News Commanders Team Notes

Washington Commanders Roster Moves: Wide receivers signed from the practice squad; Trey Amos to IR

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The Washington Commanders announced five roster moves as they get settled in for their extended stay in Spain. They are playing the Miami Dolphins in Madrid, and have been dealing with new injuries every week. Rookie CB Trey Amos suffered a fractured fibula, and has been placed on injured reserve, ending his season. The Commanders recently placed veteran CB Marshon Lattimore on IR after he tore his ACL. The defense continues to get thinner due to injury.

The Commanders didn’t sign any defensive backs today, but they did sign a pair of WRs from the practice squad. Robbie Chosen has been elevated twice, most recently against the Lions last week. He was targeted eight times over those two games, and caught five passes for 53 yards. Jacoby Jones hasn’t played in a game this season, and has been with Washington since signing as an UDFA after this year’s draft.

The Commanders filled their spots on the practice squad by signing WR River Cracraft and DE DeMarcus Walker. The Walker signing was reported earlier, with reporters speculating he could be elevated for Sunday morning’s game. That woudn’t be a good sign for DE Jalyn Holmes who was a healthy scratch last week. Cracraft is a blveteran WR who was with the Commanders in August.

We have made the following roster moves:
– Placed CB Trey Amos on the Reserve/Injured List
– Signed WR Robbie Chosen and WR Jacoby Jones from the practice squad
– Signed WR River Cracraft and DE DeMarcus Walker to the practice squad pic.twitter.com/Dfaj4Dfy6N

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 11, 2025

We’re proud to represent Demarcus Walker as he begins his next chapter with the Washington Commanders 🏛️🔥

Welcome to the VSG Family, @livinglegend_44! 🏡#TeamVSG pic.twitter.com/kwjRCyeJWO

— Vanguard Sports Group (@VanguardSG) November 11, 2025
Walker traveled to Madrid, so he could be a possible elevation for Washington’s game on Sunday. https://t.co/TdZGLryrSp

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 11, 2025
Commanders got a new pass rusher. Former second-round pick by the Broncos. https://t.co/4iF7TJc7om

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 11, 2025

Def InterceptionsFumblesTackles
SeasonAgeTeamLgPosGGSIntYdsIntTDLngPDFFFmbFRYdsFRTDSkCombSoloAstTFLQBHitsSftyAVAwards
201723DENNFLDE10000000000001.07701501
201824DENNFLDE3000000001001.04221101
201925DENNFLDE10100001000004.0221395502
202026DENNFLDE13400000100004.518993503
202127HOUNFLDE13200001100002.03121104702
202228TENNFLDE17600000000007.032239101604
202329CHINFLDL171200000000003.530171391606
202430CHINFLRDE171700000000003.547252271608
8 Yrs10042000022010026.5191117744071027
17 Game Avg17700000000004.532201371203
DEN (4 Yrs)365000011010010.5513120101607
CHI (2 Yrs)342900000000007.07742351632014
TEN (1 Yr)17600000000007.032239101604
HOU (1 Yr)13200001100002.03121104702

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 11/11/2025.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...igned-from-the-practice-squad-trey-amos-to-ir
 
Dan Quinn: Terry McLaurin, Will Harris, and Noah Brown at today’s practice in Spain

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Dan Quinn spoke to the media before the Commanders’ first practice in Spain. They will use Real Madrid’s practice facilities this week, but also had workouts at the facilities of the European Football League’s Madrid Bravos. The team held a light practice/walkthrough after he spoke to the media.

Several injured players are with the team in Spain as they prepare to return this season. The Commanders announced this morning that they have opened the 21-day practice window for S Will Harris to return from injured reserve. He suffered a broken fibula in Week 3, but was expected to return later in the season.

WRs Terry McLaurin (quad) and Noah Brown (groin) were both at today’s practice. Quinn told reporters on Monday that McLaurin would travel with the team as part of his recovery process, and he started on-field work this week. He is not playing this week, but could return in Week 13 after the team’s bye. Noah Brown hasn’t practice since getting injured in Week 2. Quinn also confirmed that RB Chris Rodriguez, who left the Lions game with a shoulder injury, will play his week.

The Commanders had some serious discipline issues during Sunday’s blowout loss to the Lions. Team captain Daron Payne was ejected from the game for striking Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown, and lost his appeal of the 1-game suspension he received on Monday. Javon Kinlaw was penalized on the next play for making contact with a ref, and he was still upset about Payne’s ejection after the game. Quinn addressed the frustration players are feeling during a losing streak full of blowout losses at halftime, and talked to the team about the self-discipline needed to not make costly mistakes.

Second-year DT Johnny Newton will be getting more playing time inside with Payne suspended. He had been used at DE due to multiple injuries at the position this season.

Dan Quinn announced on Monday that he would be taking over playcalling on defense from DC Joe Whitt Jr. He said he will be relying on Senior VP of Football Initiatives Dave Gardi and Assistant HC/Offensive Pass Game Coordinator Brian Johnson as he adds more responsibilities during the game.

Madrid Bravos:​

Buenos dias from Dan Quinn, repping the Madrid Bravos of the European League of Football.

Quinn says the #Commanders did their workout at the Bravos' facility this morning. pic.twitter.com/OcGBMTapwc

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) November 12, 2025
Dan Quinn enters wearing a Madrid Bravos jersey. The Bravos play in the European League of Football. Yes, American football. They started in 2024; the Commanders had workouts at that facility before coming to Real Madrid’s place. pic.twitter.com/uocnOBsmZr

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 12, 2025

Terry McLaurin:​

Dan Quinn says Terry McLaurin will "begin the on-field portions of the rehab" in Madrid this week. A positive step, but no set timetable on when he'll return to games.

"Sometimes these injuries take longer than you want," Quinn said.

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) November 12, 2025

Help with game day decisions with new play calling duties added:​

Dan Quinn said he'll "lean in" on Brian Johnson on game days. Dave Gardi also helps Quinn quite a bit on game days and he'll continue to do so.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 12, 2025

Johnny Newton’s increased role with Daron Payne suspended:​

Dan Quinn said Johnny Newton will step up and fill in for Daron Payne on the inside.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 12, 2025

Self-control/discipline:​

DQ says he challenged the whole team on the discipline issues from last week. “Sometimes it’s going to feel shi**y” but you have to keep it together

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) November 12, 2025

Chris Rodriguez playing this week(injured shoulder vs Lions):​

Quinn said RB Chris Rodriguez will play Sunday.

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 12, 2025

Mike McDaniel:​

Dan Quinn called Miami coach Mike McDaniel “one of my favorite coaches”. McDaniel was on Quinn’s staff in Atlanta. pic.twitter.com/JaWEjahfLJ

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 12, 2025


Practice​

Real Madrid:​

Real Madrid
36 La Liga Titles
15 Euro Cup/Champions League Titles
Host to the Commanders practices all week pic.twitter.com/BomFVGWFvt

— Mitchell Tischler (@Mitch_Tischler) November 12, 2025
Pretty cool scene at Real Madrid pic.twitter.com/OPw6Wcchyl

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) November 12, 2025

Noah Brown sighting:​

Noah Brown is here. pic.twitter.com/znZIdcvvyY

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 12, 2025
Good to see Noah Brown back on the practice field moving around pic.twitter.com/qHcv4QjiVj

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) November 12, 2025
#Commanders WR Noah Brown is here in Madrid, doing some rehab drills off to the side.

Believe this is the first time we've seen him out there since he went on IR.

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) November 12, 2025

Will Harris:​

Safety Will Harris, whose 21-day window opened today, is out here. pic.twitter.com/fpjhXyWfD5

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 12, 2025

Light first practice:​

#Commanders are keeping it pretty light here in their first practice in Madrid. Basically a walkthrough. No helmets or pads.

— Tashan Reed (@tashanreed) November 12, 2025




Sam Cosmi​

Time change/TikTok food recommendations:​

Funny moment with Sam Cosmi. He said he was still getting used to the time change. “I woke up at 5 this morning. And I was really hungry. So I went on TikTok to look up a bunch of food places.” Said he’s going to go headfirst into some Spanish food later.

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 12, 2025
Reporter: "Are you going on TikTok for food recs?"

Bobby Wagner, turning to Frankie Luvu: "You got a TikTok?"

Luvu: "I mean, it do have everything."

I have never felt so old.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 12, 2025

Dan Quinn replacing Joe Whitt at DC:​

Sam Cosmi explains that Dan Quinn told the team of the change at defensive coordinator and the team has stuck together through it all.

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) November 11, 2025

Von Miller​

Dan Quinn replacing Joe Whitt at DC:​

#Commanders OLB Von Miller, when asked by @Nell_BTP and @TheDentonDay about Dan Quinn taking over defensive play-calling from Joe Whitt.

"In this environment, it always falls back on the coach, even though it's not the coach's fault." pic.twitter.com/iyLaQLmG6h

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) November 11, 2025

Injuries:

More Von Miller, on injuries: "Of course you want to say 'next man up, next man up.' But we've been hit hard with it."

He later added: "The coaches are doing a great job, with everything that we have, to put the best product that we can out there."

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) November 11, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/pressers/...is-and-noah-brown-at-todays-practice-in-spain
 
Make your voice heard: What’s in store for Sunday morning in Madrid?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Washington Commanders fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Today, we have two simple binary questions in the Reacts survey.

Question 1


The first is our standard question that is posed every week of the season (until late-November, anyway), asking about your confidence in the team’s direction.

Question 2


Our second question asks who will win the Washington-Miami game on Sunday in Madrid.

Comments & Results


Of course, we invite you to answer the survey questions below, but also feel free to expand on your answers and provide nuance in the comments section. I rely on those comments when discussing the results of the survey when they are posted in a separate article the next few days.

POLL QUESTIONS​


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...d-whats-in-store-for-sunday-morning-in-madrid
 
Future Hogs – Week 11: A look at college football players who could help the Washington Commanders

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Week 11 saw many of the top teams in the College Football Playoff rankings get wins. Ohio State, Texas A&M, Alabama, and Georgia all won fairly easily against conference opponents. Indiana and Oregon needed late-game heroics in order to win, but got it done when it mattered. The big matchup of the weekend came courtesy of the Big 12, as unbeaten BYU faced Texas Tech. The Red Raiders defense, led by linebacker Jacob Rodriguez and pass rushers David Bailey and Romello Height, suffocated BYU and handed the Cougars their first loss. BYU fell to #12 in the College Football Playoff rankings, still higher than any other ACC team.

Week 12 matchups feature two games in the SEC with playoff implications. #4 Alabama will face #11 Oklahoma, and #5 Georgia faces #10 Texas. The top team in the SEC, #3 Texas A&M, will have a home game against South Carolina. The Big Ten’s top teams have some interesting matchups. UCLA has pulled off improbable wins, but can they take down #1 Ohio State? Wisconsin upset Washington last week and will look for another upset this week against #2 Indiana. #9 Notre Dame needs to be on upset alert on the road against #22 Pittsburgh.

Below are a few players who had a good week and might be able to help out the Commanders. Let me know what you think about these prospects and feel free to post players that stood out to you.


Joe Fagnano | QB | Senior| UConn​


Earlier this season, I mentioned UConn wide receiver Skyler Bell as a draft prospect that could help the Commanders. His quarterback should be on their radar too. Joe Fagnano has not played a lot of Power Five competition, but he is putting up quality stats against whomever he plays. The 6’4”, 225 lb signal caller has the second-most passing yards in college football to go with 25 TDs and not a single interception. Clearly, he is making good decisions, but he is also an accurate passer. He has just a slight windup in his throwing motion, but his mechanics are fairly clean otherwise. He’s also mobile enough to threaten a defense with his legs. Two concerns for Fagnano as a prospect. One, he’s 25, and two, he’s suffered a season-ending shoulder injury in the past. Fagnano went 28 of 40 for 316 yards and three touchdowns while adding 51 yards on the ground in a win over Duke.

JUICE VEREEN! 💪 Huskies answer quick! 😤 pic.twitter.com/gmRqseOlPD

— UConn Football (@UConnFootball) November 8, 2025
SKYLER BELL‼️

Huskies lead 17-14. pic.twitter.com/GodJSOdSeR

— UConn Football (@UConnFootball) November 8, 2025
HUSKIES TAKE THE LEAD‼️ pic.twitter.com/9O2dD33sAy

— UConn Football (@UConnFootball) November 8, 2025
JOE IS HIM.‼️😤

Huskies 2-point attempt is successful! pic.twitter.com/CLKesFnd7S

— UConn Football (@UConnFootball) November 8, 2025

Emmett Johnson | RB | Junior | Notre Dame​


Sacrilege for a football team in Washington to have a running back named Emmett! This Emmett might be worth it. Emmett Johnson, the 5’11”, 200 lb running back for the Cornhuskers has topped 1,000 yards rushing for the season along with 300 yards in the passing game. Johnson has excellent burst and quickness. Watch and you’ll see him explode through the line or accelerate away from defenders after securing a catch. He’s not a power runner that breaks a ton of tackles, but his quick cuts allow him to elude defenders in space. In a win over UCLA, Johnson ran for 129 yards and a touchdown on 28 attempts and caught three passes for 103 yards and two touchdowns.

