victories vs Chicago and Dallas.

Chicago

A loss on Monday night would drive the Bears further into last place in the NFC North and mire them at the bottom of the NFC with the 5 other teams with 2 or fewer wins, leaving them with a big hole to dig out of, but a surprising opportunity with the Saints, Ravens, and Bengals on tap in Weeks 7 to 9. What appeared to be a brutal pair of games back in August now looks like part of a very winnable set of games for Chicago.

A win tonight, then, would keep the Bears competitive in the NFC North at 3-2, just a half-game behind the Packers, with a 3- or 4-game stretch in front of them that provide the opportunity to build some mid-season momentum before resuming divisional play against the Vikings in Week 11.

The point spread​


Fan Duel has the Commanders as 5.5- point favorites. The Bears look vulnerable in the run game (on both offense and defense) and the Bears’ opponents in their two wins (Cowboys and Raiders) sport a combined record of 4-7-1, and a combined point differential of -56 for the season.

I thought Bears fans might see this as a bit of slap in the face to a team on a 2-game win streak coming off a bye week, but I listened to a Bears beat writer on a podcast this week who said that he thought Chicago’s ceiling was likely to be 8 wins — maybe 9 if they got lucky with Lamar Jackson’s injury in two weeks. He scoffed at the idea that the Bears would be a playoff team this year.

In the end, the Commanders are a year further along on their rebuil…er recalibration, and the Commanders are at home and coming off a good win against the Chargers. Most importantly, Jayden Daniels is healthy and has a career record of 16-7 as an NFL starting QB. There’s a lot for Commanders fans to be confident about heading into tonight’s game.

First Quarter​


The Bears got the ball first on a cool, rainy night, starting at their own 30-yard line with a massive din of noise from the raucous home crowd making the stadium deafening.

Former Commander, Olamide Zaccheaus got the initial first-down of the game on a 10-yard reception. D’andre Swift got the second one, putting the ball across midfield on a 7-yard pass. The third came on a 12-yard run by Swift. Two plays later, the Bears faced their fist 3rd-down of the game, 3rd & 4 just inside the WAS 30-yard line. An incomplete pass brought the Bears kicker on the field for a 47-yard attempt, which he drilled to give the Bears the early lead, 3-0. The 9-play drive covered 41 yards in 4:19, and looked quite efficient until the failed 1st down.

Jayden Daniels and the Commanders offense started their initial offensive drive at the 35-yard line following a touchback and wearing their ’battle black’ uniforms.

A false start penalty didn’t matter when Chris Moore (he didn’t drop this one!) pulled in a 13-yard reception for Washington’s initial first-down of the game. A roughing the passer called against Montez Sweat, who hit Jayden’s facemask, gave the Commanders another fresh set of downs. Two plays later, the Commanders faced 3rd & 3 at their own 32-yard line. Deebo Samuel broke a tackle on a screen pass to reach the line to gain — a tough run by Deebo.

Heck of a second effort from Deebo Samuel to convert this 1st down.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/NMQgUCa90v

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

On an end-zone shot by Jayden from the 21-yard line, Daniels suffered his first interception of the 2025 season!

PICK! Jaquan Brisker takes it away for the Bears 🐻

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/xmhedIj0Z1

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

The Bears look like the better team so far. With 6 minutes left in the opening quarter, Caleb Williams and his offense will start their 2nd offensive drive at their 34-yard line with a chance to pad their lead on the scoreboard.

The Bears went deep to Odunze on 1st down, a ball played well by Quan Martin.

Great coverage here from Quan Martin to prevent the long completion.

How many times have we seen this burn Washington? Not here at least.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/txMeOg0gqB

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

DJ Moore got the 1st down on a catch & run on the next play to reach the 47-yard line. Two plays later, Moore caught a pass at Washington’s 31-yard line. The Bears offense is ticking along.

An offensive pass interference penalty pushed the ball back to the 43-yard line, 2nd & 20, with the crowd roaring. On 3rd & 20, DJ Moore was tackled 8 yards short of the line to gain, and Jake Moody came out for his second field goal attempt, this one from 48 yards. It was good to make the score 6-0 with 2:27 left in the quarter.

DJ Moore came up limping at the end of this catch. pic.twitter.com/E37fcGVOtq

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Moore went to the medical tent.

It’s been all Bears so far, but thanks to not breaking after bending (twice) a good drive here could give Washington the lead.

Washington’s offense took the field at the 30-yard line following McCaffey’s return. That became the 35-yard line following a defensive penalty.

On the subsequent play, Bill Croskey-Merritt fumbled the ball at the line of scrimmage and the Bears came up with it — the second turnover in two drives! The Bears take over on the WAS 35-yard line. Montez Sweat was credited with the forced fumble; TJ Edwards got the recovery.

The Bears force another turnover!

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/U5bI0uhqWy

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

On 2nd down, D’andre Swift broke off a 12-yard run to set up 1st & goal at the 7-yard line as the quarter came to an end.

Second Quarter​


On 2nd down from the 1-yard line, Caleb Williams ran right on a called QB run and scored the game’s first TD.

Caleb Williams runs it in himself for the TD!

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/ciaJDP9Qz9

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

Following the PAT, the Bears led by 13 points against a Commanders team whose offense has given the ball away twice in two possessions.

The third possession needs to be very different. It begins at the 35-yard line. So far, the Bears have out-gained the Commanders 122 yards to 34 yards. First downs: CHI 8, WAS 4.

Dan Quinn sticks with Bill at running back. He gained 2 yards on 1st down and then was replaced by Jeremy McNichols. On the 2nd down play, Chris Moore got his 2nd catch of the game, this for 11 yards.

A reverse to Jaylin Lane got the ball to the CHI 45-yard line, but a Daniels run lost 3 yards to bring up 3rd & 6 near midfield. A defensive penalty (facemask) on 3rd down gave Washington the ball, 1st & 10, at the 38-yard line.

A Daniels run followed by a McNichols carry earned another 1st down at the 22-yard line. McNichols stayed in the game.

On the next play, Daniels dropped the ball while scrambling, but it bounced right back into his hands; he got back to the line of scrimmage.

Bloody hell my heart skipped a beat here.

Jayden Daniels fumbles but recovers. Looks like a basketball dribble. pic.twitter.com/QFy4GGVIi6

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

On the next play, Jayden Daniels hit Chris Moore for a beautiful TD catch near the sideline on the left side of the end zone for a huge touchdown that they badly needed. Fans who have been calling for Chris Moore’s release for the past couple of weeks were suddenly hailing his fantastic catch!

Jayden Daniels drops a DIME to Chris Moore for the TD 💰

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/gwYbafEY1c

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025
TOUCHDOWN

One knee equals two feet, and Chris Moore hauls in the perfect pass from Jayden Daniels for the 22 yard touchdown.

The #Commanders are on the board! #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/CSD5MxgkSN

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025
Jeremy McNichols getting huge props from the broadcast for his blitz pickup work on the Daniels/Moore TD.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/Vd2EiI3Uax

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

The score stands at 13-7 with 9:28 to play in the half. The scoring drive covered 65 yards in 8 plays with a couple of big defensive penalties helping the cause.

The Bears started the next drive at the 21-yard line following good coverage by Washington’s kickoff coverage team.

On 2nd down, Swift ran for 19 yards through a gigantic hole on the right side. The Bears have run for over 70 yards already.

Two plays later, it was 3rd & 3 at the WAS 44-yard line. Caleb Williams kept it himself to run for the 1st down — Bears now have 76 rush yards; Washington has 30.


Washington is challenging the ruling on the field that this was a catch.

This catch resulted in a 1 yard gain.

Game of inches, folks.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/1Zn4BrPKja

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

(The pass was ruled incomplete)



On 3rd & 10 from the 40-yard line, a toss play to Swift went for 9 yards, and Ben Johnson kept his offense on the field for 4th down in front of a deafening crowd. Caleb dropped back to pass and had great protection, but Frankie Luvu, playing coverage in the middle of the field, got both hands on the pass.

TURNOVER ON DOWNS

Bears go for 4th and 1, and Frankie Luvu tips the pass to force the incompletion.#Commanders ball! pic.twitter.com/uptYDNzibL

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

The incompletion gave the ball to Washington with 5:30 on the clock and 70 yards of green grass between Jayden Daniels and a Commanders lead on the scoreboard.

Bears defender Noah Sewell was injured on the 1st down play, a 7-yard reception by Bill Croskey-Merritt.

Noah Sewell for the Bears just got absolutely crunched by his own team-mate.

Ugly scenes and hope he's okay. pic.twitter.com/bltGnjcVBn

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Sewell walked off the field under his own power and later went to the locker room.

The “Bill! Bill! Bill!” song was audible when he ran for the 1st down on the next play. He added 12 yards with another carry, giving him 30 rushing yards for the game (3.8 per carry so far).

Two runs in a row.
Two first downs in a row.

Croskey-Merritt is heating up…#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/KZU4uVJb5a

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Two plays later, Washington faced 3rd & 8 at the 45-yard line. On 3rd down, Zach Ertz got his first target and first catch of the game at the CHI 35-yard line. Washington is threatening, 1st & 10, as the game reaches the 2-minutes warning.

Jayden Daniels finds Zach Ertz with a bullet for the 1st down on 3rd and 8.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/CRO9iaSLJO

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Following the time out, the Commanders gained 1 yard on 2 passes to bring up 3rd & 9 at the 34-yard line with 80 seconds on the clock. The Bears called time out to try to leave time for a drive if the Commanders score here.

The 3rd consecutive passing play — a checkdown to McNichols — earns just 2 yards.

On 4th & 7, Matt Gay came on the field to attempt a 50-yard field goal, which ‘doinked’ off the left upright. Matt Gay, who had just gotten back in the ‘good books’ with Washington fans, is now on the ‘bad’ list again.

DOINK

Matt Gay is now 3/6 from FGA of 50+ yards in 2025. pic.twitter.com/5mhCEaf1nt

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Trey Amos does a great job to break up a downfield pass on firs down. A short gain on 2nd brings up 3rd & 5 at the 45-yard line. On 3rd down, Caleb broke out of an apparent sack by Quan Martin, scrambles, and then get wholloped by Luvu for a 7-yard sack at the sideline with 24 seconds left. The Commanders will get the ball back.

Frankie Luvu absolutely SMOKED Caleb Williams on this scramble.

Oof.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/wsSwChvASM

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Starting at their own 8-yard line, Daniels takes a knee to end the half with the score Chicago 13 – Washington 7.

Two turnovers and a missed field goal are the story of the first half.

Washington will get the ball to open the 3rd quarter.

Halftime from @NWStadium pic.twitter.com/LMC3IcH9Ta

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 14, 2025

Halftime Stats​

temp-bears-halftime-box.jpg
temp-bears-halftime-stats.jpg

Statistics via ESPN


Third Quarter​


Washington’s offense opens the second half with the ball at the 40-yard line after a good return by Luke McCaffrey trailing by 6 points and (another) chance to take the lead despite the many things that went wrong in the first 30 minutes of play.

Bill was on the field for 1st down – a 9-yard pass to Zach Ertz in the middle of the field. Bill juked the defender out of his socks behind the line on 2nd down to run for 6 yards.

Two plays later, Daniels was under pressure after a play-action fake; he squirted through the defense and ran for 15 yards to the CHI 29-yard line — his longest run of the ‘25 season.

Fifteen yard gain and a 1st down by Jayden Daniels on this run.

He dropped back looking to throw, but no receivers could get separation so he kept it and scrambled.

Just Jayden Things.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/31YwtqLywm

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

On the next play, under pressure in the pocket, Daniels was flagged for intentional grounding to bring up 3rd & 16 at the 35-yard line. On the 3rd down play, Jeremy McNichols dropped a pass in the middle of the field.

Matt Gay came out for a 53-yard field goal attempt, which went right down the middle to cut the Chicago lead to 3 points with about 12 minutes left in the 3rd quarter. Gay is now 4 of 7 attempts from 50+ yards and is tentatively off the sh*t list.

The Bears started their first offensive drive of the second half at the 15-yard line after a penalty against the Bears on the return. This offers an opportunity to Washington’s defense.

The Commanders get pressure on 1st and 2nd down, but defensive penalty gives the Bears a fresh set of downs at the 20-yard line.

Kyle Monangai is in the game at RB for the Bears, but it’s Rome Odunze who gets the big play — 21 yards to the 48-yard line. On 2nd down, Williams has all day to survey the field and hits Luther Burden for a 37-yard gain on a deep crosser downfield. 1st & 10 at Washington’s 15-yard line after a pair of lightning quick strikes by Williams in the passing game.

On 2nd down, Mikey Sainristil looked like he had another interception inside the 5 yard line, but it hit the grass to give the Bears life with a 3rd & 6 play that looked like a touchdown to Odunze — nullified by an illegal formation penalty because the left tackle was too far off the line of scrimmage.

Sainristil came so close to having an interception here.

Caleb Williams threw this RIGHT at him. But Sainristil couldn't haul it in.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/LiGagJBIXS

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

On the subsequent play, Dorance Armstrong got his 6th sack of the season as Caleb Williams held the ball for several seconds looking for an open receiver.

SACK

Dorance Armstrong brings down Williams on 3rd down, and all of a sudden the momentum is swinging…

That's Armstrong's 6th sack of the season.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/aOX8r5TqmW

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Moody came out and restored the 6-point lead with a 41-yard field goal. The drive covered 62 yards in 8 plays, and the Commanders benefited from a somewhat sketchy penalty flag that took a touchdown off the board.

With 8 minutes left in the quarter, the Commanders took the field at the 16-yard line. McCaffrey returned the ball to the 44-yard line, but Magee was flagged for an illegal blindside block that may have affected the return.

Croskey-Merritt is starting to heat up; he gains 8 yards on 1st down and then reaches the line to gain on 2nd down. He now has 52 yards on 12 carries.

Jayden did what Jayden does with a new longest run of the year with an 18-yard scramble on 1st down.

There goes Jayden for 18 yards

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/23w31FZs7j

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

After 2 passes to Deebo, the Commanders faced 3rd & 2 at the CHI 47-yard line. On the 3rd down play, Daniels’ pass went through Chris Moore’s hands at the sideline.

Washington’s offense stayed on the field on 4th down, which turned out to be an easy pitch and catch with Jeremy McNichols for 13 yards on the left sideline.

Daniels to McNichols for the 4th down conversion

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/X1PqTDGOxr

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

As the clock ticked down to 3 minutes, Jayden found Luke McCaffrey standing all by himself near the 10-yard line. Luke simply turned and trotted into the end zone for the go-ahead score. Blown coverage.

JAYDEN TO LUUUUUUKE FOR SIX!

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/aHSlQEsXFM

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

Following the PAT, Commanders held a 17-16 lead. The scoring drive covered 84 yards in 9 plays — including an 18-yard run, a 13-yard pass, and the 28-yard TD to finish the drive.

The Bears start their next drive at the 23-yard line after good coverage by the Commanders. The ball hit the grass on the return, but Chicago retained possession.

D’andre Swift broke off a 14-yard run, and then a screen pass to Monangai went for 25 yards. Just like that, the Bears had 1st & 10 at Washington’s 34-yard line!

Kyle Monangai takes the screen pass 25 yards!

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/bWh9jcmaLa

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

Two plays later, on 3rd & 1 at the 25-yard line, the shotgun snap went through Caleb William’s hands. He regained control quickly, but the Washington pass rush overwhelmed him for a critical loss of 5 yards!

On 3rd and 1, Caleb Williams bobbles the snap and takes a sack for a big loss to end the 3rd quarter. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/AYQSjwcrhn

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Fourth Quarter​


To open the 4th quarter, facing 4th down, the Bears attempted a 48-yard field goal, which was blocked by Daron Payne!!!

BLOCKED! The @Commanders special come up HUGE

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/NprhmhnU6C

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025
BLOCKED

Jake Moody's FGA for Chicago is blocked and the #Commanders takeover with excellent field position!

Credit Kinlaw for the block.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/SXAiC9Vdrz

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

This is the massive play the Commanders needed to have the opportunity to take control of the game in the final stanza.

Washington quickly moves the ball across midfield.

On 2nd & 6, Jaylin Lane broke open downfield, where Jayden Daniels found him for 37 yards to the Chicago 7-yard line — 1st & goal!!

The rookie Jaylin Lane with the sweet double move pic.twitter.com/Uu9T3bl5ls

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

On 2nd down, Daniels threw a laser to the back of the end zone to TE Zach Ertz, who had a quiet week last Sunday, but scores a huge touchdown here.

Daniels. Ertz. SIX.

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/9sswHwAnbC

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

After the PAT, Washington led by 8 points, 24-16 with 11 1/2 minutes remaining in the game. The scoring drive covered 63 yards in 6 plays.

The momentum swing in the 3rd quarter has been huge, but the Bears can tie the score with a big drive. The Commanders defense needs to feed on the energy of the crowd to shut down the Chicago offense again.

The Bears drive starts at their 39-yard line following a penalty against Washington on the kickoff.

Caleb aired out the ball, throwing into double coverage inside the 5-yard line. Easily broken up by Washington’s defenders to force 3rd & 4 at the CHI 45-yard line.

Martin and Savage with the tight coverage here on Rome Odunze.

This pass was never a high percentage throw. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/TqkpiNzXIW

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Following that play, a short pass goes to D’andre Swift, who breaks a Quan Martin tackle and goes 55 yards for a touchdown. Unbelievable!

D'ANDRE SWIFT 55 YARD-TD!

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/r8sJNYKjQU

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

The two-point try failed, and Washington held onto a 24-22 lead with 10 1/2 minutes left in the game.

Chicago unsuccessful on the 2pt conversion attempt.

It's started raining at Landover as well.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/Jvwccrn8Yo

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Washington’s next drive of the game started at the 40-yard line after a good return by Luke McCaffrey.

A pair of Jayden scrambles brings up 3rd & 5 as the clock moves past the 9 min mark. On the 3rd down play, Daniels was hit low on his left leg (the one with the brace) while in the pocket, drawing a roughing flag to extend the drive. That was the 4th 1st-down by penalty for Washington in this game.

Brisker dove at the knees of Jayden Daniels and is flagged for Roughing the Passer. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/1KnxOG6YX0

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

Two plays later, on 3rd & 10 at the 39-yard line, Daniels, under pressure, threw the ball away.

Tress Way came out for his first punt of the game. It was a good one to the 9-yard line.

With about 8 minutes to play, the Bears can re-take the lead with a field goal.

A pre-snap penalty on the Bears turned it into 1st & 14 inside the 5-yard line. Monangai got buried for a 1-yad loss on first down. Zaccheaus did a solid for his old team by dropping a pass in the middle of the field when he was WIDE open to force 3rd & 16 from the 3-yard line.

Former Washington Commander Olamide Zaccheus drops the 2nd down throw.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/aJUlE6AFJ7

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

OZ caught the 3rd down pass, but was stopped 2 yards short of the line to gain.

The drop by Zacchaeaus on 2nd down leads to a punt by the Bears.

Washington ends up with the ball on their own 39-yard line with 6 minutes on the clock and a chance to ice the game.

Washington quickly faces 3rd & 13. On the 3rd down play, McNichols takes a checkdown pass in the middle of the field and bulls his way to a desperately-needed first-down. Great play by No 26 to get 15 yards and keep the drive alive.

McNichols turned the safety net checkdown on 3rd and 13 into a 15 yard gain and the 1st down.

Incredible effort.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/WTiKHzbvwC

— Chad Ryan (@ChadwikoTWW) October 14, 2025

A 8-yard scramble on 2nd down by Jayden brought up 3rd & 1 at the CHI 40-yard line with 2:58 on the clock. A first-down on this play would be huge.

On the 3rd down play, from a heavy formation in the rain, Daniels muffed the handoff to Bill. The ball hit the grass — fumble — and the Bears recovered it for their 3rd defensive takeaway of the game! This is a potential game-losing mistake.

FUMBLE! BEARS BALL!

CHIvsWAS on ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/l6Ps1NW7Kj

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

It’s a 4-down situation for the Bears as the 2-minute warning approaches.

Following the 2-minute timeout, on 3rd & 5 at the CHI 49-yard line, Williams hit a 6-yard pass to move inside the 45-yard line.

The Commanders start calling time outs as they contemplate a likely Chicago score. The Bears want to score a touchdown in the rain because their regular kicker is not playing in this game, and Jake Moody has already had one low kick blocked.

The Bears get another first down at the 31-yard line; things are looking grim. Washington’s defense needs a turnover of its own.

The Commanders use their final time out with 74 seconds remaining in the game.

With a run to the 18-yard line for another 1st down, the Bears let the clock run before taking a time out with 31 seconds on the clock. The Bears need to score to win, so the fat lady hasn’t sung yet, but she is warming up her voice.

Williams kneels down at the 20-yard line; Ben Johnson calls time out with 3 seconds on the clock.

This field goal attempt will determine the game. It will either be a 1-point loss or a 2-point win for Washington.

The 38-yard field goal attempt goes right down the middle.

JAKE MOODY FOR THE WIN! pic.twitter.com/K8GEvd7dwC

— NFL (@NFL) October 14, 2025

Bears win.

With the third turnover, the Commanders snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.

The Commanders fall to 3-3.

Final pic.twitter.com/H6a6jQcvyN

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 14, 2025

Full Game Stats​

temp-bears-final-box.jpg
temp-bears-final-stats.jpg

Statistics via ESPN



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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...doom-commanders-in-home-loss-to-chicago-bears
 
Monday Night Football: Commanders vs Bears 4th Quarter

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The Washington Commanders are hosting the Chicago Bears at Northwest Stadium on Monday Night Football. They are coming into their rematch from last season hurting on offense with WRs Terry McLaurin(groin) and Noah Brown(groin) missing another game. Backup RB Chris Rodriguez Jr(calf) is also doubtful. Jayden Daniels made his return to the field last week, and will be looking to get another win over the Bears. Last season’s matchup ended with a Hail Mary touchdown from Daniels to Brown, but Washington will look to have the game wrapped up before any last-minute heroics are needed.