🌽 32 Touches
🌽 129 RUSH YDS
🌽 103 REC YDS
🌽 3 TD@HuskerFootball RB Emmett Johnson is the only FBS player this season with 💯 rushing and receiving yards in the same game 🔥 pic.twitter.com/Yo2lFfVJkk

— Big Ten Network (@BigTenNetwork) November 9, 2025

Ian Strong | WR | Junior | Rutgers​


Sorry, Maryland fans, but Rutgers got the better of you this past weekend with Ian Strong being a big reason why. The big receiving target has been productive all season for the Scarlet Knights. At 6’3”, 211 lbs, Strong is too physical for many corners that try to press him. Once he defeats press, he stacks defenders and has enough speed to beat them downfield. If they play off him, he is a good enough route runner to use slants and curls to make positive yardage. My concern now is, despite strong hands and the ability to make contested catches, how much separation he’ll create at the next level. Strong had five catches for 88 yards and three touchdowns in the win over the Terps.

⚔️TOUCHDOWN RUTGERS⚔️

Athan Kaliakmanis (@aajk_23) finds a WIDE OPEN Ian Strong (@IanStrong23) down the field for the 45 yard score!

➡️ https://t.co/fB5CeHwBb3 pic.twitter.com/seE1KCTDdm

— Rutgers Scarlet Knights | The Knight Report (@RutgersOn3) November 8, 2025
Ian Strong 💪

The @RFootball WR's second TD of the day puts the Scarlet Knights back on top.

📺: FS1 pic.twitter.com/MRbaU6xutD

— Big Ten Football (@B1Gfootball) November 8, 2025
Ian Strong is having a DAY 🔥 @RFootball

3rd TD for the WR pic.twitter.com/UqSPF1olqw

— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 8, 2025

Benjamin Brahmer | TE | Junior | Iowa State​


The statline for Benjamin Brahmer isn’t the most impressive with just one catch for 27 yards and a touchdown, but he’s an interesting prospect to consider if he declares for the draft. He’s a huge target at 6’7”, 255 lbs, one of the reasons he has the second-most receiving touchdowns as a tight end. It also makes him an excellent target in the middle of the field. As a blocker, he certainly has a willingness and flashes good technique and leverage in the run game. Look at #18 control his defender and get him to the ground on the running play below.

BENJAMIN. BRAHMER. Athlete.

TD Clones‼️#Big12FB | 📺 @CFBONFOX pic.twitter.com/GOCNxnKZ5j

— Big 12 Conference (@Big12Conference) November 8, 2025
Carson Hansen is THAT guy 🤯
Hansen Highlights vs. TCU 🎬#Big12FB | @CycloneFB pic.twitter.com/ItUQ66TdAS

— Big 12 Studios (@big12studios) November 9, 2025

Vega Ioane | OG | RS Junior | Penn State​


This is not the season Penn State hoped for: highly touted QB out for the season, head coach fired, longest losing streak in a long time. Yet, they almost pulled off an upset of Indiana. One of their most consistent players has been Vega Ioane. Arguably the best guard in this class, Ioane is a behemoth at 6’4”, 328 lbs. If he squares you up and gets his hands on you, he’s going to put you on skates or on the ground. It is a testament to how strong he is. He can also do some pulling and some zone blocking, but it isn’t the strongest part of his game. He’s very much a phone booth player that needs to improve his lateral quickness. With that said, his physicality and toughness would be welcome additions to the Commanders’ line.

I'm loving this guard class. Vega Ioane is a brick wall pic.twitter.com/tmdIgmELix

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) November 6, 2025

Isaiah Smith | DE | Senior| SMU​


The Commanders need pass rush help and should consider it early in the 2026 NFL Draft. If they want to add another pass rusher late in the draft, or as an undrafted free agent, Isaiah Smith is a player to watch. A DC native and St. John’s alum, Smith has been productive for the Mustangs for several seasons. He is a slightly smaller defensive end with a lean build at 6’4”, 248 lbs, but he uses his length to beat tackles around the edge. If that doesn’t work, Smith has shown the ability to uses heavy hands to stun blockers or bull rush them. He has a high motor and never gives up on a play. What will have him be a later pick is the lack of explosion and speed at the position, and the need to develop additional pass rush moves. Smith left it all out on the field against Boston College with nine tackles, four tackles for a loss, and 3.5 sacks.


Sonny Styles | LB | Senior | Ohio State​


Sonny Styles began his career at Ohio State as a safety but transitioned to linebacker permanently last season. Styles mans the middle of the Buckeyes’ defense and brings the instincts and athleticism of a safety to the position. This allows him to not only play sideline to sideline and blitz effectively, but to drop in coverage and make an impact there. The safety background allows him to play man or zone well. Styles has prototypical size at 6’5”, 243 lbs and plays like it. He has no problem taking on blockers, but he needs to continue improving his ability to shed those blockers to make plays. Styles had five total tackles and a PBU in the Buckeyes win over Purdue.

Sonny Styles is playing like a lottery pick. Would be my LB1 in most classes pic.twitter.com/9CfysTIVwN

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) November 11, 2025

Will Lee III | CB | Senior | Texas A&M​


Texas A&M had no problem with Missouri this past weekend. There is a ton of draft-eligible talent on the field for the Aggies, from receiver KC Concepcion to pass rusher Cashius Howell. One player that should get a little more attention is corner Will Lee III. He’s worked his way up from JUCO to Kansas State to Texas A&M. Now, he’s the top corner and it’s easy to see why. Lee has very long arms that he uses to press receivers and get his hands on passes. He has good footwork and agility to stay in phase with receivers throughout routes. If there is a concern I have about Lee III, it’s his long speed. He’s stayed with NFL-caliber receivers downfield, but he’s also had to use his length to recover when beat deep. Lee isn’t shy about making hits. He finished the game against Missouri with three tackles and a PBU.

Texas A&M CB Will Lee III is one of the best man coverage corners in this class. He's patient in press, trusts his foot speed and hip flip to turn and run, and has the deceleration to mirror receivers on curls and comeback routes. Nice job attacking the catch point for the PBU pic.twitter.com/EFwoq5CibY

— Daniel Harms (@InHarmsWay19) November 6, 2025
Texas A&M's Will Lee III (4) is a well-rounded CB who can play press m/m, zone, & match in addition to an enthusiasm for the physical aspects of the game. While the catch was made, it was impressive to see him phase w/ Eric Singleton Jr. #GoPackGo #GigEm #NFL #TitletownTakes pic.twitter.com/RtGXEmrHNE

— Titletown Takes (@TitletownTakes_) October 23, 2025
Texas A&M's highest graded defensive players against Missouri, by grade, per PFF:

▪️Defensive – Will Lee III (75.5)
▪️Run Defense – Marcus Ratcliffe (74.7)
▪️Tackling – Marcus Ratcliffe (81.4)
▪️Pressure – Daymion Sanford (87.3)
▪️Coverage – Will Lee III (75.0) pic.twitter.com/ifXt7ou4wY

— TexAgs (@TexAgs) November 9, 2025

Keionte Scott| Safety | Senior | Miami​


Miami won comfortably over Syracuse with their defense playing a major role. They shut out the Orange in the first half and only allowed 10 points in the game. Safety Keionte Scott was instrumental in the success of the defense. The 6’0”, 195 lb transfer from Auburn is a physical player that throws his body around to make plays, but he plays with discipline. Scott plays more of a strong safety role for the Hurricanes, patrolling the short and intermediate areas of the field. His excellent closing speed allows him to run down receivers in the flat, blitz from the slot, or break on passes. He finished the day with a sack, a pass deflection, and a pick six.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/college-p...yers-who-could-help-the-washington-commanders
 
Thursday Night Football: New York Jets @ New England Patriots

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Week 11 of the 2025 season kicks off with an AFC East matchup between the New York Jets and the New England Patriots. The Jets are a 2-win team while the Patriots are riding high at 8-2. Drake Maye is currently tied with Matthew Stafford for the best NFL MVP odds at +300. The Jets are starting Justin Fields and he was not good in a win over the Browns. The Patriots are big home favorites, and this could get ugly fast.

Matchup: New York Jets (2-7) vs New England Patriots (8-2)

Date/Time: Thursday, November 13 | 8:20 p.m. ET

Location: Gillette Stadium | Foxborough, MA

TELEVISION: Amazon Prime Video

Mike Tirico (play-by-play)

Kirk Herbstreit (game analyst)

Kaylee Hartung (sideline reporter)

RADIO: Sirius XM NFL

New York: XM/SXM 226, Internet 824

New England: XM/SXM 225, Internet 821

National: 88

Live Streaming: Amazon, NFL+, fuboTV

Odds: Patriots -12.5, 43.5 O/U

New York: +610

New England: -900

Prediction: Patriots 30 – Jets 13

SB Nation Blogs: Gang Green Nation | Pats Pulpit


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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...t-football-new-york-jets-new-england-patriots
 
Daily Slop – 14 Nov 25 – Commanders DT Johnny Newton will start on Sunday in place of Daron Payne

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Commanders links

Articles​


ESPN

Madrid’s NFL moment: Commanders, Dolphins kick off NFL’s Spain era


Both teams enter the historic matchup with something to prove. The Commanders, winless in international play (0-1-1), turn to veteran quarterback Marcus Mariota for his fifth start of the season while Jayden Daniels remains sidelined. On the opposing side, the Dolphins are 2-5 in international regular-season games and have lost four straight overseas.

Adding to the storyline is a special connection under center: both Mariota and Tua Tagovailoa hail from Saint Louis High School in Honolulu, Hawai’i — where Tagovailoa first met Mariota at a passing academy when he was in fourth grade.



NFL.com

NFL Week 11 picks: Upset and score predictions, matchup analysis for every game

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Why Tom picked the Dolphins: For perhaps the first time this season, they’re entering a game looking like the more functional, stable side, carrying some honest-to-god mojo from Week 10’s impressive win over Buffalo. Could Miami actually gather some — lord help us — momentum here? It’s hard to imagine a more appealing foil for Mike McDaniel’s crew than the Commanders, whose defense is stained by the highest EPA per dropback mark (0.22) in the NFL, per Next Gen Stats, while allowing a league-high passer rating of 112.7 to opposing QBs. Tua Tagovailoa thus has a great chance to post a passer rating of 80-plus for the second consecutive game, which would mark the first time he’s done that since Week 5 against Carolina. He also has some capable offensive playmakers (De’Von Achane and Jaylen Waddle) at his disposal, while Washington will not have Terry McLaurin, Daron Payne or, you know, the one player who basically makes that whole operation go (Jayden Daniels). Unless you’re predicting some international hijinks, it’s difficult to justify going against McDaniel’s squad here.



Washington Post (paywall)

In Spain, the Commanders are trying to interpret what has gone wrong


A trip that was supposed to be a showcase instead is a reckoning for a team on a five-game skid.

Five straight losses will make the sturdiest franchise wobble. What has happened over the past month — with the past four losses each by at least three touchdowns — can make you wonder whether the franchise was stable in the first place.

Think about when Commanders fans considered making this sojourn. When the game was announced in May, Washington was an NFL darling, a surprise NFC finalist with an adult general manager who seemed adept at roster construction, an introspective coach who doubled as a culture-builder and a comet of a young quarterback who made anything possible. Shelling out a few grand to see your exciting, contending team in an exotic destination could have seemed tempting, even logical.

Given all that, it’s almost inconceivable that the Commanders outfit that is practicing this week at the headquarters of Real Madrid, the soccer powerhouse, feels so unsteady. Adam Peters is still the general manager. Dan Quinn is still the coach. Jayden Daniels is still the quarterback — even if he’s on the shelf. This was supposed to be a showcase. Instead, the Commanders are in shambles.

It makes this year hard to assess. Is this a cursed season for a franchise that remains on the ascent? Or is this a team that a year ago jelled in a magical way but is too flawed to repeat it without a true rebuild?

That’s what this week against the Dolphins will help us answer. That’s what the six games after that are for. This week’s stage will be spectacular. But the Commanders could be christening NFL expansion to Mars and the issues would remain the same. They are real. They are extensive. No one is immune from scrutiny. Buenos dias? Not at the moment.



Commanders.com

Practice notes | Defensive players know they must execute better, no matter who’s calling plays


it’s clear over the past month that Washington has not played up to its expectations. Over the last three games, the Commanders’ defense ranks 31st in yards per game, last in passing yards given up, 30th in sack percentage and 29th in third-down conversion rate. They’ve lost by at least 21 points in each of their last four games with two squads — the Dallas Cowboys and Detroit Lions — hanging 40 points on them.

So, it’s hard to blame Quinn for wanting to take more serious steps to pin down exactly what hasn’t been working for the Commanders’ defense.

“I think now just after watching and reviewing the tape, we felt off,” Quinn said. “You’ve heard me say that word and so I thought this is the time to add into that and lean in. Joe and I have got a great vibe together. We’ve worked together through our time in Dallas and we’ll lean back into that space where he’ll help me along the way and all that leads up into the game and calling it into that space.”