They’ll look to their rookie sensation RB Bill Croskey-Merritt to control the game again, after his breakout game last week against the Los Angeles Chargers. Washington has the best running game in the league, and they’ll need to lean on that again, along with an improved defense, to hand Chicago another loss.

The Chicago Bears are 2-2 and coming off their bye week. They beat the Cowboys and the Raiders before their bye, but dropped their first two games to their division rivals, the Minnesota Vikings and Detroit Lions. The Bears season unraveled after their loss to Washington, and ended with a 5-12 record and a fired coaching staff. They’re now led by former Detroit Lions OC Ben Johnson, who had famously turned down an interview to be the Commanders head coach while Washington was flying to Detroit to meet with him.

This should be a fun one!

BearsCommandersBlackjpg.jpg

⚫⚫⚫@SeatGeek | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/TuelzDp18c

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 10, 2025

Injury Report

Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/CBSvYAm1Xh

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) October 11, 2025
Commanders vs Bears Saturday Injury Report: Two players questionable https://t.co/xP2jY7wrYM

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 11, 2025


Matchup: Chicago Bears (2-2) @ Washington Commanders (3-2)

Location: Northwest Stadium | Landover, MD

Date/Time: October 13, 2025, 8:15 p.m. ET

TV: ABC

Joe Buck (play-by-play)

Troy Aikman (analyst)

Lisa Salters (sideline)

Let’s watch some football together. ManningCast Mondays are back. pic.twitter.com/gSKwfntlpa

— Omaha Productions (@OmahaProd) September 2, 2025

RADIO: Big 100(iHeart Radio)

Bram Weinstein (play-by-play)

London Fletcher (analyst)

Logan Paulsen (sideline)

Spanish Broadcast

Moisés Linares (play-by-play)

Juan Romero (analyst)

Sirius XM NFL

Chicago: XM/SXM 227, Internet 805

Washington: XM/SXM 228, Internet 831

National: 230, Internet 963

Español: 229. Internet 832

Online Stream: Sling TV, NFL+, fuboTV

FanDuel Odds: Commanders -4.5 , 49.5 O/U

Chicago +176

Washington -210

Prediction: Commanders 24 – Bears 23

Enemy Blog: Windy City Gridiron


Washington Commanders 2025 Schedule


Week 1 – vs New York Giants (Sunday, September 7th, 1 p.m., FOX) W 21-6

Week 2 – @ Green Bay Packers (Thursday, September 11th, 8:15pm, Amazon) L 27-18

Week 3 – vs Las Vegas Raiders, (Sunday, September 21st, 1 p.m., FOX) W 41-24

Week 4 – @ Atlanta Falcons (Sunday, September 28th, 1 p.m., FOX) L 34-27

Week 5 – @ Los Angeles Chargers (Sunday, October 5th, 4:25 p.m., FOX) W 27-10

Week 6 – vs Chicago Bears (October 13th, 8:15 p.m., Monday Night Football double header on ESPN)

Week 7 – @ Dallas Cowboys (Sunday, October 19th, 4:25 p.m.)

Week 8 – @ Kansas City Chiefs (October 27th, 8:15 pm, MNF on ABC/ESPN)

Week 9 – vs Seattle Seahawks (November 2nd, 8:15 p.m., SNF on NBC)

Week 10 – vs Detroit Lions (Sunday, November 9th, 4:25 p.m., FOX)

Week 11 – @ Miami Dolphins (November 16th, Madrid, Spain, 9:30 a.m., NFLN)

Week 12 – BYE WEEK

Week 13 – vs Denver Broncos (November 30th, 8:15 p.m., SNF on NBC)

Week 14 – @ Minnesota Vikings (Sunday, December 7th, 1 p.m. FOX)

Week 15 – @ New York Giants (Sunday, December 14th, 1 p.m., FOX)

Week 16 – vs Philadelphia Eagles (Saturday, December 20th, FOX)

Week 17 – vs Dallas Cowboys (Thursday, December 25th, 1 p.m., Christmas Day, Netflix)

Week 18 – @ Philadelphia Eagles (Date/Time TBD)

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/382244/monday-night-football-commanders-vs-bears-4th-quarter
 
Thinking out loud about the Commanders after 6 weeks of play

imagn-27319840.jpg


I know my place and I usually stay in my lane. I am not a football analyst; I can’t break down film or decipher X’s and O’s. I have no special insights. I’m just a fan with a keyboard with the time and inclination to make sure that there’s content to read and discuss every day. My biggest skills are the ability to copy & paste, the discipline and sobriety needed to stick to a regular schedule, and a more-than-passing acquaintance with English grammar and punctuation.

I have my opinions, but, for the most part, I try to air them in the comments section like everyone else. It seems like a bit of abuse of privilege to fill up an article with thoughts from my head, which are nothing more substantial than the opinions of any other Washington fan.

Normally, when I do write an article about a football topic, as I did last week, talking about special teams, I make a sincere effort to write an article that is evidence-based, and which will inform the reader, even if the ideas I share in the article are not useful. Hopefully, the evidence in the article provides good information regardless of the value of my associated thoughts.

Once or twice a season, however, I give in to the urge to write an opinion article — an editorial, if you will. When I do, I casually toss out the window the idea that I need to include valuable information or evidence and I simply indulge myself in sharing my burgundy-tinted opinions, giving this type of article all the nutritional value of artificial whipped cream. I usually reserve it for the bye week, but I have enough loose thoughts rattling around in my head at the moment that I thought I’d let loose this week.

If you’re not interested in reading my ramblings, I don’t blame you — I’ll see you later in the Daily Slop.

If, against the odds, you still want to read what I’ve written, grab your napkin and spoon and dig into a big bowl of aerated fat & sugar.

The Matt Gay criticism is too much of a ‘knee jerk’ at this point​


Washington’s kicker struggled through a rough training camp and an uncomfortable preseason. After not attempting a field goal against the Giants in Week 1, he had a bad game (1 successful field goal on 3 attempts of 50+ yards) against Green Bay, then missed his first attempt against the Raiders. We were all, rightfully, deeply concerned about the kicker. Trust me, I was right along with you in my criticism of how the position had been handled in the offseason.

Since the miss in the first quarter of the Raiders game, Matt Gay has attempted 10 field goals, making 9 of them. His lone miss bounced off the upright on a 50-yard attempt in the rain on Monday night. His 9 successful kicks comprise 3 from 50+, 4 from 40-49, 1 from 30-39, and 1 from 20-29. He’s a perfect 16 for 16 on PATs this season. He’s also 4 of 7 on attempts of 50+ yards on the season.

In short, while every missed field goal drives fans crazy, no kicker is perfect. Gay, who looked like he might be a genuine problem from training camp to halftime of Week 3, now appears to be kicking like a typical NFL kicker. While I would have liked to have seen training camp competition for the job, that didn’t happen, and I’m not gonna worry about that decision now. Over the last 15 quarters of regular season NFL games, Matt Gay has hit 90% of his field goals, missing from 50, and 100% of his PATs. He has hit 3 or his 4 attempts from 50+ yards in those 15 quarters of football.

The shouts for him to be replaced sound a bit shrill to my ear at the moment, especially given the limited options that are likely to be available in mid-October.

I’m encouraged by the loss to the Bears​


Like pretty much every NFL fan, I don’t enjoy watching my team lose. The ‘gut punch’ factor on Monday night, in my mind, comes not so much from the fact of the loss itself as from the fact that the Commanders had the lead and the ball with the clock winding down, but lost — not because of some great play by the opposition — but because of a self-inflicted mistake. Jayden Daniels lost control of a wet, slippery ball, and the game changed instantly.

That was not the only mistake that Jayden made on Monday night, nor was it the only egregious error made by the offense during the game.

So, why am I encouraged?

Because, despite the number of significant mistakes made by the team, the Commanders were ahead on the scoreboard and actually held the advantage on the field for the entire 4th quarter — which began with the blocked field goal — up until the moment that Jayden fumbled on the 3rd & 1 play.

Despite the huge number of errors made by the Commanders on Monday night — including 3 turnovers — the result was a 1-point loss. Washington wasn’t beaten by the Bears so much as let down by some uncharacteristic mistakes that I don’t expect to be repeated every week.

This was a win that the Commanders gave away. That’s why it stings so sharply, but that’s also why I see it as an encouraging sign for what’s to come.

What good news is on the horizon?​


I heard someone, yesterday, comment that the Cowboys would be tougher this week because the team might get CeeDee Lamb back from injury.

Well, yeah. Washington may get Terry McLaurin back, and that should change the way opponents have to play against the Commanders offense.

Other potential good news (this week or next) could include the return of Noah Brown and the activation of Sam Cosmi.

Defensively the Commanders really missed Eddie Goldman on Monday night, who was inactive due to an illness. That should be a one-off event.

CB Jonathan Jones, who went on IR with a hamstring injury in mid-September, has already missed 4 games and will be eligible to return — providing needed depth — as soon as he is healthy.

Safety Will Harris has been badly missed since he went on IR in late September with a fractured fibula. It seems like a December 1st return (the Denver game after the bye week) might be a good target for his return.

Of course, the best return has already happened — that is, Jayden Daniels returning from a 2-game absence following a knee injury.

The Commanders have reached 3-3, which is not really a bad outcome, with Jayden missing 2 games, Terry missing 4 games, Sam Cosmi missing 6 games, and several other key short-term injuries. It seems likely that the team will be healthier going forward than it was in September, which makes me optimistic about the arrow pointing up during the remaining 11 games.

More help is on the way in the form of players getting healthy and re-joining the active roster.

Jayden is the key and the Bears game was the outlier​


Jayden Daniels is 16-8 as an NFL starting quarterback. In his 24 starts, he has been personally responsible for 2 turnovers in a single game three times. He did it in Weeks 12 and 16 of 2024 when he threw two interceptions against the Cowboys and two against the Eagles. He also did it this week with a fumble and an INT against the Bears.

In those three games, he is 1-2 as a starter, meaning that he is 15-6 when he doesn’t personally turn the ball over twice in a game.

Jayden Daniels is the reason why the Commanders achieved 12 regular season wins and reached the NFC Championship game in January.

Jayden Daniels is a force multiplier; he is the definition of a franchise quarterback — a guy who lifts the entire roster to achieve more than the sum of its parts.

Jayden killed two drives with a pair of key mistakes that came at key moments in the first and fourth quarters on Monday night. That was an aberration — the Bears game was an outlier. Play that game 100 times and Jayden beats Chicago 95 times. His two key turnovers in this game were not reflective of the kind of play Jayden Daniels normally delivers.

He’ll be better because he is better.

Jayden’s production — 211 yards, 3 TDs passing; 52 yards rushing — was the reason Washington was winning the game with 3:10 on the clock. That level of play is the norm for him. He will lead the Commanders to more wins than losses going forward.

I feel confident about the road ahead because the Commanders have Jayden Daniels.

Playoffs?​


I frequently discuss the importance of winning games against division and conference opponents because of the NFL’s tie breaking rules for declaring division winners, playoff participation, and setting playoff seeding.

Each loss to a division or conference opponent increases the importance of winning those that remain.

I had hoped that the Commanders would beat the Bears (NFC) and Cowboys (NFC East) to improve the team’s tie-breaking credentials. Well, we know what happened with the Bears.

With wins against the Chargers and Raiders, the Commanders are 2-0 vs the AFC but only 1-3 vs the NFC — though Washington does boast a 1-0 record inside the division.

Thanks to the tie between the Cowboys and Packers, Washington is unlikely to have to apply any tie-breakers with either team. Since the Packers own the first tie-breaker (head-to-head games), this is a good thing.

The Commanders need to build up the team’s division and conference records, though, in the remaining games. If Washington finishes with the same overall record as the Giants or Eagles in January, division wins come into play if the teams have split their two regular season games. Likewise, if Washington is competing for a wild card spot in the playoffs as a non-division winner, wins against NFC opponents are hugely important. Washington needs to beat Dallas on Sunday to get back above .500 in overall record, remain undefeated at 2-0 inside the NFC East, and add a win to improve to 2-3 in conference play.

The best way to get to the playoffs will be to win the division. That would have felt more realistic if Washington had beaten the Bears on Monday night, but even with the loss, the Commanders sit just a game back of Philly with 11 to play.

Like Washington, all three division rivals, including the Eagles, sit at a crossroads on the season as we enter Week 7. For all 4 teams, the season could come together or fall apart over the next few weeks. Beat Dallas this week and the Commanders could easily be playing for the NFC East title and home games in the playoffs when it faces the Giants, Cowboys and Eagles (twice) in the final 4 weeks of the regular season.

One interesting bit of trivia is that the Commanders are the ONLY NFC East team with a positive point differential through 6 weeks. Washington is +32 while the Eagles, Cowboys and Giants are -1, -6 and -23, respectively. League-wide, the Commanders rank 6th in point differential. This means that the team has been losing close games (9 pts, 7pts, 1 pt) while winning by bigger margins (15, 15, 17 points).

The combined record of the 5 teams above Washington in point differential is 19-10. The combined record of the next 5 teams behind Washington is 18-10-1.

The Commanders are one fumble away from a 4-2 record, which would fit right in with the other 10 teams that have a point differential of +27 or better. Washington is playing better football than the 3-3 record indicates.

Speaking of that Dallas game​


The Cowboys offense is 1st in the NFL in scoring at 29.7 points per game; the Commanders are 13th at 26.3.

Defensively, Dallas is 31st in points allowed, giving up 30.7 ppg; the Commanders rank 13th at 21.6.

This feels like a shootout waiting to happen. It needs to be a shootout that Washington wins.

Maybe it’s time for DQ and Joe Whitt to stop talking about defensive turnovers​


“Ball is life”

Since Joe Whitt’s arrival in DC, he has said that creating turnovers is part of his defensive squad’s identity. Dan Quinn has echoed and doubled down on that idea.

But it hasn’t happened. Washington is 29th in defensive takeaways through 6 weeks. Not so coincidentally, I think, the Commanders defense ranked 29th in defensive takeaways in 2024. Talk about consistency!!

Perhaps it’s time for DQ and Joe Whitt to admit that this defense is not “producing the ball” as the defensive coordinator likes to phrase it.

There is only so much time and so many messages that a coaching staff can preach in a week of NFL preparation. Every good manager and coach knows that you get what you prioritize — at least, that’s where subordinates or players will put their emphasis.

DQ and Whitt have been preaching the importance of turnovers since they got here last year. The offense has generally been pretty protective of the ball, but the defense has not been getting it away from the opposition with any regularity.

Lately, both coaches have criticized things like secondary run fits, over-trying, and “putting on the cape” — that is, players ‘guessing’ or trying to do more than their own jobs. I wonder if that’s related to the constant messaging about creating turnovers.

I’m now wondering if Whitt and Quinn should let go of this treasured part of the defensive identity that doesn’t match reality. To date, Commanders’ defensive turnovers are largely a myth.

Perhaps it’s time to change the messaging to things like the importance of good tackling, run fits, or playing the right coverage on every play. Let’s get the defensive players focused on something that they can accomplish immediately to make a difference instead of chasing the apparition of creating turnovers like Quinn’s old Dallas defenses did.

Speaking of coaches speaking​


I have always been a keen observer of public speakers. As a one-time corporate trainer in the US and a long-time teacher in Thailand, I’ve spent an inordinate amount of my working life speaking to rooms full of people. As a teacher here in Bangkok, I taught English-language public speaking courses every semester for 14 years. In fact, my experience in public speaking stretches back to 1981-82 when I spent a year in the pulpits of Catholic churches convincing congregants to part with their hard-earned money to support a diocesan outreach program.

When Jay Gruden was the coach of the Redskins, I was so fascinated by how he spoke to the media that I used to write lengthy articles to dissect what he said and what he meant. I did it a few times with Ron Rivera, but it wasn’t as much fun.

Dan Quinn is an excellent public speaker. He listens carefully to questions, is clear and organized in his answers, and he is keenly aware of giving reporters what they need to do their jobs.

Quinn is also skilled at not saying things he doesn’t want to say. What I find most intriguing in most of his press conferences is what he doesn’t say. A simple example is what he said about Sam Cosmi during training camp. DQ said with regularity that Sam was progressing well; that they ‘wouldn’t miss a step’ with him, and that Quinn didn’t rule out a Week 1 return. Many fans and some sports writers interpreted that to mean that a Week 1 (or early September) return was likely. Those people were surprised when Cosmi opened the season on the PUP list.

There’s a reason that everyone seems to think that Noah Brown or Terry McLaurin — as they did with Sam Cosmi — is probably gonna return any day now. It’s because Dan Quinn doesn’t say they won’t. He says the player is ‘making progress’, ‘hitting all his markers’, or ‘had a good practice today’, which, if you think about it, reveals nothing about his actual return to play.

There’s a reason why, when DQ gets asked multiple times in a single week about a possible re-shuffle of the offensive line, he can say that it’s being considered, and the assembled press can still be shocked to learn on game day that Chris Paul is replacing Brandon Coleman. It’s because Dan Quinn admits to the general principle of competition without saying who’s winning or losing.

On Tuesday this week, Nicki Jhabvala asked about the report that the Commanders were signing Drake Jackson, whom she identified by name in her question. Here’s DQ’s answer:

I thought at the end of the half we had some good pressure, and I know [Dorance Armstrong] and Frankie [Luvu] ended on one. It was good to see that as a two minute at the end of the half. But it’s just from, you know, us digging in always, that’s where we’re not ever going to stop competing, you know, and finding ways and looking. So, we’ll do that, you know, kind of the whole way through.

Not a word about Jackson — of course, DQ isn’t gonna talk about a player who isn’t on the team before his signing is formally announced. He thus avoids any questions about who is coming off the roster if Jackson is being signed. Quinn identifies good performance from two specific players and reinforces the general principle of competition, but gives away no new information. Importantly, though, the reporters still get the quote(s) they need to write their stories.

Remarkable

One of the first things I came to admire about Quinn early in his tenure was his reliance on the word “remarkable” when discussing players. Asked about almost any player’s performance or attitude, Quinn, when he first arrived, would say what he found to be “remarkable” about it.

The interesting thing here is that, while it sounds like strong praise, “remarkable” is not inherently good or bad. One can find something remarkable because it is unusually positive — or unusually negative. When Quinn, last year, talked about players being remarkable, he was often giving little or no useful information in his response, but it gave reporters grist for the mill.

When DQ started to sound unintelligible

This season, Quinn’s clarity of speech began to break down. There were two habits that became increasingly apparent and annoying (to me). One was his use of the phrase “this space” or “those spaces”, which he was randomly inserting into his answers to questions to the point where his answers were sometimes nearly unintelligible because the phrase (that/those space(s)) had no clear meaning. The other was his use of the words “to go” as a tag at the end of sentences.

This space / those spaces

I mentioned my annoyance with Quinn’s use of this space/those spaces in an article I wrote in September. I wonder if a staffer at Ashburn read my article, because almost immediately, DQ cut his use of the phrase by about 90%, and it has almost disappeared from his answers in the past week or so.

To go

What didn’t disappear, however, was his random use of the words “to go” when speaking to the press. I didn’t mention it in my earlier article, but I’m mentioning it now for a specific reason, and I hope it doesn’t lead to Quinn correcting the annoying habit.

Despite the fact that Quinn has typically used the “to go” phrase a dozen or more times in every press conference of the 2025 regular season, in his Tuesday press conference following the loss to the Bears, I didn’t hear Quinn use it a single time. It was deafening in its absence.

I have a theory about the change in speaking pattern.

On Tuesday, I think DQ was a bit raw emotionally from the loss on MNF. He was doing the presser because he had to — it’s a weekly obligation — but he was tired, pissed off and disappointed. As a result, I think his answers were a bit more “honest” than usual, by which I mean, less filtered.

I surmise that, when DQ is simply trying to be a good guy and give reporters quotes for their stories, his use of “to go” is a bit of a ‘tell’ that he is…well…‘constructing’ an answer that meets the needs of the assembled reporters. When you hear it used, I think you can identify that Dan Quinn is ‘on stage’ and managing what he says — and what he doesn’t say. It’s absence may indicate that DQ is speaking more ‘from the heart’ and that his answers are a bit less filtered, meaning that he may be more inclined to give real hints about what he is thinking, rather than avoiding doing so by his usual habit of focusing on general principles (like competition) while telling reporters what’s not happening (like, we’re not gonna miss any steps in his recovery process).

While I’m critiquing public speakers, let me mention one thing about John Keim’s podcast​


Today, I listened to a John Keim post-MNF podcast with Bram Weinstein as his guest.

I’m not going to critique the content of the podcast (which was good) or Keim’s speech patterns (which identify him as a professional writer), but mention a decision he made about his paid advertising.

Twice during the podcast, once at the beginning and once in the middle, Keim had to do paid reads, where he reads messages from paid advertisers.

I’ve been listening to John Keim podcasts for as long as he’s been a podcaster. What surprised me this time was that he chose to clearly apologize to the audience prior to reading the paid ads. He didn’t just do it the first time; he did it both times. He also said, “and one more” as a transition from the first ad to the second on each read, presumably to include it in the apology.

I was a bit stunned that he would feel the need to apologize. I imagine it was in response to some sort of feedback from listeners, but I can’t imagine that anyone fails to understand that TV, radio, podcasts and even sports blogs are commercial activities that primarily earn revenue from advertising. The audience for these media must understand that hearing or seeing the ads is part of the tradeoff, right?

My thought, when I heard it, was that if I were a paid advertiser, I’d be disappointed to hear an apology ahead of my paid read. My further thought was that if I were in Keim’s shoes (I’m not), I wouldn’t apologize to my audience for paying the bills with ads.