Still, Wagner and fellow linebacker Frankie Luvu want the players to own their mistakes rather than blame the scheme. Miscommunication errors and a lack of execution, both factors the players can control, have been a problem for the Commanders all season, and it has led to explosive plays from offenses. For example, Jordan Magee watched as Jahmyr Gibbs ran past him for the opening score of the Lions game, while Sam Darnold completed 17 consecutive passes before getting a drop.



A to Z Sports

Johnny Newton to start with Daron Payne out


Payne has been one of the more productive players on defense, even with all of their struggles, and he leaves big shoes to be filled. Quinn talked about how much of a loss it is for the defense, and Johnny Newton will be the starter on Sunday with Payne out.

“Yeah, we’ll miss Daron [Payne] for sure inside,” Quinn said. “His presence, the physicality. Johnny Newton and Javon Kinlaw will be the two who will feature the most inside. And then Eddie Goldman and Sheldon Day would be there behind them. But we’re pleased with the development that Johnny’s taking, especially on the pass rush side. He has had some injuries coming into last year and I felt like it took him this season, this preseason, to hit his stride and hit the next spot. And I feel like he’s doing that. So, we’ll lean in more on him for sure here.”



Commanders Wire

Brothers face off in Week 11 when Commanders battle Dolphins in Madrid


[A]fter an impressive training camp, the Commanders inserted [Chris] Paul as the new starting left guard in Week 3. He’s remained there ever since, with Washington coaches repeatedly praising his performance.

Paul isn’t the only member of his family having a banner 2025: Patrick Paul, Chris’ younger brother by three years, is in his second NFL season. A second-round pick from Houston in 2024, Patrick appeared in all 17 games as a rookie for the Miami Dolphins last season. He started three games, but this season, Paul has taken over as Miami’s starting left tackle and has quickly developed into one of the NFL’s best young offensive tackles.

On Sunday, the Paul brothers will reunite as opponents. While they won’t share the field together, it will be a special moment for them.

This week, the Commanders and Dolphins are playing in Madrid. It’s the NFL’s first-ever game in Madrid. It allowed the two brothers to spend some time together ahead of Week 11, something they’ve been unable to do this year.



Front Office Sports

NFL Caps 7-Game International Slate With Spain Debut—Plans for More


Like other international matchups this season, Sunday’s game will include a larger-than-normal halftime show, with Bizarrap and Daddy Yankee taking the stage in Madrid.

Spain is the fourth European nation to host a regular-season NFL game (along with England, Germany, and Ireland), and will likely be in line to host more in the future, as the league continues chasing its international expansion goals of one day playing 16 games per season outside the U.S.

This season’s seven games abroad are two more than the previous high of five in each of the previous three seasons

In 2026, the NFL will make its [regular season] debut in Australia, as the Rams host a to-be-determined opponent in Melbourne. The league is also hopeful it will return to Mexico City for the first time since 2022, as renovations at Azteca Stadium will finally be completed.



ESPN

NFL Week 11 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips

Dolphins (3-7) at Commanders (3-7) in Madrid​


9:30 a.m. ET | NFL Network
ESPN BET:
MIA -2.5 (47.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Dolphins: Miami joyously celebrated last week’s win over the Buffalo Bills, but the celebrations ended as soon as the team boarded the plane to Madrid. Fullback Alec Ingold credited the Dolphins’ coaching staff for establishing a 24-hour rule and keeping them focused as they attempt to put together their first winning streak of the season. Coach Mike McDaniel insisted that looking to more than just the next game is “a recipe for failure” and that the Dolphins are hyper focused on the Commanders. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

What we’re hearing on the Commanders: Washington coach Dan Quinn took over defensive playcalling duties, but it remains to be seen what the Commanders can correct with a different playcaller. While their pass coverage will be impacted by losing both starting outside corners — Trey Amos (fibula) and Marshon Lattimore (ACL) — the defense ranks 28th versus the run over the past five weeks and will be without tackle Daron Payne (suspension). “We’ll miss Daron for sure inside, his presence, his physicality,” Quinn said. Payne will be replaced by second-year man Jer’Zhan Newton, who isn’t as big or as strong as Payne but can win with quickness. — John Keim

Stat to know: The Commanders average 4.9 yards per rush, sixth highest in the NFL. On the contrary, the Dolphins allow 4.9 yards per rush, fifth worst in the NFL. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Commanders RB Jacory Croskey-Merritt will record at least 80 rushing yards for the first time in over a month. Why? Because the Commanders are averaging 2.5 yards per carry after contact (second most in the NFL), while the Dolphins’ defense has allowed 2.2 yards per carry after contact (fourth most). — Walder

Injuries: Dolphins | Commanders

Maldonado’s pick: Dolphins 20, Commanders 12
Moody’s pick: Dolphins 32, Commanders 20
Walder’s pick: Commanders 27, Dolphins 21
FPI prediction: WSH, 51.9% (by an average of 0.4 points)



Washington Post (paywall)

In between football, Commanders soak in cultural experience in Madrid


Washington’s players and coaches have billed this week in Madrid as a much-needed opportunity to bond and potentially start to turn around their season. A win against the Miami Dolphins on Sunday would end a five-game skid ahead of next week’s bye.

On a more fundamental level, though, players and coaches have also acknowledged how cool it has been just to be here. They have spent their free time roaming the city’s streets and their evenings sharing meals at local restaurants — ranging from Japanese to Mediterranean cuisine, in addition to local fare.

The Commanders opted to spend the week in Madrid acclimating rather than flying in on Friday as some teams have done for other international games.

Washington’s practices have been on soccer turf at the immaculate facility that usually houses global powerhouse Real Madrid. Their game will be the first professional football game played at iconic Bernabéu Stadium.

While the matchup will feature a pair of 3-7 teams, it is nevertheless expected to draw a sizable crowd. When asked what Spanish fans can expect, Frankie Luvu said there will be “a lot of violence,” at least relative to the type of football they’re used to.

“I hope they’re loud for our defense and quiet for our offense,” Cosmi added. “That would help a lot.”


Podcasts & videos

High-Level NFL Run Schemes + Miami Dolphins Trickery | Film Breakdown | Washington Commanders | NFL​


🎙 Commanders have a stadium architect. Big step. There are also two new WRs on the roster including one surprising addition. @michaelpinRVA joins to discuss where Washington goes from here, Daron Payne and the importance of good vibes.https://t.co/cFTUSNjspp

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) November 13, 2025

Episode 1,198 – Guest: @BenStandig.
– discussion of Terry McLaurin's lack of visibility
– will/should Jayden Daniels play again this season?
– where are we now on Kliff Kingsbury leaving this offseason for a head-coaching job?

React to Dan Quinn commentshttps://t.co/zw1pAP9QFk

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) November 13, 2025

Upcoming opponent


The Phinsider

Miami Dolphins getting healthier ahead of clash with Washington Commanders


On Wednesday, starting right tackle Austin Jackson practiced with the club for the first time since injuring his toe during the team’s week one contest against the Indianapolis Colts. He remained a limited participant in practice on Thursday as well. EDGE rusher Chop Robinson — dealing with a concussion — missed Miami’s game against the Buffalo Bills last week, but returned to practice for the Dolphins this week and looks to be ready to suit up against Washington on Sunday.

After starting the practice week on the sidelines, Miami’s starting center Aaron Brewer returned to a limited practice on Thursday while he nurses foot and ankle injuries. Starting cornerback Rasul Douglas — also dealing with foot and ankle injures — followed Brewer’s lead and practiced in a limited fashion on Thursday as well.


Discussion topics


The Athletic (paywall)

QB future for all 32 NFL teams: Daniel Jones, Tua Tagovailoa among intriguing decisions ahead

We’re happy with our established franchise QB​


Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys

Signed through:
2028 | APY rank: 1 | EPA rank: 10

The Cowboys are 6-10-1 with Prescott in the lineup since they signed him to his latest extension before last season. That is mostly because only Jaxson Dart and Mac Jones have gotten worse support from their defenses among 34 qualifying quarterbacks over that span. For comparison, Burrow has an 11-8 starting record over that span while his defense has, on average, been just as bad (-8.3 EPA per start). (You can learn more about the Betrayal Index, a metric that was conceived to measure this dynamic, in the video below from last month.)

Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles

Signed through:
2028 | APY rank: 11 | EPA rank: 13

You won’t find Hurts among the stat leaders in passing on a team that leans into the ground game behind an elite offensive line. But in two Super Bowls, he has 525 yards passing, 142 yards rushing, seven total touchdowns, two turnovers and a 109.4 passer rating with one Lombardi Trophy hoisted. He ranks second to Russell Wilson in EPA per pass play in Super Bowls among the eight QBs with more than one Super Bowl start this century.

Hot stock: Hold​


Jayden Daniels, Washington Commanders

Signed through:
2027 (team option for 2028) | APY rank: 27 | EPA rank: 21

Daniels’ rookie season was so impressive, he broke the record Stroud held for the highest debut by a second-year player in Quarterback Tiers. Also like Stroud, Daniels has regressed in his second season with a team whose roster issues came to the fore. He has missed games this season with three separate injuries: a sprained knee, a strained hamstring and a dislocated elbow on his non-throwing arm. There’s a chance he could return for Week 13.

Too early to say, but there’s been good with the bad​


Caleb Williams, Chicago Bears

Signed through:
2027 (team option for 2028) | APY rank: 25 | EPA rank: 14

The marriage between Williams and new coach Ben Johnson remains in its early stages, with some positive signs. Williams has cut his sack rate from 10.8 percent as a rookie to 4.6 percent this season, a shift that belies the fact he is scrambling at the same rate, completing about the same percentage of his passes and holding the ball even longer (3.16 average time to throw or sack, up from 2.84 as a rookie). Johnson presumably would like Williams to work toward playing on time more consistently.

Bo Nix, Denver Broncos

Signed through:
2027 (team option for 2028) | APY rank: 40 | EPA rank: 22

The Broncos have won seven consecutive games with a mixture of defense and fourth-quarter heroics from Nix and the offense. It’s an unsustainable formula that is temporarily tabling more consequential discussions regarding Nix’s trajectory. The quarterback’s year-over-year efficiency has declined by almost every measure except for sack rate, which was already low. It’s looking like next season will be defining for Nix’s trajectory with the Broncos.

Jaxson Dart, New York Giants

Signed through:
2028 (team option for 2029) | APY rank: 42 | EPA rank: 17

Dart brought excitement and hope to the Giants’ offense while consistently putting his body at risk, as reflected in the four times he’s been tested for concussions since the preseason. Jameis Winston will start for the Giants against the Packers this week while Dart recovers from the concussion he suffered in Brian Daboll’s final game as head coach.

Way too early to pass lasting judgment, but so far, not so great​


Michael Penix Jr., Atlanta Falcons

Signed through:
2027 (team option for 2028) | APY rank: 37 | EPA rank: 30


aBit o’Twitter

¡Los capitanes en Madrid!@NWFCU | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/k80gq9j8jp

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 14, 2025
The Bernabéu is NFL Ready! pic.twitter.com/pz5S0lyLSX

— Mitchell Tischler (@Mitch_Tischler) November 13, 2025
Some drills from Friday practice in Madrid pic.twitter.com/EWTCp1rWQc

— David Harrison (@DHarrison82) November 14, 2025
"I'm just here for the Sangria." 😂 https://t.co/TX8yvI3oAW

— Riggo's Rag (@RiggosRag) November 14, 2025
Terry McLaurin is once again working off to the side at #Commanders practice, as is Noah Brown.

Will Harris is still wearing a no-contact jersey. He's made terrific progress in his rehab but unlikely to play Sunday.

— Tom Schad (@Tom_Schad) November 14, 2025
Luvu out of non contact jersey. Wearing normal red

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) November 14, 2025
Deebo and Sam Hartman 😂 pic.twitter.com/0PbUDus9tW

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) November 14, 2025
To help those being interviewed, a translator device was used. The hard part: trying to listen to the device through the ear piece while someone was still asking the question. The device is about a second behind. That’s why Mike Sainristil was trying to focus only on the device. pic.twitter.com/VQjwoWRDJv

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 14, 2025
#Commanders Rally at Irish Rover, Madrid, Spain. pic.twitter.com/SDsD3u8yfi

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) November 14, 2025
After 232 years, the U.S. mint has made the last Penny. pic.twitter.com/h9E3VAV268

— Pop Base (@PopBase) November 12, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...-will-start-on-sunday-in-place-of-daron-payne
 
Commanders vs Dolphins Friday Injury Report: Two players questionable

gettyimages-2243991351.jpg


The Washington Commanders held their third, and final practice of the week in Spain as they prepare to play the Miami Dolphins on Sunday. Two players are listed as questionable, and they both picked up new injuries during the week. TE Ben Sinnott was on yesterday’s report, and he was limited with an ankle injury, and didn’t practice today. LB Jordan Magee was limited today with a new knee injury, and is questionable for Sunday. He saw less snaps last week, and could be limited if he plays.