As an audience member (which I am), I can say that I not only expect it, but I’m glad to put up with it because of the high quality content that John Keim, Bram Weinstein (and many others) provide on their podcasts.

Let’s kick ass in Dallas!

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...ud-about-the-commanders-after-6-weeks-of-play
 
Commanders vs Cowboys Wednesday Injury Report: Long list on a short week

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The Washington Commanders held their first practice of the week today, a jog-through as they prepare for an away game against the Dallas Cowboys. The team hosted the Bears on Monday Night Football and are working on a shortened, travel-week schedule.

The injury report from today’s light practice is long, but includes seven players getting vet rest days. Only one of those players, Zach Ertz(shoulder), was also listed with an injury.

Dorance Armstrong is the team’s best pass rusher this season, and he joined the injured list after suffering a hamstring injury vs the Bears. He was able to return to the game, but Dan Quinn said they would have a better idea about where he’s at tomorrow during a full practice with speed drills.

WR Noah Brown was placed on injured reserve today after missing the last four games. Quinn said the injury wasn’t responding well enough during his limited practices last week, so they shut him down for at least another four weeks.

WR Terry McLaurin (quad) missed his third straight game, but returned to practice for the first time today. He was limited, but it was a positive sign for an injury we don’t have a lot of details about.

Deebo Samuel has been dealing with a heel injury for the last two weeks. Quinn said they were managing the injury last week and he didn’t think this would be a season-long issue.

Chris Rodriguez Jr didn’t practice last week due to a new calf injury. He was active on Monday night, but didn’t practice today.

Jayden Daniels (knee) has played the last two games with a knee brace, and will continue wearing it for the foreseeable future. He was a full go for a light practice.

Sam Cosmi’s 21-day practice window was opened two weeks ago. He was a full participant today, and will likely be activated this week. CB Jonathan Jones missed the last four games after going to IR with a hamstring injury. He was a full participant in practice, and had his 21-day practice window opened today.

DE Drake Jackson was officially signed to the 53-man roster, but he’s still “working back” from the knee injury that kept him out of football for more than a year.

Wednesday injury report#WASvsDAL | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/yNiiDtc1za

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 15, 2025
Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/iukIyjwis1

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) October 15, 2025

DNP​


DE Dorance Armstrong – Suffered hamstring injury vs Bears, returned to the game

DE Drake Jackson – Returning from major knee injury

RB Chris Rodriguez – Didn’t practice last week with a calf injury

WR Deebo Samuel – Dealing with a heel injury last two weeks, played most WR snaps vs Bears

Limited


WR Terry McLaurin – Suffered a quad injury vs the Raiders, first practice since. Misses third straight game

Full


RT Sam Cosmi – 21-day practice window opened two weeks ago, returning from ACL surgery

QB Jayden Daniels – Played last two games with brace after missing two games with a knee sprain

CB Jonathan Jones – On injured reserve for four games with hamstring injury

Vet Rest Day​


TE John Bates

TE Zach Ertz –
Also listed with shoulder injury

DT Javon Kinlaw

OLB Von Miller

DT Daron Payne

OT Laremy Tunsil

LB Bobby Wagner


Injured Reserve​


WR Noah Brown – Had dealt with a knee injury since June, Missing fourth straight game with groin injury

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/382305/co...esday-injury-report-long-list-on-a-short-week
 
All aTwitter: 16-Oct-25 – Commanders roster in flux ahead of Dallas game with players moving onto and off of IR and PUP

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The goal of All aTwitter is to give readers a detailed or quirky look, through the unique lens of Twitter, at the Commanders, the NFL, and sports in general, along with a smattering of other things.


Click here for Washington Commanders Beat Writers Twitter Feed


Click here for NFL News, Rumors & Reports Twitter Feed


Tip: If a tweet isn’t fully visible on your screen, clicking on the date at the bottom of the tweet will open it up individually in either the X app or your browser.

We have made the following roster moves:
– Signed DE Drake Jackson
– Placed WR Noah Brown on the Reserve/Injured List
– Signed G Julian Good-Jones to the practice squad pic.twitter.com/DkwTLRlTX4

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 15, 2025
Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/iukIyjwis1

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) October 15, 2025
Good news for the Cowboys: CeeDee Lamb, KaVontae Turpin and Tyler Booker are all expected to practice today, per Brian Schottenheimer.

— Joseph Hoyt (@JoeJHoyt) October 15, 2025
Dont wanna overreact with the Dorrance stuff but they did just sign a free agent D end https://t.co/RpkSxaToq0

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 15, 2025
Dan Quinn said that newly-signed DE Drake Jackson is still "working back" from his knee injury.

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 15, 2025
Super physical WR that forces DBs into contact. It's not a coincidence he draws the PIs. Just unfortunate he cant stay healthy https://t.co/RlA3ZGOL3p

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 15, 2025
We have opened the 21-day practice window for CB Jonathan Jones pic.twitter.com/GzdZA76hrP

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 15, 2025
Dan Quinn says Terry McLaurin will practice all of this week… today is more of a jog-thru for the entire team

Quinn on McLaurin: "Excited where he's trending"@JPFinlayNBCS #RaiseHail #Commanders pic.twitter.com/0xoJbcMDzj

— NBC4 Sports (@NBC4Sports) October 15, 2025
Quinn on Sam Cosmi. Said "it was a hell of a start for him" in practice last week.

Assuming no setback, I would think likelihood Cosmi is activated before Sunday. Not the same as play. They also have some time before 21-day window closes next week.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) October 15, 2025
Will Sam Cosmi make his season debut on Sunday at Dallas?!

Here's the big fella today stretching before practice pic.twitter.com/jv04OAKZ6Z

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
Luke McCaffrey scored his 3rd touchdown in 4 games pic.twitter.com/k04exgkaef

— All-Pro Reels (@allproreels) October 15, 2025
Jayden on Luke McCaffrey – He's made two of the most wide open TDs I've ever seen, so salute to Luke

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 15, 2025
The tackle race is tight through Week 6 👀 pic.twitter.com/do1y07wOwR

— NFL (@NFL) October 16, 2025
Small fundamental mistakes…

DQ talks about “Vice” tackling and “Vicing” a blocker to keep leverage.

Both DB’s jump outside the Tackle pulling & leads to huge gain of 19 yards. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/Wr2C5DGb2G

— Last of the Fullbacks (@TheLastFullback) October 15, 2025
You don’t see Bobby Wagner out of Gap fit very often but he guesses here and misses.

This is 2nd & 5 on the WSH 19.

Bears gain 12 here & would score two plays later. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/mWE5I5zYbq

— Last of the Fullbacks (@TheLastFullback) October 15, 2025
More defensive dysfunction…

Quan Martin rotating into the box and attempting to tell Wagner to bump.

Wagner never bumps & shoots backside C-gap.

Defense is down a gap frontside and the bears gash ‘em. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/8FrgfHXhSo

— Last of the Fullbacks (@TheLastFullback) October 15, 2025

Javon Freaking Kinlaw.

Certified problem.

Driving the double team into the TE/H-back attempting to pull #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/bDlKgFMuJH

— Last of the Fullbacks (@TheLastFullback) October 15, 2025
The kid is special.

Croskey-Merritt jump cut (x2) turning a loss into 7 yards. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/c4k8Z2Yii6

— Last of the Fullbacks (@TheLastFullback) October 15, 2025
Zach Ertz said after that loss the other night players are “pissed off.”

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 15, 2025
He should see the fans

— 𝓒𝓸𝓶𝓶𝓪𝓷𝓭𝓮𝓻𝓼 𝓡𝓸𝓫 🇺🇸 (@WFTRob) October 15, 2025
Put it on a T-Shirt!

"Execution Fuels Emotion"

Great stuff here from Commanders TE Zach Ertz. pic.twitter.com/2Sdmd3Nr6O

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
Spoke with Commanders rookie WR Jaylin Lane after today's practice.

On maybe getting Terry McLaurin back this week, Jaylin said, "it's huge man, getting Scary Terry back. He's just a great leader for the team." pic.twitter.com/f0xcJIJuAb

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
With every game and rep Commanders rookie right tackle Josh Conerly Jr. is getting more and more comfortable.

He told me, "I have definitely felt my best the last couple of weeks…I feel like my sets are a lot better than what they were." pic.twitter.com/kZyoEK11fR

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
Loved this from Commanders safety Quan Martin.

I asked him about that missed tackle on MNF and how he will respond.

Quan said, "Stuff is going to happen, just being able to respond and take the lesson from it. Just learn from it. Just come back and get better honestly." pic.twitter.com/zUBZ1bPU2v

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
We caught up with Commanders rookie RB Bill Croskey-Merritt today.

On his fumbles the last two games, Bill said, "it's nothing I can't handle. I know I'm going to bounce back. We got another opportunity and I know I'll be ready to take advantage of it." pic.twitter.com/IR4G7PeQ91

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
I think Commanders safety Darnell Savage is getting better every week.

He had 27 snaps against the Bears.

On going up against this Cowboys offense, Darnell said, "having anticipation on what's going to happen next so you can be ahead of it." pic.twitter.com/zmt4IFZiiF

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
Commanders fans,

It's your favorite weekly interview.

I caught up with Javon Kinlaw after today's practice.

JK said, "I think we're desperate right now for a win. I know I am..I'm a sore loser. You got to take a punch to give a punch. Your counter punch has got to be greater." pic.twitter.com/2UoA9Npr1S

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) October 15, 2025
Javon Kinlaw on the Cowboys offensive success this season: “They’re blocking like a motherfu**er”

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) October 15, 2025

NFL Week 7 television maps: Washington Commanders vs. Dallas Cowboys https://t.co/7vh0DRfq8i pic.twitter.com/R4b7TBwNJL

— Commanders Wire (@Washington_Wire) October 15, 2025
Dan Quinn got asked about the late afternoon Jerry World sun by @Mitch_Tischler https://t.co/EFMW7GrzGv pic.twitter.com/mghm5t3Rf5

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) October 16, 2025
From The Insiders on @nflnetwork: A lot of talk about the #Eagles’ offense being predictable. A deeper dive with @BaldyNFL and @MarcRoss on what that means and why it’s about much more than that. pic.twitter.com/lKQMwzswtJ

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) October 15, 2025
NFL Offenses – Yards Before vs. After Contact

⬆️= higher yards after contact
➡️= higher yards before contact pic.twitter.com/N6qDsynZXg

— SūmerSports (@SumerSports) October 15, 2025
NFL Offenses – Motion Rate vs. EPA/Play in Motion

⬆️= motion EPA/Play
➡️= motion rate pic.twitter.com/2pNpPUNoue

— SūmerSports (@SumerSports) October 15, 2025
NFL cornerbacks who have allowed the lowest passer rating this season (min. 10 targets):

🔒 Derion Kendrick, Seahawks – 19.9
🔒 Jamel Dean, Bucs – 27.4
🔒 Benjamin St-Juste, Chargers – 27.5
🔒 Dee Alford, Falcons – 33.2
🔒 Isaiah Rodgers, Vikings – 44.9
🔒 Nohl Williams, Chiefs… pic.twitter.com/5IKU01GmVM

— PFSN (@PFSN365) October 15, 2025
Brian Branch will miss the Lions’ game Monday night against the Buccaneers after his appeal failed to overturn his one-game suspension. https://t.co/MDtxcwb2QB

— MarkMaske (@MarkMaske) October 16, 2025
"I don't know how you watch that game last night, and walk away thinking… that [Caleb Williams] is even close to being as good as Jayden Daniels."@TheKostos thinks the Bears’ quarterback still has a ways to go before being in the same conversation as the Commanders’ star… pic.twitter.com/7iiYLR8Ltg

— BETMGM Network (@BETMGMNetwork) October 14, 2025
This is where PFF loses credibility to me.