Four players didn’t travel to Spain and they were all ruled out. QB Jayden Daniels will miss his second game due to an elbow dislocation. He is expected to be reevaluated after the team’s Week 12 bye, and they will reassess his return to play timeline. WR Treylon Burks had finger surgery, and LB Ale Kaho didn’t travel after suffering a concussion on a kickoff on Sunday.

S Will Harris (fibula) and DE Drake Jackson (patellar tendon) had their 21-day practice windows opened to return from IR, but that won’t be happening this week. They will have the bye week, and another week of practice to prepare to return when the Commanders host the Denver Broncos in Week 13.

LB Frankie Luvu and S Quan Martin were both limited with shoulder injuries until today’s full participation. The non-contact jerseys were off and they both should be active on Sunday.

#WASvsMIA game status

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 14, 2025
Dolphins OLB Bradley Chubb pops up as questionable with a foot injury.

Austin Jackson is doubtful to be activated off IR, so probably after the bye for him. https://t.co/eX81bcMqoQ pic.twitter.com/poXb6QJeJz

— David Furones (@DavidFurones_) November 14, 2025

OUT​


WR Treylon Burks – Had finger surgery and didn’t travel with the team

QB Jayden Daniels – Out for second game due to dislocated elbow

LB Ale Kaho – Suffered a concussion vs the Lions and didn’t travel with the team

S Will Harris – Returning from a fractured fibula, 21-day practice window activated on Wednesday

DE Drake Jackson – 21-day practice window opened yesterday to return from IR (patellar tendon)

WR Terry McLaurin – Quad injury will be evaluated during the bye week, did work on the side this week

Questionable


LB Jordan Magee – Limited today with a new knee injury

TE Ben Sinnott – Limited yesterday, and DNP today with new ankle injury

No Injury Designation​


LB Frankie Luvu – Suffered shoulder injury vs Lions, first full practice today

S Quan Martin – Suffered shoulder injury vs the Lions, first full practice today

RB Chris Rodriguez Jr – Full participant all week after leaving Lions game with a shoulder injury

LB Bobby Wagner – Playing with thumb injury he’s dealt with last three weeks

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...friday-injury-report-two-players-questionable
 
Daily Slop – 15 Nov 25 – Opportunities and challenges of many kinds accompany the NFL to Madrid

imagn-27587201.jpg

Commanders links

Articles​


The Athletic (paywall)

NFL at Real Madrid: Key questions around Miami Dolphins ‘home’ game in Spain

Have there been any complications?


The NFL’s field director Nick Pappas told AP last month that changes would have to be made to the Bernabeu pitch, as “the needs of the surface drastically increase when compared to soccer (in terms of) traction and stabilisation”.

The pitch’s dimensions, 105 x 68 metres, also needed to be extended to meet the NFL specifications of 109.7 x 48.8 metres. This was not a problem because the front rows of seats all around the pitch can be removed following the recent stadium renovations.

Another challenge is that NFL squads — with a 53-man active roster and dozens of coaches, medical and support staff — add up to well over double the numbers in soccer. The Bernabeu bench areas have been expanded, but a bigger issue was the size of the locker rooms. That was eventually resolved by extending the existing changing areas into adjacent VIP zones.

“The folks at Real Madrid have been great partners throughout,” NFL executive vice president Peter O’Reilly told reporters in a virtual call last week.

What’s the reaction been like locally?


Sonia Cea Quintana, director of sports for Madrid city hall, told The Athletic that tickets “all sold out on the first day, which shows the excitement that is felt”.

Although it may be hard to believe that some young people in Madrid followed Tom Brady more closely than Cristiano Ronaldo, local American football fans see the game as a great opportunity to grow the sport further in Spain — especially European League of Football players who, when they were children, preferred a ball that wasn’t round.

Yago Rivero, defensive end for the Madrid Bravos, explains to The Athletic that American football in Spain has semi-professional and professional paths, and that many young people like him are motivated from a very early age to perhaps one day reach the NFL through scholarships and academies such as the one established in the United Kingdom, at Loughborough University.

Rivero’s Madrid Bravos team-mate Pablo Araya adds: “It is very interesting that they have done it in the Bernabeu, because it is known across the whole world. A stadium so symbolic, hosting an American football game, it gives it that extra importance. It can inspire many boys and girls to try the sport.”



Washington Post (paywall)

One key to the NFL’s global growth? Translating its lingo.


The question posed to offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury on Thursday was about the Washington Commanders’ use of pistol and shotgun formations. In a booth adjacent to the news conference room, Luis Daniel Guerrero heard the question and had a split second of panic.

Guerrero has been an interpreter in Spain for more than 20 years, but he had never interpreted comments about football — or, as he knows it, American football. Hours of preparation had given him a general sense of what those terms could mean, but he wasn’t sure how to best interpret them for the Spanish reporters in the room. The Spanish words “pistola” and “escopeta” would convey meaning without context, but context would take time — which, in this case, he did not have.

“You have to add something to it, so people know what you’re talking about,” he said. “‘Pistol’ and ‘shotgun’ means nothing to a normal Spaniard.”

Guerrero knows this because, well, he is a normal Spaniard. Before being hired to interpret the Commanders’ news conferences this week, he said he knew essentially nothing about football — including the broad base of jargon that is second nature in the United States, even for non-football fans.

“’Scrimmage’ means nothing here,” he explained. “It’s part of your daily life.”

Guerrero’s dilemma illustrates one of the most fundamental challenges for the NFL as it tries to grow football into a global game. For the sport to gain significant popularity in new markets such as Madrid, where the Commanders will face the Miami Dolphins on Sunday, the league must first help translate its lexicon — including in non English-speaking markets accustomed to the nomenclature and flow of sports such as soccer or rugby.

The added language barrier outside of the U.K. only makes the introduction of football-specific terms, such as “no-huddle offense,” more complicated. Even among non-football fans in English-speaking countries, there might be a baseline understanding of what a huddle entails. In Spanish, Cervera said, there is no direct translation, and words such as “reunión” only come close. So the most efficient way to portray a no-huddle offense might not be by explaining the huddle at all but rather by focusing on the speed of the offensive attack — ataque rápido.

“It’s not just translating words,” Cervera said. “It’s translating the context.”

“Touchdown is something that everybody knows, everybody understands,” Davila said. “We don’t need to explain that.”



Commanders.com

Commanders’ Spanish broadcasters Juan Romero, Moises Linares see ‘great opportunity’ with Madrid game


Romero and Linares will be able to lean on a shared bond and mission to help them rise above while they are in Madrid, Spain this week for the Commanders’ Week 11 clash against the Dolphins. On site at the NFL’s first-ever game in Spain and the duo’s first time working a Commanders’ game abroad, the team’s official Spanish-language broadcasters are excited to spread the gospel of Washington football and serve the Spanish-speaking fan base on a historic trip.

While the NFL game in Spain is a first, it isn’t exactly a surprise. Over the last several years, international destinations have become a fixture of the regular season NFL schedule with cities ranging from Mexico City to Dublin to São Paulo being awarded games. The 2025 regular season features seven games played outside of the U.S., the most ever to date. Signs point to this setup perhaps being more of a norm than a rarity. Like other destinations the NFL has traveled to as of late, Spain has qualities that make it ripe for welcoming the sport at this time.

“That fan base is in its infant state right now,” Linares said. “They’re starting to see the game more often. They have access to the NFL like never before. They’re hungry to see an event in person like we’ve seen in other countries — Ireland, England, Germany. So, I think this is a great opportunity to bring the game to them so they can see it, live it in person and get to enjoy it like they never have before.”



Washington Post (paywall)

As the NFL lands in Madrid, the league hopes Spain will fall for football


The NFL sees a land fertile with potential fans, even if many Spaniards aren’t yet familiar with the nuances of American football.

When the first batch of tickets were released in July, there were around 700,000 digital devices waiting in the queue to purchase a ticket. Bernabéu Stadium’s capacity is 84,000.

“Every time we release a new batch, it sells out within hours,” said Gerrit Meier, managing director and head of NFL International. “We have seen incredible demand.”

The league estimates 90 percent of attendees at international games are from that market, and it seems Madrid will follow that trend. Once the initial novelty wears off, though, the league knows it will have to generate genuine fandom to maintain interest.

The NFL is hopeful Madrid could follow a similar path to London, which has hosted NFL games annually since 2007 (aside from 2020 because of the pandemic). The demand from fans in the United Kingdom was instant, too, but it has evolved over the years.

“A decade ago, it was awesome because it was a rainbow of jerseys, but it also wasn’t really a home team crowd at all,” Schroeder said. “You look now at a game in London, and you see 80 percent of fans wearing the jersey of the home team.”



Commanders.com

‘It just feels connected’: Fans feel camaraderie, pride in gathering in Madrid to support Commanders


“It’s awesome; I’ve met a lot of cool people,” said Erik Paige, who came to Madrid from Germany. “We’ve had a lot of fun, we’re looking forward to having more.”

For fans like Paige, the Week 11 matchup is their first opportunity to see the Commanders in person. Paige felt a “straight connection” with Washington when he saw the team play for the first time during the 2017 season. Like many other European fans, however, it isn’t easy for Paige to find the time or money to fly to Maryland and visit Northwest Stadium for a game.

So, when the NFL announced that the Commanders would be one of the teams playing overseas, Paige called his girlfriend and said, “We have to go.” Paige said there aren’t as many Washington fans in Germany, so to have so many of them in one place has been a new experience for him.

“To see the Washington community come together in Madrid, it’s a blessing,” Paige said.

For others, it’s a chance to celebrate life-changing news. Three weeks ago, Jaime Bangson was reparing to go through topical chemotherapy and needed something to distract her.

Bangson said she was “really in her head” about the treatment when she saw that the Commanders were hosting a tailgate event in Spain in the days leading up to the game. So, without any real intentions of going to the game, she started to think about what a trip to Spain would look like.

“I planned this dream trip just so I didn’t have to think all weekend,” Bangson said. “But then I realized maybe if I dipped into my savings, I could maybe actually make this a reality.”

Bangson then sent a text to her dad asking if he wanted to go to a tailgate party with her. After he asked her which one, she replied with information about the one in Madrid.

“First, we said, ‘This is nuts,'” Bangson recalled. “Next weekend he goes, ‘You know what? Let’s just do it.'”



The Athletic (paywall)

Commanders’ Joe Whitt Jr. on demotion: ‘I understood and expected it. … It’s about winning’


“I understood it. And I expected it,” Whitt said Friday in his first public comments since the change. “So, it was what it was. When he came and sat down and talked to me, I knew what the conversation was gonna be.

“Our relationship is a special one. There’s very few people in coaching that I’m closer to, but I understood it. … I have no ill will to anybody. It’s about winning. That’s what it’s all about. It’s about winning and playing well, and we haven’t done that. That’s the bottom line.”

Quinn announced the coaching change on Monday, saying it was made because the Commanders’ defense “felt off,” a feeling no one could dispute at this point.

The Commanders have lost each of their last four games by 20-plus points. They’ve given up 36 completions of 20-plus yards (tied for the most in the NFL) and have allowed more passing yards per attempt (8.4) than any defense in the league.

Over the last five games, which have all been losses, the Commanders gave up an average of 151.8 rushing yards per game, the fifth most in the NFL in that span.

Quinn and Whitt made multiple changes to try to eliminate the mistakes on game days, such as simplifying the play calls, changing some personnel and moving Whitt from the coaches’ booth to the sideline with the hope of streamlining communication.

However, nothing worked. Instead, the defense got worse, giving up 546 net yards and 9.1 yards per pass attempt to the Lions.



ESPN

Aloha, amigo: Hawaiian QBs Tua, Mariota meet in Madrid


Mariota is not the only quarterback from Saint Louis High School in Honolulu to start in this game. That, of course, is also where Tua Tagovailoa began his playing career, following in Mariota’s footsteps.

Sunday’s game between two 3-7 teams (9:30 a.m. ET on NFL Network, NFL+) was supposed to be a matchup between Jayden Daniels and Tagovailoa, but Daniels suffered a dislocated left elbow two weeks ago. That paved the way for Mariota to start, doing so against a player he has mentored since Tagovailoa was in high school.

Tagovailoa was a junior in high school when Mariota began working with him at camps. Tagovailoa once said that when others pushed him away, Mariota would pull him aside at a time when Mariota was one of the top quarterbacks in the country.

Though many assumed that Tagovailoa would follow Mariota and play at Oregon, he pivoted and headed for Alabama — all with Mariota’s support.

“For Tua and myself, we grew up in the middle of the Pacific,” he said, “far away from here. The fact that we get a chance to be part of this game is special, and I don’t take that for granted at all.”



The Athletic (paywall)

The Commanders’ injury numbers tell a grim story


Wide receiver Treylon Burks played 52 offensive snaps in two games for the Commanders. He caught all four of his targets (including one that went for 37 yards) and was one of only two Washington receivers to run at least 10 routes in the team’s last outing.

Not bad for a guy who signed less than a month ago.

But just as Burks was finding a rhythm and just as the Commanders felt as though they landed another contributor, he was ruled out of the team’s Week 11 game in Spain because of a finger injury that required surgery.

His injury, while minor and not expected to keep him out long term, was a microcosm of the Commanders’ season: Their spate of injuries, while hardly the only reason or even the biggest reason for their 3-7 record, has depleted their roster, affecting multiple starters, reserves and now the players signed to help fill the void.

Including those ruled out for Sunday’s game against the Miami Dolphins, a total of 20 Commanders will have missed a combined 81 games this season because of injuries. More than half of those players were starters.

The impact? Washington has used 312 unique lineups on offense so far this season, by far the most of any team. Only three of those lineups have played together for 10 or more plays this season. By comparison, the Commanders had 19 offensive lineups that played at least 10 plays together last season.



Heavy.com

Jonathan Jones : Recovered from groin injury


Jones (groin) isn’t listed on Washington’s injury report for Sunday’s game against the Dolphins. Jones sustained a groin injury during Washington’s Week 10 loss to the Lions, but he has recovered in time to suit up Sunday against the Dolphins in Madrid. He has started only one game in 2025 but is likely to make a second start Sunday since Marshon Lattimore (knee) and Trey Amos (lower leg) are both on IR.



Commanders.com

3 keys to Commanders vs. Dolphins


Prevent explosive plays from De’Von Achane.

Achane has been a potent weapon for the Dolphins since he was taken in the third round of the 2023 draft, but the former Texas A&M running back has surged in production this season with 1,105 total yards and nine touchdowns. He gained even more popularity last week, when his 174 rushing yards and two touchdowns fueled the Dolphins to a 30-13 win over the Buffalo Bills.

The Commanders have already faced a similar type of weapon in Detroit Lions running back Jahmyr Gibbs, who put up 172 total yards and three touchdowns against their defense. Gibbs’ versatility was a difficult challenge for the Commanders’ defense, which gave up an average of 9.5 yards on Gibbs’ 18 touches.

But Gibbs wasn’t the only versatile running back who gave Washington problems this season. Bijan Robinson had 181 total yards, including 106 as a receiver, and two scores in the Atlanta Falcons’ 34-27 win over the Commanders. It likely isn’t possible to completely eliminate Achane as an option, but one of head coach Dan Quinn’s biggest challenges as a play caller will be to at least have an answer for Achane.


Podcasts & videos

Chris Rodriguez on Staying Ready & the Dolphins + Shawn Springs in Madrid | Next Man Up | Commanders​


On video with five thoughts on the Commanders: on the Change at DC; a good opportunity for Johnny Newton; how Quinn sent a message. More. ⁦@ESPNRichmondhttps://t.co/ri9WG5XswJ

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 15, 2025

NFC East links


Pride of Detroit

Detroit Lions vs. Philadelphia Eagles preview, prediction: On Paper


A statistical preview and prediction for Detroit Lions vs. Philadelphia Eagles.

Lions pass offense (6th in DVOA) vs. Eagles pass defense (11th)​



The Lions offense had a huge bounce-back game last week against the Commanders, and while it may not seem like a huge change based on the chart, a deeper dive into the statistics show just how much that game even improved their season-long rankings. Here’s where they stand now compared to last week:

  • Passer ranking: 118.0 (1st) — last week: 116.5 (2nd)
  • Yards per attempt: 8.1 (5th) — last week: 8.0 (6th)
  • EPA/dropback: 0.257 (5th) — last week: 0.201 (8th)
  • Dropback success rate: 53.2% (4th) — last week: 51.5% (9th)

Now, granted that came against a poor Commanders defense (27th in pass defense DVOA). Still, it was relieving to see the Lions passing attack operate in a way that looked familiar.

The biggest question is whether the Lions’ offensive line can repeat their sack-less performance. While Jared Goff has avoided a single sack in four of nine games this year, the pass protection has been inconsistent, at best. Detroit ranks 20th in PFF pass blocking grade, 27th in ESPN’s pass block win rate, 17th in pressure rate, and 13th in sack rate.

Goff could also be without one of his go-to options on third down, with tight end Sam LaPorta missing two practices with a back injury. Though it’s worth pointing out that the Eagles currently rank No. 1 in defensive DVOA against tight ends, so he has a tough matchup anyways. The better matchup for Detroit is utilizing Jahmyr Gibbs in the passing game, where the Eagles rank 29th in defensive DVOA against running backs. Last week, Gibbs found some success in that area, catching three passes for 30 yards and a touchdown.



This is a stunningly good chart for the Eagles’ pass defense. And when you look closer, you see how Philly has shut down the likes of Dak Prescott, Patrick Mahomes, Matthew Stafford, and Baker Mayfield—just in the first four weeks of the season. They’ve only allowed over 250 passing yards twice, and only allowed a passer rating above 90 twice all year.

I’m fully-convinced this is not only a top-10 pass defense, but likely a top-five. Here’s where they rank in some other statistical categories:

  • Passer rating allowed: 80.2 (4th)
  • Y/A allowed: 6.5 (6th)
  • Dropback EPA: 0.062 (15th)
  • Dropback success rate: 45.3% (12th)

It’s a little surprising to see their last two advanced metrics so low, but I suspect part of the reason—especially with EPA—is the fact that they haven’t created many negative plays this year. They have just five interceptions (t-20th) despite ranking 11th in passes defended, and they only have 19 sacks on the season (24th). Still, they seem to be doing everything else right, including preventing big plays. They’ve allowed just 26 passing plays of 20+ yards, t-12th best in the NFL.

Their secondary is playing outstanding. Quinyon Mitchell (24th among CBs in PFF coverage grade) and nickel Cooper DeJean (7th) lead the way, but the third corner—Adoree Jackson (98th)—is their biggest liability.

As for the lack of pass rush, the Eagles may have found a solution in Jaelan Phillips. In his first game with the Eagles last week, Phillips produced eight pressures, two quarterback hits and a tackle for loss. And while the edge defenders are still a bit questionable, Jalen Carter’s interior presence as a pass rusher (28 pressures, t-10th among DTs) will be a force to be reckoned with.

Player to watch: Lions’ interior OL. While the Eagles won’t produce exotic looks like the Vikings and their blitz percentage is just 26th in the league, that interior defensive line is full of dudes and Detroit’s patchworked offensive line still has a lot to prove despite last week’s strong performance.

Advantage: Draw. Philly is so stout on all three levels of the defense that this could be a tough week for the Lions’ passing attack. Then again, with Dan Campbell taking over play-calling last week, Detroit seems to have gotten a shot in the arm. Because of the small sample size there, the confidence level is low in predicting the result this week, so we’re calling it a draw.



Silver & Black Pride

What does Quinnen Williams bring to Dallas Cowboys’ defense?


Q: [W]hat do you expect recently acquired defensive tackle Quinnen Williams to bring to Dallas?

A: That’s the big question. Should the Cowboys have done this? We just don’t know yet. The expectation is that no matter what, he is going to be a run-stopper in the middle, something the Cowboys have lacked for a while.

He’s young enough that there shouldn’t be any kind of age-related drop-off in the near future, so you’d expect at least a plug for a leaky run defense. If he can force double-teams and draw attention away from the pass rushers, that would be an added benefit. If he can actually collapse the pocket, including some pass-rush ability, then the Cowboys will have made the right move.

Q: It seems like Dak Prescott started the year strong but has fizzled over the last two games. What’s been the difference in his play to start the season and more recently? Also, it comes with the territory of being the Cowboys’ starting quarterback, but it feels like Prescott takes a lot of heat/criticism in the media. What’s the fanbase’s perception of him?

A: I wouldn’t say that there is any one thing you can pick out in Prescott’s recent play that would make you say “he’s not doing this or that”. His completion percentage is down, so he may be having some accuracy problems, but the Broncos are a really good defense, so that had some impact. And our pass protection against the Cardinals was really bad, Prescott was on the move a lot and never got comfortable. We also have had issues in the red zone recently, but play-calling and penalties have also had an impact there.

At this point, I would say that Prescott just had some down days from a very bright start to the season. I feel like the offense should be fine going forward.

As for Prescott and the Cowboys fanbase, it’s really split. Count me among those who think that Prescott is not the problem in Dallas, but many fans feel the opposite. It’s an ongoing debate.



Acme Packing Company

The Packers will run well against the Giants. It’s a trap.


The Giants are dead last in run defense DVOA at 16.8% (positive numbers are bad for defensive DVOA). The Bengals are a close-ish second at 13.2%, but both are orders of magnitude worse than Buffalo at a third-worst 6.1%.

But you might be thinking, “Hey, Paul, 16.8 doesn’t seem so bad, I thought it was going to be like 48 or something?” And that’s fair because that’s usually how DVOA works, but we need to keep in mind how RUNNING works. Running is generally a negative efficiency play to start with, and so the median run defense this year (Houston) is -12%, or 28 percentage points away from the Giants. Cleveland has the best run defense at -32.2%, and there are six teams below 20%. Relative to the league, the Giants are horrible. They’re 48.8% points from the leaders. See, your instincts were good!



EPA tells the same story as DVOA, where the Giants are allowing a dead last .142 EPA per running play. How bad is that? It’s so bad that 24 teams allow fewer average EPA per passing drop back! 24! Tampa Quarterback Baker Mayfield averages 1.34 EPA per drop back, and so on average, a run against the Giants is more valuable than a Baker Mayfield pass attempt. It is also more valuable than a Justin Herbert pass attempt, and more than twice as valuable as an Aaron Rodgers pass attempt.

But maybe you don’t care for all of these newfangled analytics. Maybe you don’t trust them. “Paul, if they’re as bad as you say, why even bother with all of this fancy math? After all, if you serve me a terrible cheeseburger, I don’t need to know the ingredients, I just need to take a bite.” Alright, fair point, so how about this?

In Week 1, Commanders’ running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt ran the ball 10 times for 82 yards and a touchdown. Deebo Samuel chipped in a 19-yard touchdown, and all in as a team, they rushed for 220 yards on 32 carries. In Week 2, Javonte Williams ran for 97 yards and a score on 18 carries, but because every Dallas game is a shootout, Dak also threw for 361 yards and two touchdowns. The Chiefs ran for 105 yards and a score as a team. The Chargers actually lost to the Giants despite Omarion Hampton running for 128 yards and a score on just 12 carries. The Eagles lost their first game to the Giants (Cam Skattebo had 98 yards and 3 scores for New York) but they maybe should have given Saquon a few more carries, as he ripped off 58 yards on just 12 carries. In their second game, which the Eagles won handily, they did exactly that. Saquon had 150 yards and a score on 14 carries, and backup Tank Bigsby had another 104 yards on 9 carries. The 49ers had 159 yards and two touchdowns on a robust 39 carries, if you’re wondering how the Packer game might go. Denver only handed off 15 times, but their backs gained 94 yards. And last week, D’Andre Swift had 80 yards on just 13 carries.

That’s a lot of big yardage gained on carries in the teens for a lot of Giant opponents. On the season, they have allowed a league-worst 5.5 yards per carry and a league-worst 1521 yards total, despite ranking only sixth in carries against. Shockingly, the Titans have actually allowed one more rushing touchdown (15) than the Giants.

And so, the Packers will likely run against the Giants, and run well.



ESPN

Can Mike Kafka make it work in New York?


Players throughout the week noticed Kafka bears a calming presence, a different manner than Daboll, who was known as more impassioned on the sideline.

The belief among some seems to be that Kafka’s approach could be beneficial, especially in late-game situations, when the Giants have struggled. They’re just the second team in the Super Bowl era to drop two games in the same season with at least a 10-point lead with under four minutes remaining.

Perhaps this could help when things start to snowball.

“He’s probably naturally a little bit more of a calmer personality, so to speak,” wide receiver Darius Slayton said of Kafka. “But that can be helpful, especially in a high-pressure game like we’re in, week in and week out, that calmer presence can definitely be beneficial.”

“He’s poised,” Winston said. “He’s very poised on the sideline. And don’t get me wrong, this is a very challenging situation because I would not be here if it weren’t for Brian Daboll. And I am so grateful for him and the opportunity that he forwarded me to come to New York and do what I love.”

Kafka has been waiting for this chance, not necessarily in New York and under these circumstances, but he has interviewed for eight head coaching openings and been a finalist in at least a couple. He has been on the verge of becoming an NFL head coach for the past three seasons.

One high-level executive who was involved in interviews with Kafka considered him prepared and organized. He saw confidence and conviction on top of having a strong football IQ. That team was impressed.


Upcoming opponent


Hogs Haven

Five Questions with The Phinsider


The Dolphins defense started the season allowing 30+ points in their first three games, but has held teams to 13 or fewer points in two of their most recent three games. Why did they start the season so rough and what accounts for their recent turnaround? Is it sustainable?

A large part of it is probably the growth of younger players. Due to injuries and roster moves, Miami is relying on young players to make an impact. Defensive tackle Kenneth Grant is 22, defensive tackle Jordan Phillips is 21, linebacker Chop Robinson is 22, defensive back Dante Trader, Jr. is 22, and defensive back Jason Marshall, Jr., is 23, and they are all starters or key members of the rotation. They were struggling early, especially Grant who was already being declared a first-round bust by some, but they are starting to piece it together and the defense is responding. Since Week 6, Miami has turned into an elite rush defense, a huge turnaround for a team that allowed at least 150 rushing yards in four of their first five games including 197 yards allowed to the New York Jets and 239 yards to the Carolina Panthers.