I thought Caleb was average last night, certainly up-and-down.

Graded worse than Justin Fields? Cooper Rush? Dillon Gabriel?

Did they watch those QB's play this weekend?

Again, not Caleb's best game or anywhere close, but jeez pic.twitter.com/SLCGhihH6C

— Harrison Graham (@HGrahamNFL) October 14, 2025
I guess CHI fans thought that since they beat WSH that the media would all of a sudden put Williams over Daniel’s like that game was a deciding factor. The eye test and numbers don’t lie man. Daniel’s is the standard.#raisehail

— Jordan Hampton (@TheBurgany_Gold) October 16, 2025
"Enter Sandman" to start the 4th quarter is a nice touch.

It's occurred at every home game this season. It dips into the VT roots of the fanbase.

Players get into it too.

Another example of an improved homefield advantage. Someone is doing good work. @Commanders https://t.co/Jke4goP6bJ

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) October 16, 2025
It was absolutely electric!! 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/uTxLTLFBqx

— AZ Commander (@AzCommander1) October 16, 2025
Was just alerted to this over on instagram but apparently the NFL released a new batch of tix for the Commanders game in Spain – for those who have been waiting, grab your tix and see @JPFinlayNBCS perform a ceremonial flamenco in Madrid! https://t.co/ziQ92EuEYn

— Mitchell Tischler (@Mitch_Tischler) October 15, 2025
🇪🇸 The @Commanders are taking over Madrid!

🏈 RALLY IN MADRID
📍 The Irish Rover
🗓️ Fri, Nov 14 | 12–4 PM CET

🏈 KICKOFF GAMEDAY
📍 The James Joyce Irish Pub
🗓️ Sun, Nov 16 | 10 AM CET

See yall there❗#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/k0oO2jvqbI

— Chris Bryant (@HogfarmerChris) October 15, 2025
This is the wildest ending to a head coach press conference I’ve ever seen…

💀 pic.twitter.com/gX7e4NSBHD

— Maserati Marv 🏎️💨 (@MHJera_) October 15, 2025
Dan Snyder’s state of the art $192 million Lady S superyacht lost power at sea and limped into Falmouth, UK, for repairs. The former Redskins owner is flying in technicians all the way from the Netherlands to repair and bring his beloved 305-foot – https://t.co/bjCf43HkCQ pic.twitter.com/Vi4eB4U0BA

— Luxurylaunches (@luxurylaunches) October 15, 2025

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...ith-players-moving-onto-and-off-of-ir-and-pup
 
All aTwitter: 17-Oct-25 – Adam Peters may have just gotten another 2026 sixth-round draft pick

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The goal of All aTwitter is to give readers a detailed or quirky look, through the unique lens of Twitter, at the Commanders, the NFL, and sports in general, along with a smattering of other things.


Click here for Washington Commanders Beat Writers Twitter Feed


Click here for NFL News, Rumors & Reports Twitter Feed


Tip: If a tweet isn’t fully visible on your screen, clicking on the date at the bottom of the tweet will open it up individually in either the X app or your browser.

Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/exClKMFNnO

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) October 16, 2025
Cowboys WR CeeDee Lamb said he could have played last week against the Panthers. He sat another week so he could be fully healthy without limitations.
He will not be on a pitch count against Commanders. pic.twitter.com/BmjnFylC41

— Clarence Hill Jr (@clarencehilljr) October 16, 2025
LB Ale Kaho (illness) has been added to the injury report. He did not practice. https://t.co/hPaQcPcJby

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 16, 2025
The Commanders worked out former Giants cornerback Tre Hawkins, per the wire.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) October 17, 2025
The all-burgundy uniform in Dallas https://t.co/ZaWXeWnFjn

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) October 17, 2025
Washington Commanders G Julian Good-Jones is wearing number 61. Last assigned to Tyler Cooper. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/ppSDnURFte

— NFL Jersey Numbers (@nfl_jersey_num) October 16, 2025
Jackson went straight to IR, so don't look for 93 on the field any time soon https://t.co/UJRBM0aOfL

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) October 17, 2025
DE Drake Jackson has been placed on IR after signing with the team yesterday.

He's been sidelined since 2023 with a serious knee injury, and is working his way back to the field.

Jackson will miss a minimum of four more games before he's eligible to be activated.

The… https://t.co/1nVcza4THB

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) October 16, 2025
I think I missed this one at the time of the signing, so just a bit of catch up https://t.co/IpH91d9sd0

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) October 17, 2025
Tackled at the 1. He’s got Commander in his blood 🥹 #RaiseHail https://t.co/9ZiYBbOejd

— Lord Delulu 🖤 (@Moodi_TheMenace) October 17, 2025
The NFL teams that are looking to trade for a WR before the deadline are looking at the wrong piece IMO.

They Should be targeting Adonai Mitchell!

Just put on his limited tape in the NFL & then put on his college tape at Texas and tell me how I'm wrong…..

Plus you aren't… pic.twitter.com/4LJvSs3qWJ

— My Mind Is A Weapon FF (@SleezBomb) October 16, 2025
#RaiseHail
This could add another draft pick for Adam Peters in April https://t.co/Bz1j24ese3

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) October 17, 2025
#WASvsDAL officiating crew cheat sheet

Divisional HOME teams are 15-22 ATS in referee Alex Kemp's career. The Cowboys have a mixed record w' Kemp. The most notable game, their 23-17 Wild Card loss vs #49ers in 2022 (14 penalties- 89 yds)

Since the start of the 2024 season,… pic.twitter.com/EHeVo8LiCZ

— nflrefstats (@nflrefstats1) October 16, 2025
In the last four games Washington has lined up in the pistol formation 59 times; it has run the ball 49 times. That's 83 percent… The Commanders have averaged 5.5 yards per carry in that stretch — tho it was only 2.4 vs. the Bears.

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 16, 2025
Jayden Daniels thru 1st 4 games in 2024:
(Passing) 897 yds 3 TD 1 Int ( 3-1 record)

Jayden Daniels 1st 4 games played 2025:
(Passing) 875 yards 7 TDs 1 int ( 2-2 record ) pic.twitter.com/76W5cD6X0d

— Commanders Declassified Podcast (@DeclassifiedWft) October 16, 2025
He sold the double move here. Big time . Also got off clean vs press on a slant earlier in the game (ball went to Deebo for plus 9). He’s improved his route running. Spoke to him about that earlier this week… https://t.co/rmGXSAGzTO

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 16, 2025
Aaron Rodgers and Joe Flacco combined tonight:

• 81 years old
• 7 passing TD
• 591 passing yards

Simply amazing 🥲 pic.twitter.com/bvsL0QVQoF

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) October 17, 2025
Holy Sh*t: Steelers HC Mike Tomlin goes OFF Browns GM Andrew Berry for trading Joe Flacco to the Bengals.

“Andrew Berry must be a lot smarter than me or us because it doesn’t make sense to me to trade a QB you think enough of to make your opening-day starter to a division… pic.twitter.com/gsEFaXs1lF

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) October 13, 2025
did Tomlin really say in the halftime interview: "we've got to stop the run" and then load 9 defenders into the box on the first snap?

meanwhile, Cincy has 23 pass attempts to 9 rushes & is happy to pass all over this PIT secondary if PIT wants to stop the run

— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) October 17, 2025
Joe Flacco is throwing it to Ja’Marr Chase almost every time when everyone on the field knows he’s going to throw it to Chase every time. It’s amazing to watch.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) October 17, 2025
FLACCO DIME TO HIGGINS WHO MAKES A HIGH IQ PLAY 🔥

PITvsCIN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/5kbBK0eoaO

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Aaron Rodgers said hold my beer

What a game https://t.co/SMmZsvIAE1

— MadHatter LJ 🎩🐷 (@MadHatter_LJ) October 17, 2025
Aaron Rodgers heaves a Hail Mary to the end zone. DENIED ❌
Bengals hang on for the win 🔥 #Bengals #Steelers #NFL #CINvsPIT pic.twitter.com/eb26UNAWxh

— Aggregate Sports (@AggregateSports) October 17, 2025
Rodgers' Hail Mary traveled 69.3 air yards, per @NextGenStats

— Eric Edholm (@Eric_Edholm) October 17, 2025
Joe Flacco is now 11 and 11 in his career vs the Steelers, but we should have known, he has now moved to 4-0 vs the Steelers on Thursday nights

— James Palmer (@JamesPalmerTV) October 17, 2025
Darnell Washington scores and does the 6-7 celebration 😂

PITvsCIN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/FJWXzKR2A5

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Look at Flacco, man. pic.twitter.com/2k3KTryez9

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
🚨 JOE FLACCO TUSH PUSH 🚨 pic.twitter.com/5Prpr8Fxqv

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Terry would have caught that. pic.twitter.com/wgoSHsceU4

— MadHatter LJ 🎩🐷 (@MadHatter_LJ) October 17, 2025
This play was reviewed…

And it revealed an INSANE pick by DJ Turner II. Bengals ball!

PITvsCIN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/TANxTS75LK

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Roman Wilson flew five whole yards.

PITvsCIN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/TBlzFMrU0u

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Chase Brown is LOOSE. Look at Ja'Marr get out and block 👀

PITvsCIN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/rUG5o2bi1B

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Ja’Marr Chase’s last two appearances on Thursday Night Football:

– 16 REC, 161 YDS, 1 TD vs. Steelers
– 11 REC, 264 YDS, 3 TD vs. Ravens pic.twitter.com/9RGM5Rkp3k

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) October 17, 2025
Jordan Battle PICKS OFF Rodgers.

He's ruled down back at the 24-yard-line.

PITvsCIN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/qoFY1oNFpc

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Darnell Washington is massive. pic.twitter.com/j8DTlgsDPN

— NFL (@NFL) October 17, 2025
Joe Flacco’s been with the Bengals for 10 days and has already thrown more TD passes than he did in four starts for the Browns

— Daniel Oyefusi (@DanielOyefusi) October 17, 2025
it speaks to how tough life is for Dillon Gabriel (or Shadeur eventually) just how much better Flacco has looked in Cincinnati

— Gregg Rosenthal (@greggrosenthal) October 17, 2025
Maybe Flacco IS elite after all

— Lance Zierlein (@LanceZierlein) October 17, 2025
The Bengals have home games against the Jets and Bears next, then their bye. Their next road game is a month from tonight. They could be 5-4 going into Pittsburgh on Nov. 16.

Getting Joe Burrow back with a shot at the playoffs is … possible.

— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) October 17, 2025
Texting with an NFC exec this week about the pass rusher trade market, it sounds like there will be a supply and demand issue for teams looking to upgrade:

"More teams interested than teams selling it seems like." #Panthers

— Mike Kaye (@mike_e_kaye) October 16, 2025
Per PFF Caleb Williams was the lowest graded Bears offensive player against the Commanders (46.1).

— FIRST ROUND MOCK (@firstroundmock) October 15, 2025

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...st-gotten-another-2026-sixth-round-draft-pick
 
Dan Quinn: Terry McLaurin will miss 4th game; “Just not ready yet”

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Dan Quinn opened his Friday presser by talking about this week’s team captains, Chris Paul(offense), Von Miller(defense), Tyler Owens(special teams). They all have ties to the state of Texas where the team will be on Sunday to play the Dallas Cowboys. Quinn said he loves Chris Paul’s story, and he’s been a big help in the run game.

Terry McLaurin(quad) is the only player that has been ruled out. Quinn said he’s closer, but he’s just not ready yet. This will be the fourth game that McLaurin will miss, which raised similar questions to Noah Brown who was placed on IR this week after missing his fourth game with a groin injury. Quinn said it’s difficult with a soft tissue injury for a speed player. McLaurin is working at it, but needed another week.

Deebo Samuel has been the team’s lead WR with McLaurin sidelined, but he’s also been dealing with a heel injury for the last three weeks. He has played through it, and played the most WR snaps on the team. Samuel got reps in today which is a good sign for him playing through it again on Sunday.

Sam Cosmi(ACL) and Jonathan Jones(hamstring) are coming back from injuries and had their 21-day practice windows opened recently. Cosmi has been practicing fully and Quinn said he looked good in practice. Cosmi and Jones could be activated for Sunday’s game.

The Commanders signed former 1st round WR Treylon Burks to the practice squad and they have a plan for him. Quinn was very excited to add him to the team as they continue to deal with injuries at the position.

LIVE: HC Dan Quinn speaks to the media after the final practice of the week https://t.co/aFvB4ir0zU

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 17, 2025

Team captains:​

Our Week 7 captains 🤝@NWFCU | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/0R2jFZM3lN

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 17, 2025

Terry McLaurin:​

Dan Quinn rules out Terry McLaurin for Sunday and discusses why his soft tissue injury is lingering for so long. pic.twitter.com/ys1Y2EqpCT

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) October 17, 2025
Dan Quinn says #Commanders WR Terry McLaurin is OUT for Sunday.

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) October 17, 2025
Quinn said McLaurin is working hard to come back, but it’s “just not ready yet.” Difficult to monitor with soft tissue injuries. “It’s frustrating,” Quinn said, “but he’s closer.”

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) October 17, 2025
Quinn on Terry McLaurin: "He's not ready yet."

On why not IR earlier: "You don't want to go there if (he's ready) earlier. (Soft tissue injuries) aren't easy to say two weeks or three weeks. "

Said a player with Terry's speed makes soft tissue injury can be difficult to test.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) October 17, 2025

Deebo Samuel:​

Dan Quinn said Deebo Samuel was able to get reps in today. Good sign.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) October 17, 2025

Sam Cosmi/Jonathan Jones:​

Quinn said both Cosmi and Jonathan Jones had a good week in practice. Neither were ruled out for a return to the active roster this weekend

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) October 17, 2025
#Commanders guard Sam Cosmi had a good week per Dan Quinn. No game status update just yet.

— CWallSports (@cwallse) October 17, 2025

Treylon Burks:​

Dan Quinn on Treylon Burks. pic.twitter.com/GxziEdGc7s

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) October 17, 2025
Quinn said the team is excited for Treylon Burks. Needs to take some time to get up to speed, but they have a plan for him

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) October 17, 2025


Deebo Samuel

Playing on Sunday?:​

WR Debo Samuel said “we’ll just have to see” when asked about playing Sunday. He said the heel is “aggravating for sure”.

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 17, 2025


Practice​

Deebo Samuel:​

Deebo Samuel getting early work in during stretching. pic.twitter.com/r9WYwMfi7z

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 17, 2025
#Commanders WR Deebo Samuel is working off to the side at practice today

— Tashan Reed (@tashanreed) October 17, 2025

Terry McLaurin:​

Terry McLaurin headed to the field. pic.twitter.com/Jwe4adNGjf

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 17, 2025
Terry McLaurin just walked out to practice with his jersey on but no helmet

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) October 17, 2025

Dorance Armstrong:​

DE Dorance Armstrong just walked out here but not in uniform.

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 17, 2025

Treylon Burks:​

Treylon Burks is here and wearing no. 13. That was Tay Martin's number as of yesterday.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) October 17, 2025

Chris Rodriguez:​

RB Chris Rodriguez is out here during the media-viewing portion of practice.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) October 17, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/383031/dan-quinn-terry-mclaurin-will-miss-4th-game-just-not-ready-yet
 
Commanders vs Cowboys Friday Injury Report: Five players questionable

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The Washington Commanders held their last full practice of the week today. They are preparing for an away game against the Dallas Cowboys. The team hosted the Bears on Monday Night Football and are working on a shortened, travel-week schedule.

Dan Quinn spoke to reporters after today’s practice and ruled out WR Terry McLaurin. This is the fourth game he’s missed due to a quad injury he suffered during Week 3. There had been optimism when McLaurin returned to practice this week, but he’s “just not ready yet” according to Quinn. They didn’t place him on injured reserve because of the possibility it could have been a 2-3 week injury, but it’s a soft tissue injury and they can take longer with speed players like McLaurin.

The Commanders listed five players as questionable for the Cowboys game. Dorance Armstrong was dealing with a hamstring injury during Monday’s loss to the Chicago Bears, and exited the game a few times. He hasn’t practice all week, but was working on the side field today. He is the team’s best pass rusher this season, and would be a big loss to the defense if he can’t play on Sunday.

Dorance Armstrong is the team’s best pass rusher this season, and his absence would be felt if he can’t play against his former team this weekend. He left the Bears game a few times due to a hamstring injury, and has now been sidelined for both practices so far this week. Dan Quinn said on Wednesday they would have a better idea about where he’s at today, and not being on the practice field isn’t a good sign for his availability on on this shortened, travel week.

Deebo Samuel has been dealing with a heel injury for the last two weeks. Quinn said, last week, that they were managing the injury and he didn’t think this would be a season-long issue. Deebo has been playing through the injury, and got the heel taped up during the Bears game. He was a limited participant today, and should play through the injury like he has the last two weeks.

Zach Ertz had a vet rest day on Wednesday, but was also listed with a shoulder injury. He remained on the injury report yesterday, but was a full participant. Ertz added a calf injury to his listing today, and was only a limited participant in today’s practice. If Ertz can’t go vs the Cowboys, Washington will have John Bates, Ben Sinnott, and Colson Yankoff available.

Sam Cosmi’s 21-day practice window was opened two weeks ago. He was a full participant in practice, and could still be activated this week. If he’s not activated this week, he will need to be activated from the Reserve/PUP list before Wednesday, or he will be placed on IR for the season.

CB Jonathan Jones missed the last four games after going to IR with a hamstring injury. He also also been a full participant in practice all week, and could get activated after his 21-day practice window opened on Wednesday.

Chris Rodriguez Jr didn’t practice last week due to a calf injury. He was active on Monday night, but he only played four snaps last week (1 offense, 3 special teams). Rodriguez got a full practice in today, and doesn’t have an injury designation for the Cowboys game.

Jayden Daniels (knee) has played the last two games with a knee brace, and will continue wearing it for the foreseeable future. He was a full go in practice all week.

#WASvsDAL game status

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 17, 2025
Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/b704ffQ1KD

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) October 17, 2025

Out​


WR Terry McLaurin – Suffered a quad injury vs the Raiders, missing fourth game

Questionable


DE Dorance Armstrong – Suffered hamstring injury vs Bears, DNP all week

RT Sam Cosmi – 21-day practice window opened two weeks ago, returning from ACL surgery

TE Zach Ertz – Limited today with shoulder/calf injuries

CB Jonathan Jones – On injured reserve for four games with hamstring injury; 21-day practice window opened this week

WR Deebo Samuel – Dealing with a heel injury last two weeks, played most WR snaps vs Bears

No Injury Designation​


QB Jayden Daniels – Played last two games with brace after missing two games with a knee sprain

LB Ale Kaho – Added to the injury report with an illness on Thursday

RB Chris Rodriguez – Didn’t practice last week with a calf injury

Injured Reserve​


DE Drake Jackson – Signed this weekand placed on IR yesterday; Returning from major knee injury

WR Noah Brown – Had dealt with a knee injury since June, Missed fourth straight game with groin injury

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...riday-injury-report-five-players-questionable
 
Washington Commanders Injury Update: Deebo Samuel ruled out

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Deebo Samuel Sr has been dealing with a heel injury for the last three weeks, but has been able to play through it the last 2 games. He was listed as questionable for tomorrow’s away game against the Dallas Cowboys after a limited practice yesterday.

The Washington Commanders have now ruled Deebo out, and he won’t travel with the team to Dallas. The Commanders are already missing Terry McLaurin who was ruled out with a quad injury that has now kept him sidelined for the last four games. Noah Brown was placed on injured reserve this week after missing four games with a groin injury.

The Commanders are now down to Chris Moore, Luke McCaffrey, and Jaylin Lane available on the 53-man roster. They also have Ja’Corey Brooks, Robbie Chosen, Jacoby Jones, and Treylon Burks available on the practice squad. Burks was just signed this week, and will likely need some time to get acclimated with the new offense. Brooks was elevated last week along with Tay Martin, who was released after exhausting his three elevations. Robbie Chosen could see his first action with the Commanders tomorrow.

WR Deebo Samuel Sr. (heel) has been downgraded to OUT. He will not travel with the team to Dallas. https://t.co/IpmMsH3wH2

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 18, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/383612/wa...date-deebo-samuel-ruled-out-vs-dallas-cowboys
 
Daily Slop – 19 Oct 25 – Game Day in Dallas as Commanders look for 4th win of the season

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Commanders links

Dallas week.@BankofAmerica | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/2Xr8bNJTaG

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 19, 2025

Articles​


The Athletic (paywall)

Should the Commanders trade for a receiver? Will they be buyers or sellers? Mailbag


With a few receivers on short contracts potentially available, such as Jakobi Meyers, Calvin Ridley, Chris Olave and Jerry Jeudy, shouldn’t the Commanders look at moving a third- or fourth-round pick to get some more available personnel? Love Noah Brown and his story, but he simply misses too much time. — Chris V.

Doesn’t make much sense to me. First of all, the Commanders don’t have a 2026 fourth-round pick. They gave up theirs in the trade for Laremy Tunsil. Second, when they traded for Marshon Lattimore at the deadline last season, they were 7-2 and seemed to be further along in their rebuild than perhaps they thought initially. Now they’re 3-3 with a tough stretch ahead, the oldest roster in the NFL and clear roster deficiencies.