There will still be the mistakes that come from relying on younger players, but the game seems to be slowing down for them, they are cutting down on the self-inflicted penalties, and understanding defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver’s system better. The veterans, like defensive tackle Zach Sieler, linebackers Jordyn Brooks and Tyrel Dodson, and safety Minkah Fitzpatrick are getting everyone in sync and the results are starting to show up on the field.


NFL league links

Articles​


The Commanders will play the Broncos in Week 13 (after the Week 12 bye)

NFL.com

Broncos RB J.K. Dobbins believed to have significant foot injury, could be placed on injured reserve


The Denver Broncos running back is believed to be out for the foreseeable future with a significant foot injury, NFL Network Insiders Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero reported Friday.

Dobbins is working through his options but being placed on injured reserve, which would force him out for at least the next four games, remains a possibility, per Rapoport and Pelissero.

The Broncos ruled Dobbins out for Sunday’s game versus the Chiefs.

Dobbins going on IR would mean he’ll have missed multiple games in each of his last five seasons and at least one game dating back to his 2020 rookie season with the Baltimore Ravens in which he played 15 out of a possible 16.

Prior to adding Dobbins, Denver selected RJ Harvey in the second round of the 2025 NFL Draft. Harvey’s proved to be an excellent receiver out of the backfield (25 receptions for 175 yards and four TDs), but will now be asked to put on his running shoes.

So far, Harvey’s carried the ball 50 times for 214 yards and a pair of scores. He’ll be looked on to up his rushing numbers in a major way. Tyler Badie and Jaleel McLaughlin could also see some more reps at RB.


Discussion topics


The Athletic (paywall)

NFL executives worried about lackluster 2026 QB draft class: ‘I don’t love any of them’


As recently as a couple of months ago, teams anticipated a stacked crop of quarterbacks — not necessarily rivaling the 2024 draft class but surely better than the 2025 group. But with college quarterbacks underperforming across the board, there are serious concerns about the position, and that is going to reshape teams’ plans for the opening round.

“Nobody is playing the position well enough to be like, ‘That dude can take over my franchise,’” said an NFL team executive who was granted anonymity so he could speak openly.

This could be a massive blow to teams like the New York Jets and Cleveland Browns, which have glaring holes at QB and a pair of first-round selections at their disposal. It also hurts the Tennessee Titans, who have the inside track on the top pick, and their ability to auction off the selection to the highest bidder.

Of course, there’s plenty of time for evaluations to evolve between now and April, but the early analysis hasn’t been encouraging. There’s no clear-cut top prospect to truly set the pace for the rest of the class.

“I don’t love any of (the quarterbacks) right now,” a second executive said. “We’re trying to grasp onto somebody because there isn’t anybody, and it’s such a flavor of the week. Good luck right now.”

“Overall, we were hoping it was going to be better than last year,” a third executive said. “There was a hangover from such a good class two years ago. There were more projected (quarterbacks) coming into this year, but the expectations of the higher-end players never really materialized. Some of the younger guys are leaning toward going back because they haven’t played well and are making the NIL money.”

Fernando Mendoza, Indiana

If the draft were today, the 6-foot-5, 225-pounder might have the edge as the top QB. But even the staunchest Mendoza supporters don’t believe it’s by a wide margin.

Ty Simpson, Alabama

The 6-foot-2, 210-pounder has had an eye-opening ascension in his first season as the starter.

“He’s had the best year out of all of (the QB prospects), but he’s not as high up as some of these other guys in terms of physical tools,” an executive said. “More power to him. The kid has played his tail off, and he’s throwing the s— out of the ball.”

Dante Moore, Oregon

NFL teams think the 20-year-old redshirt sophomore will return to school, and that’d be useful to clean up his issues with inconsistency.

LaNorris Sellers, South Carolina

The 6-foot-3, 240-pounder has traits on top of traits on top of traits. He’s big and explosive, boasts a powerful arm, can win with his legs on third down and is tough to tackle. Coming out of the summer, it was fair to believe a solid season would solidify Sellers as the top QB because of his overall athletic ability.

However, Sellers just hasn’t played well enough, and teams are hoping the 20-year-old will return to school.


aBit o’Twitter

Commanders Rally in Madrid….. you can’t even get in! #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/env11zIV9v

— Felix Trammell (@FelixDTrammell) November 14, 2025
Dolphins LB Chop Robinson has cleared concussion protocol and will play Sunday vs. Commanders. Optimism that C Aaron Brewer plays too. CB Rasul Douglas is questionable.

— Cameron Wolfe (@CameronWolfe) November 14, 2025
Dolphins C Aaron Brewer said Daron Payne not being available for Commanders is "amazing… definitely beneficial towards us." Brewer said Payne gave him fits going against him earlier in his career.

— David Furones (@DavidFurones_) November 14, 2025
Months after knocking on a few NFL doors, including the #Jets, Bill Belichick says he’s happy at UNC and won’t pursue the #Giants’ vacancy. pic.twitter.com/zT8uyzUhYu

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) November 15, 2025
Spanish skills 👌 @SeatGeek | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/IE3wcO2PKj

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 15, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...ges-of-many-kinds-accompany-the-nfl-to-madrid
 
Washington Commanders Roster Moves: Two players elevated from the practice squad

gettyimages-1750723959.jpg


The Washington Commanders are elevating RB Chase Edmonds and CB Tre Hawkins from the practice squad. This is the first elevation for both players this season. Edmonds signed to the Commanders practice squad on September 15th. He has past history with OC Kliff Kingsbury from their time together with the Arizona Cardinals, but this is the first time he’s had the opportunity to be active on a gameday. Hawkins was signed to the practice squad on November 5th, and was released by the Giants earlier this year. He suffered a lumbar spine injury in 2024, and this will be his first game back if he is active tomorrow.

The Commanders ruled six players out for tomorrow’s game against the Miami Dolphins. Two of them[DE Drake Jackson(patellar tendon), S Will Harris(fibula)] are still on injured reserve, but had their 21-day practice windows opened this week. Three of the players ruled out didn’t make the trip to Madrid, Spain because they were still dealing with injuries[QB Jayden Daniels(elbow), WR Treylon Burks(finger surgery), S Ale Kaho(concussion)]. WRs Terry McLaurin(quad) and Noah Brown(groin, IR) were with the team, but only did work with trainers on the side fields as they prepare to return. The Commanders also ruled out TE Ben Sinnott earlier today with an ankle injury.

We have elevated RB Chase Edmonds and CB Tre Hawkins from the practice squad

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 15, 2025

Lions announce roster moves:

Released S Jammie Robinson.

Activated S Daniel Thomas from Reserve/Injured (remains listed as Questionable on the Game Status Report).

Elevated OL Michael Niese from the Pracfice Squad to the Active/Inactive list. pic.twitter.com/DaDJn3KJLC

— Detroit Lions (@Lions) November 8, 2025
Lions Game Status Update:

LB Malcolm Rodriguez (knee) was not activated from Reserve/Injured and has been downgraded to OUT for Sunday’s game at Washington.

— Detroit Lions (@Lions) November 8, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...-two-players-elevated-from-the-practice-squad
 
Washington Commanders vs Miami Dolphins 3rd Quarter

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The Washington Commanders are visiting the Miami Dolphins on Sunday for the NFL’s first game in Spain. They have been there all week, practicing at Real Madrid’s facilities. The Commanders are on a five-game losing streak and have been blown out the last four weeks in a row. They enter Week 11 with a 3-7 record, and face the 3-7 Miami Dolphins who are coming off their biggest win of the season, dominating the Buffalo Bills 30-13.

The Commanders season has not gone as planned, and injuries have played a big part in that. Washington will be starting Marcus Mariota at QB, as Jayden Daniels misses another week after dislocating his elbow. The wide receiver room has been an injury ward all year, and the defensive line has been playing guys from the practice squad regularly.

This will be the first game that Dan Quinn will be calling the plays for the defense after taking over as the defensive coordinator from Joe Whitt Jr. The defense has looked disorganized and undisciplined for weeks, and Quinn has decided to take over, demoting Whitt Jr to the role he played under him when he was the DC for the Cowboys.

Euro trip drip@SeatGeek | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/87kmOzSdOd

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 14, 2025

Injury Report

Injury Report: pic.twitter.com/1YuO9lVN49

— Washington Commanders PR (@Wash_PR) November 7, 2025
TE Ben Sinnott has been downgraded to OUT. He suffered an ankle injury this week. LB

Jordan Magee is still questionable with a new knee injury. https://t.co/3pKp1kDFE7

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) November 15, 2025


Matchup: Washington Commanders (3-7) @ Miami Dolphins (3-7)

Location: Bernabéu Stadium | Madrid, Spain

Date/Time: November 16, 2025, 9:30 a.m. ET

TV: NFL Network, WUSA 9 CBS(local)

Kenny Albert (play-by-play)

Jonathan Vilma (analyst)

Jamie Erdahl (sideline)

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

Washington: XM/SXM 380, Internet 831

Miami: XM/SXM 227, Internet 819

National: 88

Online Stream: Sling TV, NFL+, fuboTV

FanDuel Odds: Commanders +2.5 , 47.5 O/U

Washington +126

Miami -148

Prediction: Commanders 27 – Dolphins 24

Enemy Blog: The Phinsider


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) L 25-24

Week 7 – @ Dallas Cowboys (Sunday, October 19th, 4:25 p.m.) L 44-22

Week 8 – @ Kansas City Chiefs (October 27th, 8:15 pm, MNF on ABC/ESPN) L 28-7

Week 9 – vs Seattle Seahawks (November 2nd, 8:15 p.m., SNF on NBC) L 38-14

Week 10 – vs Detroit Lions (Sunday, November 9th, 4:25 p.m., FOX) L 44-22

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)

Purchase Washington Commanders tickets at StubHub!


Hogs Haven Media Information


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NFL News twitter feed

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/game-day-...gton-commanders-vs-miami-dolphins-3rd-quarter
 
Sunday Night Football: Detroit Lions vs Philadelphia Eagles

gettyimages-1423166815.jpg


Week 11 is not over yet, we’ve got one more game to watch on Sunday. The Detroit Lions are visiting the Philadelphia Eagles in a possible NFC Championship game preview. The Lions are tied for the second-best record in the NFC and the Eagles are tied for the best record in the conference. Detroit is coming off a 44-22 win over the Commanders, and the Eagles struggled to pull out a 10-7 win against the Packers last week.

Matchup: Detroit Lions (6-3) at Philadelphia Eagles (7-2)

Date/Time: November 16, 2025, 8:20 p.m. ET

Location: Lincoln Financial Field | Philadelphia, PA

TELEVISION: NBC

Mike Tirico (play-by-play)

Cris Collinsworth (analyst)

Melissa Stark (sideline)

RADIO: Sirius XM NFL

Detroit: XM/SXM 226, Internet 810

Philadelphia: XM/SXM 225, Internet 825

National: 88

Español: 227, Internet 832

Live Streaming: Peacock, NFL+, fuboTV

FanDuel odds: Eagles -2.5, 46.5 O/U

Detroit: +124

Philadelphia: -146

Prediction: Eagles 23 – Lions 21

SB Nation Blogs: Pride of Detroit | Bleeding Green Nation


Hogs Haven Media Information


Podcasts: Apple Podcasts | Pandora | Spotify | Podbean | iHeartRadio

Facebook Page:
Click here to like our page

Twitter: Follow @HogsHaven

Instagram: Follow @Hogs_Haven

Threads: Follow @hogs_haven

Blue Sky: Follow Hogs Haven

Manager: Scott Jennings: Follow @ScottJenningsHH

Buy Washington gear at the Hogs Haven Fanshop



NFL News twitter feed

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...football-detroit-lions-vs-philadelphia-eagles
 
Commanders Vs. Dolphins (Madrid) – Studs and Duds

The NFL’s first game in Madrid featured two teams who were 3-7 and had fallen on some bad luck. However, each of these teams was on a different streak. Washington had lost five straight – mostly in embarrassing fashion, while Miami had won three of their last four, most recently beating Buffalo 30-13.

Surprisingly, this was a defensive battle that featured a few goal line stands and limited big plays down the field. Ultimately, missed opportunities doomed the Commanders yet again, this time on the leg of one Matt Gay – who missed two field goals; one to win the game towards the end of regulation. Even though Washington lost 16-13 in overtime, there were some positives on the defensive side of the ball to take away from this contest.

Below are my Studs and Duds of the game, followed by some notes.