I also struggle with the notion of trading for a skill player. A premium position, maybe. But to give up assets for a receiver who will soon need a new deal doesn’t add up for me.

I like Joe Whitt, but at what point is his ability as a DC determined? We keep hearing the same excuses every week and that “we’ll correct it,” but then it’s SSDD. This defense seems no better than last year’s, when the offense was near-perfect. It’s not this year, and the defense does not appear capable of picking up the slack. — Mike L.

Man, you guys are quick to write off people! I’m old enough to remember when it seemed outlandish to fire a coach after only two seasons. In his defense (no pun intended), Washington’s defense — the whole roster, really — has been dealt a tough hand with all the injuries. Whitt lost a starting defensive end (Deatrich Wise Jr.) and his backup (Javontae Jean-Baptiste) for the season, lost his top backup corner (Jonathan Jones) for a stretch and lost his starting strong safety (Will Harris), too.

Plus, I don’t think the problem in most instances (not all) is the coaching. Even players themselves have said it’s been about the execution. The plays are there, but they’re not executing. I understand that it ultimately falls on the coach, but it would seem silly to get rid of a coach who could be a very fine coordinator and is well-respected by players when the real issue is execution.

The parts that do bother me, however, are the persistent problems with the basics, like tackling. Missed tackles are happening far too often, which of course leads to too many explosives. I don’t know why the team is unable to clean those up.



The Athletic (paywall)

Commanders’ Deebo Samuel out vs. Cowboys with heel injury: Who steps up?


Neither Samuel nor McLaurin will travel with the team to Dallas. Washington will face the Cowboys with three wideouts on the active roster — Luke McCaffrey, Jaylin Lane and Chris Moore — and three on the practice squad: Ja’Corey Brooks, Treylon Burks and Jacoby Jones. Washington elevated Robbie Chosen from the practice squad for Sunday’s game.



Commanders.com

Game status | Terry McLaurin ruled out vs. Cowboys


Although McLaurin is closer to making a return, the injury has not improved enough yet.

“It’s frustrating for him, because he’s working at it hard,” head coach Dan Quinn said after Friday’s practice. “It’s just not ready yet, and that sometimes happens when you have a soft tissue injury and you’re wanting it to get there. But you have to push it at the top speeds.”

The Commanders also signed former first-round pick Treylon Burks to their practice squad on Friday. Quinn said the team is excited to have Burks and has a plan in place for him, although he will need to get up to speed on the offensive system before being a meaningful contributor.

With a WR corps that struggles to get separation, opposing defenses have adjusted the way they approach the #Commanders offense.

Dallas plays the highest rate of zone across the league. I wouldn't be surprised if they go more man tomorrow.

Credit: @NickiJhabvala pic.twitter.com/J3UNTwePGf

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) October 19, 2025


Heavy.com

Zach Ertz : Expected to face Cowboys


Ertz (shoulder), who is officially listed as questionable for Sunday’s game against Dallas, is expected to play, Ian Rapoport of NFL Network reports. Ertz appears positioned for a significant role in the receiving game versus the Cowboys, with Terry McLaurin (quadriceps) and Deebo Samuel (heel) both ruled out, and Noah Brown (groin/knee) on injured reserve. The veteran tight end secured all six of his targets for 43 yards and a score during Washington’s narrow loss to the Bears in Week 6, a contest Samuel took the field for, so it won’t be surprising if Ertz sees his target share grow versus a Dallas defense that’s surrendered the most passing yards to opponents in the league through six weeks. His status may not be made official until roughly 90 minutes prior to kickoff at 4:25 p.m. ET, but Ertz is on track to take the field Sunday.



Commanders Wire

Good and bad news for the Commanders on Sunday vs. Cowboys


[T]here was some good news as the Commanders activated guard Sam Cosmi from PUP and cornerback Jonathan Jones from injured reserve (IR). The two roster spots were open because the Commanders placed Brown on IR and released defensive end Jalyn Holmes. The Commanders also elevated defensive tackle Sheldon Day from the practice squad for Sunday’s game.

.@SamCosmi's BACK pic.twitter.com/y9GOIV4K4Y

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 18, 2025

Podcasts & videos

HC Dan Quinn Previews Washington Commanders vs. Dallas Cowboys | The Gameplan | NFL​



NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

Carson Wentz officially starting for Vikings against Eagles


Philadelphia losing to their former franchise QB would not be a good feeling.

Wentz began the 2025 season as J.J. McCarthy’s backup but the second-year signal caller got hurt in Week 2. There was thought that McCarthy might return for Week 7 but he was limited in practice while Wentz was a full participant despite a recent shoulder injury. McCarthy is expected to serve as the emergency third quarterback while undrafted rookie Max Brosmer backs up Wentz.

Wentz is 2-1 in three starts for the Vikings so far this season. He’s completing 69% of his passes, which is nice, for 253 yards per game, five passing touchdowns, and two interceptions. He’s taken 12 sacks and has fumbled once.

On that note, we all know too well that Wentz is prone to losing control of the football. He’s fumbled 74 times in 102 career games played. The Eagles’ pass rush has struggled to notch sacks this season but maybe they can finally get going against Wentz playing behind a banged up offensive line?

The Eagles sacked Wentz nine times the last time (and first time) Philly’s former franchise quarterback started against his original NFL team. That was back in September 2022, when Wentz was playing for the Washington Commanders.

With the Birds entering Sunday as 2.5-point road favorites, they’re expected to win. But if Wentz can lead his Vikings to an upset, the Eagles will suffer their third straight loss to drop to 4-3. Losing would be bad enough. Losing to Wentz would only be salt in the wound.



Blogging the Boys

Cowboys fans are fed up, but what happens if they win on Sunday?


They played the Carolina Panthers, a middling team that hasn’t seen much success lately, and promptly lost to them. The deflating loss was the last straw for some fans who have already started thinking about the 2026 draft.

While the Cowboys are not totally done with the hope of playoffs in the 2025 season, they need a miracle among their defense to have any real chance. This week they get another chance to help themselves in the NFC East with a game against a direct rival. the Washington Commanders. The Cowboys can bypass the Commanders in the division race with a win, which would actually rekindle hope for some.

Just how many fans will come along for a ‘playoff chase’ if Dallas wins is a good question. Right now, they have very little support among the fanbase. We asked you earlier this week if you were confident the organization was going in the right direction, and only 11% were confident.



Blogging the Boys

5 things to watch when the Cowboys host the Commanders


A big play on special teams

Whenever these two teams square off, weird things happen on special teams. From kick returns taken to the house, to mishaps on field goals/PATs. In fact, both of those things happened in Week 12 of last year when Turpin did his infamous video game spin move and scurried 99 yards for a touchdown. Then, on the ensuing drive, it looked like the Commanders were going to tie the game when a coverage breakdown resulted in an 86-yard touchdown reception from Terry McLaurin, but a shanked extra point prevented that from happening.

The Commanders blocked a field goal last week, and you might remember them blocking a field goal a couple of years ago that ended Brandon Aubrey’s perfect season. Don’t be surprised if we see some special teams hijinks on Sunday, and it’s worth noting that the Cowboys should also get back their return specialist, Turpin, back after missing the last two games with a foot injury.

Can't make this ending up 😳

WASvsDAL– Sunday 4:25pm ET on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/iTUrDYVpBX

— NFL (@NFL) October 18, 2025


ESPN

The vibes are unusually high for the Giants


Winning cures all woes in the NFL. It’s the ultimate deodorant. The Giants (2-4) had lost 18 of their past 22 games entering last Thursday night against the Eagles. They had dropped eight straight in the division. That left the fan base anticipating the next collapse, with very little on the horizon to keep them excited.

There was a feeling of impending doom.

Wins over the Chargers and Eagles have seemingly changed everything. They’ve provided hope for a franchise that was lost for the previous two and a half years. The fans have been reinvigorated by the results and the way that Dart and fellow rookie Cam Skattebo play — neither are willing to concede a yard and both play with a youthful exuberance that captivated the national audience on Thursday night.

It has created an optimistic atmosphere around the team that hasn’t been there for years.


NFL league links

Articles​


Washington Post (paywall)

These four NFL division leaders are on borrowed time


The stats and game film show the 49ers, Eagles, Chargers and Bills might not be on top of their divisions much longer.

Philadelphia Eagles

It’s kind of unfathomable for the defending Super Bowl champions to have been outgained in every game this season. But that’s the case. The Eagles (4-2) have been outscored 52-17 in the past five quarters alone.

Injuries to the offensive line have been crushing. Philadelphia has allowed the third-highest pressure rate in the NFL, and Saquon Barkley is somehow averaging 71.1 fewer rushing yards than a year ago. Jalen Hurts seems unwilling to risk interceptions by throwing into tight windows, wide receiver A.J. Brown is miffed again, and the Eagles are averaging just 4.7 yards per play (tied for 28th entering Week 7).

All of that may be symptomatic of a larger issue that is undermining the offense. (There is more hope for a defensive reversal with powerful defensive tackle Jalen Carter vowing to play this weekend.)

Offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo “is horses—,” said one general manager who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he’s not allowed to publicly discuss other team’s personnel. “That’s their biggest problem.”

Another general manager opined about the ability of Coach Nick Sirianni, a former wide receiver and wide receivers coach, to take over the offense. Hmm.


aBit o’Twitter

We have made the following roster moves:
– Activated G Sam Cosmi off the Reserve/Physically Unable to Perform List
– Activated CB Jonathan Jones off the Reserve/Injured List
– Released DE Jalyn Holmes
– Elevated WR Robbie Chosen and DT Sheldon Day from the practice squad pic.twitter.com/Pt2wFAfOK2

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) October 18, 2025
Commanders LB Jordan Magee was fined $5,849 for a blindside block in the third quarter against the Bears.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) October 18, 2025
The #Cowboys terrible defense actually leads the #NFL in "hurry percentage" at 16.3% of dropbacks, per @pfref #Commanders are way down at 4.7%.

Last year, in both matchups, the Boys def front 7 largely controlled both games, especially against JD 5. However, no Micah & D-Law.

— Chris Russell AKA the 🐓🐓! (@Russellmania621) October 19, 2025
As a matter of fact, the #NFL average for 32 teams per @pfref is 136.4 points allowed.

The #Commanders have allowed the 126 points, which is clearly below the league average.

Washington is 13th in points allowed.

23.2 PPG allowed per team across #NFL. @Commanders are 21.0

— Chris Russell AKA the 🐓🐓! (@Russellmania621) October 19, 2025
No team has played less man coverage than Dallas according to TruMedia. And no one has played more zone. https://t.co/2ddH1Umol8

— John Keim (@john_keim) October 18, 2025
Friday Injury Report for the #Rams and #Jaguars.

No Puka Nacua or Devin Lloyd this weekend. #DUUUVAL pic.twitter.com/H3HQz78hGJ

— Touchdown Jaguars! Podcast (@TDJaguarsPod) October 17, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...-as-commanders-look-for-4th-win-of-the-season
 
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