Studs:​

  • Deebo Samuel: Deebo finally looked healthy again after dealing with a nagging heel injury for a few weeks. The explosion we saw early in the season was back and he made the most of his team-leading seven receptions, turning those into 74 yards and a touchdown.
Great run-after-catch on this screen by Deebo for the TD! pic.twitter.com/RQdSE8W6Je

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Eddie Goldman: Goldman was the only defensive lineman that stood out during the game. He had five total tackles, two for a loss, and none was bigger than his stuff at the goal line to prevent a Dolphins touchdown.
Eddie Goldman with the MASSIVE stop on 4th down from the one yard line pic.twitter.com/2Da9owWm3Q

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Brandon Coleman: I love giving a shout-out to offensive lineman, and sometimes it’s tough before getting to watch the All-22 to really see the impact they had in the game. However, Brandon Coleman was a stand-out in the heavy packages opening holes for the running backs. Kudos to him for showing great effort.
Coleman AGAIN with a big block. Bates nice job here too! pic.twitter.com/YFVlRHxhYm

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Coleman nice blocking on the CRod run! pic.twitter.com/CCac4y5Iyw

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Jordan Magee: Magee flashed in the open field showing speed to the football (something we haven’t see from our linebacking corps much this season) and the ability to break down and make a tackle on the shifty Achane. He had five tackles, four of them solo.
ANOTHER great tackle by Magee in space on Achane pic.twitter.com/gWG5syTta2

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Nice open-field tackle by Magee on the speedy Achane pic.twitter.com/kOZRRlVLdq

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Dan Quinn: I know he is playing short-handed, but with Quinn calling the defense, it looked like a NIGHT AND DAY difference from the HORRIBLE scheme Joe Whitt was calling on a weekly basis. And before you say anything about the Dolphins, don’t forget, this is the team who just hung 30 on Buffalo the week before and one who has won three of their last four games.
GREAT call by Dan Quinn on the corner blitz. Jones gets the sack! pic.twitter.com/cwG2Ao2aC5

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025

Duds:​

  • Matt Gay: Gay is a complete disaster on any kick beyond 50 yards, and in today’s NFL, that is completely unacceptable. Shame, SHAME on Adam Peters for signing this guy and giving him $4.5M guaranteed to lose us football games. Gay missed two field goals from 51 and 56 (that would have won the game) respectively. At this point, some fans may actually consider him a Stud for preserving a high draft pick.
  • Zach Ertz: I’m really starting to get annoyed with Ertz’s antics. The constant going down before contact stuff is unacceptable. I know players slip on the field from time to time, but it seems to happen to him more often than others (see his slip on the angle route at the goal line). This man offers literally NO run-after-catch ability.
4th and goal – Ertz slips on the route and the ball goes incomplete.

Another redzone misfire. pic.twitter.com/vMVpK2bSuq

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Nice route and catch by Wrtz…

BUT WHY DOES HE SLIDE??? pic.twitter.com/SL4ZgRGkHO

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025

Notes:​

  • Marcus Mariota was having a great game until his interception on a poor decision in overtime. This brought back memories of Drew Allar for me. He finished regulation 20-29 for 213 yards and a touchdown, while adding 49 yards on the ground. He also saved a safety with a heads-up play in the endzone.
Mariota picked off on the first possession of OT pic.twitter.com/I55ksCyhGq

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Mariota finds Deebo from his own endzone for 28 yards pic.twitter.com/fcwVUW5hXy

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Mariota shows off the wheels as he scrambles for 43yds pic.twitter.com/u3cskovDDR

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Mariota saves a safety with this heads-up play pic.twitter.com/lvDwcMMjZa

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Chris Rodriguez ran hard all game. He carried the ball 15 times for an impressive 79 yards (5.3 YPC) and caught a pass for 6 yards. He’s overtaken Bill as Washington’s lead back.
‼️This jump-cut by CRod was ELITE!!! pic.twitter.com/ruuJ4P5jfE

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • The diving defended pass Bobby Wagner made on the goal line to save a touchdown, and the back-arching stop of Achane at the two-yard line are what’s keeping him off the Duds list. Aside from those plays, he YET AGAIN was a liability in any run outside the B-Gaps!
WHAT THE FLYING $&@! Is Bobby Wagner DOING!!!!! pic.twitter.com/0kDDS4QE4n

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Wagner with the HUGE pass defended on 4th and goal – denies a TD pic.twitter.com/qY0syBnctB

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Watch Wagner (who is SO slow) try to go UNDER the block instead of playing over-the-top of it. A NORMAL MLB would beat this block and at least GET to the outside.

THIS folks, is the problem! pic.twitter.com/CJdALpNSnn

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • I thought Mike Sainristil was having a really nice game at outside cornerback – and then he muffed a punt…
Sainristil muffs a punt and the Dolphins recovered.

My question is – WHY is he back there returning punts??? Coaches NEED to be questioned after this😡😡😡 pic.twitter.com/T2tlKbjPJZ

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Frankie Luvu had a few splash plays, including a nice stop at the goal line, however his game this season remains incredibly inconsistent.
3rd and Goal – Luvu with the big stop! pic.twitter.com/w5J28JRPb5

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Quan Martin continues to take poor angles and miss too many tackles from his safety spot. He did look a bit better in coverage with Quinn calling the plays.
How many poor angles and missed tackles have we seen from Quan Martin this season 🤦🏻‍♂️ pic.twitter.com/FDxnOnnQA0

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Kinlaw did have a few penalties, and I have noticed he plays WAY TOO HIGH, but he made some big plays down by the goal line and he deserved some credit for those. That said, he’s not generating any pressure on the quarterback and too often takes himself out of plays in the run game by not maintaining his gap-integrity.
Kinlaw with the big STUFF pic.twitter.com/poInHmBkup

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
Defensive line getting blown off the ball. Kinlaw get easily turned and the hole is massive! pic.twitter.com/goVdYosVMx

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Preston Smith literally FELL into one of his two tackles in the game. He is a complete non-factor and looks to be going through the motions out there. He’s the definition of collecting a paycheck.
Preston Smith, playing inside here, has been a HUGE disappointment. Just gets turned WAY too easily, and Luvu is not sound on the outside. pic.twitter.com/93hjV23Pgv

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Jacob Martin collected a sack and led the team in pressures.
3rd and 2 – GREAT play by Martin to get the sack! pic.twitter.com/qUxl7dibtX

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 16, 2025
  • Johnny Newton – Hahahahahahaha is all I can say. What a WASTE of a draft pick!

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/studs-and-duds/389378/commanders-vs-dolphins-madrid-studs-and-duds
 
Monday Night Football: Dallas Cowboys vs Las Vegas Raiders

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We’ve got one game left for Week 11 of the 2025/’26 NFL season. This week’s Monday Night Football features the Dallas Cowboys visiting the Las Vegas Raiders. The Cowboys haven’t won a game since Week 7, when they beat the Commanders 44-22. They are coming off their bye week, and have lost their last two games. The Raiders have lost three in a row, and only have two wins this season.

Who: Dallas Cowboys (3-5-1) at Las Vegas Raiders (2-7)

Where: Allegiant Stadium | Las Vegas, NV

When: November 17, 2025, 8:15 p.m.

TV: ABC/ESPN

Joe Buck (play-by-play)

Troy Aikman (analyst)

Lisa Salters (sideline)

ManningCast on ESPN2

Sirius XM NFL


Dallas: XM/SXM 226, Internet 808

Las Vegas: XM/SXM 225, Internet 816

National: 88

Español: XM/SXM 227, Internet 832

Online Stream: Fubo.TV, ESPN+

FanDuel Sportsbook odds: Cowboys -3,5, 50.5 O/U

Dallas: -190

Las Vegas: +160

Prediction: Cowboys 33 – Raiders 20

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...-football-dallas-cowboys-vs-las-vegas-raiders
 
Daily Slop – 18 Nov 25 – Safety Tyler Owens was not on the field for a single defensive snap against the Dolphins

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Commanders links

Articles​


Washington Post (paywall)

Commanders cut Matt Gay after two more misses, sign Jake Moody


Washington signed Gay to a lucrative one-year deal in the offseason, hoping to solve what has been an ongoing issue. Instead, he is out and Moody, 25, is in.

Gay, 31, made just 13 of his 19 field goal attempts and particularly struggled from beyond 50 yards, from which he had missed more attempts (five) than he had made (four) through 10 games.

It will now be Moody’s turn.

The 25-year-old has spent the better part of the season in Chicago after being cut by the San Francisco 49ers on Sept. 9. He made 8 of 9 field goal attempts in two appearances with the Bears — including the 38-yard game-winner in their Oct. 13 win over Washington — but has struggled from distance. He has made just 6 of 12 field goals from 50-plus yards in 34 career games.

Moody has a prior relationship with Peters, who was the assistant general manager in San Francisco when the 49ers selected him in the third round of the 2023 draft. His draft position (99th overall) was high for a kicker, and he rewarded the team with a solid rookie season in which he converted 84 percent of his field goals. But his sophomore season was shaky, and two misses in the opener this year prompted his release.

Moody becomes the 10th kicker to sign in Washington with Quinn and Peters at the helm, continuing an absurdly high degree of turnover at one of the sport’s most pressure-packed positions. Some of the previous nine never played in a game, others succumbed to injuries, and some — such as Matthew Wright, who was signed after Gay got hurt — were temporary fill-ins.

Gay was supposed to stop that kicker carousel from spinning. When the Commanders signed him in March, they gave him a fully guaranteed $4.25 million contract.

Gay appeared visibly distraught while speaking with reporters after Sunday’s game. He said the snap and hold on the potential game-winner were perfect, the attempt was within his range, and the ball felt good leaving his foot. But “it only counts if it goes through,” he continued, and he instead was left to try to assume blame for the Commanders’ sixth consecutive loss.



Commanders Wire

Commanders new kicker has a history with WR Deebo Samuel


Samuel and Moody were teammates with the 49ers for two seasons (2023-24) and had a memorable sideline altercation last November. After Moody missed his third field goal, Samuel confronted him on the sideline. Long snapper Taybor Pepper intervened, and Samuel took a swipe at his neck, making contact with Moody’s facemask.

Here’s the incident.

Deebo Samuel grabbed the neck of long snapper Taybor Pepper and swiped at kicker Jake Moody after a third missed field goal pic.twitter.com/wFIK3p38DR

— Ollie Connolly (@OllieConnolly) November 10, 2024

The incident reflected poorly on Samuel at the time, but he spoke about it afterward, accepting responsibility.

“Normally I don’t even get like that, but just frustrated in the heat of battle, a close game, and I kind of got out of character a little bit,” Samuel said, via Nick Wagoner of ESPN. “But I’ll talk to Moody and we’ll get past it.”

Moody said there was no need for Samuel to apologize, and the two apparently moved past the incident quickly.

“It’s an emotional game, and stuff like that happens all the time,” Moody said, NFL.com. “You just move past it and we won, so that’s all that matters.”

“There doesn’t need to be (an apology)………I do (need) to make those kicks at the end of the day, that’s all I’m focused on. I’m not worried about anything like that.”



ESPN

Five plays that derailed the Commanders this season


No game typified that more than Sunday’s loss in Spain. In the final four minutes of the game, Washington had: a fourth-and-1 pass fail because of a slip; a fumbled punt, and an overtime interception leading to a game-winning field goal for Miami.

“One play doesn’t define a game, one play doesn’t define a season,” Washington tight end Zach Ertz said.

He’s right, of course. But there are multiple plays that can sum up a season. Here are five:

Moment of hope

Three weeks into the season, Washington finally saw what it needed: Daniels and Terry McLaurin connecting on a 56-yard pass vs. the Las Vegas Raiders late in the third quarter.

After missing all of training camp due to a hold-out/hold-in, a strong connection between the two formed in 2024 had re-emerged.

McLaurin and Daniels connected 70 times last season for 944 yards and 12 touchdowns. But McLaurin’s absence in camp impacted their chemistry.

Offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury said they needed to get “the feel, the timing, feel the depths of routes and things of that nature.”

But the same play that brought smiles delivered weeks of pain.

On the play, McLaurin injured his right quad, whether from diving for the end zone or a defensive back falling on it. He has played one game since that catch — and re-aggravated his quad on Oct. 27 at Kansas City. He hasn’t played since.

From Hail to fail

Daniels bobbled the exchange from center on a third-and-1 that Chicago recovered at its own 44-yard line. Had Washington picked up the first down it could have either run out the clock with another first down or, at the least, pinned the Bears deep with a punt and little time remaining.

Instead, Daniels tried to hand the ball off to rookie running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt and lost control. The Bears recovered, the defense couldn’t prevent them from driving another 36 yards and, this time, Chicago won the game, 25-24, on a last second field goal-capping an eight-point fourth-quarter comeback.

The loss was not all on Daniels for sure, though he did throw a first-quarter interception in the red zone as well. The defense then allowed more big plays with sloppy tackling.

And Washington hasn’t won since.

The slip

[O]n a fourth-and-goal from the 1 vs. Miami on Sunday, Ertz started on that same route and cut inside. The play was there except this time Ertz stumbled and Marcus Mariota’s pass fell incomplete.

Washington could have taken a 20-13 lead with 6 minutes, 6 seconds left in the game. Perhaps the Commanders would have still lost in overtime. More disasters followed, however: a fumbled punt; a missed 56-yard field goal at the end of regulation; an overtime interception that led to Miami’s game-winning field goal.



Washington Post (paywall)

Five thoughts on the struggling Commanders entering their bye week


After the defense continually struggled, Quinn took over play-calling duties from coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. With him dialing things up against the Dolphins, the Commanders allowed just 311 yards, their lowest total since they held the New York Giants to 231 in Week 1.

Washington was stout in high-leverage moments, too. Miami converted just 3 of 9 third downs, failed to convert both of its fourth-down attempts and scored touchdowns on 1 of 4 red-zone possessions, which included three goal-to-go situations.

The Commanders’ defense still has room for improvement — especially against the run — but it played much better than in recent weeks. That’s something it can build on.



A to Z Sports

The Commanders’ defense finally showed up


The Commanders’ defense has been historically bad after four-straight losses by 21+ points, and Quinn made the difficult decision to demote his guy Joe Whitt Jr, and take over. We wanted to see if the change brought some juice to the player who looked defeated, and that’s exactly what we saw against the Dolphins. The defense looked drastically different than what we’ve seen since the season started.

The biggest difference we saw was the passing defense, as the Commanders held the Dolphins to only 142 net passing yards, which is the fewest since Week 8 of the 2024 season. Third and fourth downs were another key area they’ve struggled in all season, but they held the Dolphins to 3-9 on third down conversions, and had two huge plays on fourth down.

The Commanders have the Denver Broncos after the bye week and then face the Minnesota Vikings for two games featuring second-year quarterbacks (Bo Nix, J.J. McCarthy). Then, the team concludes the season with a four-game NFC East stretch, during which we will see what it’s truly made of.



Commanders.com

5 takeaways from Commanders vs. Dolphins


The biggest question for the Commanders during the bye week is how they can compete and try to sneak into the playoffs with four division games left, including two matchups against the Philadelphia Eagles in the final two weeks. They expect to get healthier, particularly at receiver, in the next week, but there’s no clear timetable for impact players like Terry McLaurin and Noah Brown. Jayden Daniels could also return from his elbow injury at some point this season, although there’s no telling when, or if, that will happen.

The Commanders could get help at safety and defensive end between now and their Week 13 matchup against the Denver Broncos, as Will Harris and Drake Jackson are both in their 21-day windows to return to the active roster. Washington has struggled to rush the passer and cover receivers in the secondary, so both players would be welcomed additions for a thin defensive unit.



Heavy.com

Bobby Wagner : Leads team in tackles again Sunday


Wagner logged eight tackles (four solo) and a defensed pass Sunday in a Week 11 overtime loss to Miami. Wagner continues to provide steady output as a tackler, as he’s recorded at least seven stops in all 11 of Washington’s games so far this year. He has slowed down from a torrid season-opening pace, though — Wagner has finished with single-digit tackles in five of his past six contests after reaching the double-digit mark in each of the first five weeks of the campaign. That’s nitpicking his big-time production, though, as the veteran linebacker ranks second in the NFL with 107 stops through 11 weeks.



Riggo’s Rag

NFL is not going to flex Commanders out of prime time in Week 13


According to Nicki Jhabvala from The Athletic, there are no plans to flex out Washington’s clash with Denver in favor of a more enticing fixture. That came with dismay among sections of the fan base, who would be happier with the Commanders going back to the fringes until they become more competitive. Alas, they are still a big market team that draws ratings, and the Broncos are 9-2 with ambitions of reaching the Super Bowl growing with every passing week.

Unless several established figures return from injury, this encounter should be pretty one-sided. The Broncos’ defense is nothing short of sensational, and they could get reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year cornerback Patrick Surtain II back by this point. Although their offense hasn’t been firing on all cylinders, they’ve got more than enough to cause problems for the Commanders.

It’s not hard to see why this was chosen for the national stage before the campaign. The Commanders and Broncos were both expected to challenge. Jayden Daniels and Bo Nix were second-year quarterbacks who took the league by storm as rookies. But it would be a massive shock if the former LSU standout was able to feature after dislocating his elbow.



Riggo’s Rag

Seven Commanders players whose roster futures are falling apart at the bye week


Tyler Owens – Commanders S

Tyler Owens has all the athleticism in the world. He’s a physical force with the size, length, and athleticism typically associated with productive defensive backs in Dan Quinn’s defensive scheme. Injuries have stunted his development, but the Washington Commanders made no secret of their stance regarding the young safety in Week 11 against the Miami Dolphins.

Quinn took over defensive play-calling from Joe Whitt Jr., and there were improvements. It didn’t affect the overall outcome, but Owens not logging a single defensive snap was a damning indictment of how his progress is being perceived by the head coach.

This is a bitter blow for Owens. He was expected to play more, not less, as the Commanders aim to get younger. That wasn’t the case, and one has to wonder if the former Texas Tech standout will be on the 53-man roster when the 2026 campaign arrives.



Pro Football Focus (premium content)

NFL Week 11 Statistical Review

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#Commanders HC Dan Quinn took over play-calling duties from DC Joe Whitt Jr. this week. What changed and did it have much of an impact? I took a closer look: https://t.co/Id5Q5499KU pic.twitter.com/5iuaftinSB

— Mark Bullock (@MarkBullockNFL) November 17, 2025

Podcasts & videos

Red Zone Collapse: Commanders’ #2 Unit Vanishes in Catastrophic OT Loss​


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NFC East links


Big Blue View

New York Giants’ Abdul Carter disciplined for mid-week infraction


New York Giants rookie edge defender Abdul Carter did not start Sunday’s game against the Green Bay Packers due to what Carter said was an infraction that occurred during the week.

It was disclosed on Monday morning that Carter was reportedly asleep in the team’s facility at the time of a walk-through during the week.

Carter disputed some of the report, per Duggan’s story:

“Was not sleep, actually doing recovery,” Carter said on X. “Nonetheless that’s on ME!”
Being late to meetings has been a trend during Carter’s rookie season that former coach Brian Daboll let slide, a source said.

Giants’ interim head coach Mike Kafka said in the post-game that it was decision to sit Carter, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft.

“Coach’s decision. That was my decision,” Kafka said after the Giants fell to 2-9 with a 27-20 loss on Sunday. “We’ll just keep the rest of that in-house.”

“I made a mistake during the week that was detrimental to the team,” Carter said. “Had to live with it.”

The timing and the action by Kafka, in his first game, is interesting. Part of the narrative around why Brian Daboll was fired as Giants head coach on Monday was that Daboll was either unable or unwilling to hold players accountable.

This was clearly an effort by Kafka to establish that he would do that.



Bleeding Green Nation

Can the Eagles win the Super Bowl with a mediocre offense?


They are almost certain to win their second straight NFC East title (something no team in the division has done since 2004), and are in control of their own destiny for home field advantage throughout the postseason.

Those are all things to celebrate. The defense is playing on another level. To shut down a Lions team that put up 44 points, piled up 30 first downs and accumulated 546 yards of total offense last week against Washington was breathtaking to behold.

The offense, however, remains stuck in the mud. When playing within structure, Jalen Hurts had difficulty finding open receivers, the running game was largely ineffective, and the play calling once again appeared vanilla and predictable. Their biggest plays were made out of structure. A.J. Brown was targeted but mostly quiet, Saquon Barkley found few holes to run through and explosive plays were once again non-existent.

At this point, you have to wonder if this is all the Eagles are going to get from Kevin Patullo and Nick Sirianni’s offense. And, if it is, is it enough?

The reason Eagles fans are angsty is because most Super Bowl champions don’t have lackluster offenses. One analysis following the 2022 Super Bowl took a look at every Super Bowl winner going back to the 1970 Colts to see how often a champion featured one of the league’s best offenses, defenses and/or both. The numbers are particularly interesting to both the Eagles, the NFC’s top seed, and the Denver Broncos, who are currently the No. 1 seed in the AFC.

Can the Eagles pull out of their offensive rut? One would think that, if they had the answers, they would have discovered them by now.

Should the Eagles’ and Broncos’ offensive numbers hold, the data shows only three Super Bowl winners finished with a worse PPG average offensively: the 2008 Steelers (20th), 2015 Broncos (19th) and 2002 Buccaneers (18th). Only five other Super Bowl winners finished outside the top-10 in offense: the 1982 Redskins and ‘03 Patriots (12th), 2000 Ravens and ‘07 Giants (14th) and the 1990 Giants (15th).

Of the eight teams above, six featured the No. 1 defense in football, based on PPG: the ‘82 Redskins, ‘90 Giants, ‘00 Ravens, ‘02 Bucs, ‘03 Patriots, and ‘08 Steelers.

As Medium noted two years ago, since the merger, the average Super Bowl winner is ranked 5.7th on offense and 6.0 on defense.

In other words, if you’re going to have a middling offense, your defense better be out of this world.



Blogging the Boys

Defense dominates as Cowboys cruise to 33-16 win over Raiders


The Cowboys got the ball to start, and everyone quickly noticed that neither CeeDee Lamb nor George Pickens were on the field at all. Dallas quickly went three-and-out, and sideline reporter Lisa Salters confirmed it was a coach’s decision and nothing to do with an injury.

That brought up the first look at this new Dallas defense, featuring newly-minted Cowboys Quinnen Williams and Logan Wilson, on top of three players – DeMarvion Overshown, Shavon Revel, and Malik Hooker – returning from injury. Caelen Carson also got the start at outside cornerback in place of Kaiir Elam.

The changes seemed to work. The Raiders punted after just four plays. Then, when the Dallas defense came back onto the field in the shadow of their own goal post following a strip sack of Dak Prescott, they held the Raiders to -2 yards and a field goal.

In fact, the Cowboys wouldn’t give up a single touchdown until the fourth quarter, and even then it came on a drive that took 14 plays and two fourth-down conversions. By that point, the Cowboys also held a dominant 31-9 lead and were content to milk the clock by giving up dink-and-dunk passes to Las Vegas.


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Bengals’ Chase suspended one game for spitting on Steelers’ Ramsey


Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase has been suspended one game without pay for spitting on Pittsburgh Steelers defensive back Jalen Ramsey, the league announced Monday.

Chase is appealing the suspension, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. The appeal will be heard and ruled upon by either Derrick Brooks, Ramon Foster or Jordy Nelson, the hearing officers jointly appointed by the NFL and NFL Players Association.

If the suspension is upheld, he would miss his team’s upcoming game against the New England Patriots in Week 12. The incident occurred in Cincinnati’s 34-12 loss to the Steelers on Sunday. Video from Cincinnati’s WXIX-TV showed Chase clearly spitting in Ramsey’s direction, which prompted Ramsey to throw a punch at Chase.

The suspension would cost Chase his weekly paycheck of $448,333 along with a $58,823 per game active bonus he would be forfeiting.

In announcing the suspension, the league cited the section of the rule book that applies to “any act which is contrary to the generally understood principles of sportsmanship.”

This is the second time this season that a player has been suspended for spitting on an opponent. In Week 1, Philadelphia Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter spit on Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott before the first play from scrimmage, prompting Carter’s ejection. The NFL viewed that as a single-game suspension.

However, Chase finished the game against the Steelers. At the time, officials did not spot Chase’s actions before ejecting Ramsey for the thrown punch.

Chase also denied spitting on Ramsey.

“I ain’t ever opened my mouth to that guy,” said Chase, who said that words exchanged between the two is what prompted Ramsey’s reaction.

But the league sided with Ramsey. Bengals coach Zac Taylor admonished Chase’s actions Monday.

“Obviously what happened is crossing the line, and we can’t have that,” Taylor said. “I know he’ll own up to that.

When approached by ESPN on Monday, Chase declined to speak to reporters.



ESPN

Source: Shedeur Sanders’ home broken into during NFL debut


According to multiple reports, it wasn’t clear whether anything was stolen from Sanders’ residence and no suspects have been identified.

In the past year or so, burglaries have taken place at the homes of multiple high-profile athletes, including the Dallas Mavericks’ Luka Doncic, the Cincinnati Bengals’ Joe Burrow, and the Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce.

In Sunday’s 23-16 loss, Sanders completed 4 of 16 passes for 47 yards and threw an interception. He was also sacked twice. Browns coach Kevin Stefanski said after the game that Sanders will start next Sunday’s game against the Raiders in Las Vegas if Gabriel cannot clear protocol.



ESPN

Sources: Falcons’ Penix (knee) expected to miss rest of season


Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Penix Jr. is not expected to play again this season as a result of the knee injury he suffered during Sunday’s loss to the Carolina Panthers, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The belief is that Penix has some damage to his ACL, but he is going through further test testing to get more clarity, sources told Schefter.

The Falcons said in a statement that Penix will be put on injured reserve, sidelining him for at least the next four games, however, the team is “working through the medical process to determine the severity of the injury.”

Veteran Kirk Cousins replaced Penix on Sunday in the eventual 30-27 overtime loss at home and will take over as the Falcons’ starting quarterback with Penix sidelined. The loss dropped the Falcons to 3-7.

Cousins was the starter last season before a five-game stretch in which he threw nine interceptions. Penix took over in Week 16, and the Falcons said he would start moving forward. The expectation was that the Falcons would trade or release Cousins, but the organization was comfortable with him as the backup despite the hefty price tag.

In college, Penix had four season-ending injuries, including torn ACLs in 2018 and 2020.



ESPN

49ers search for kicker again with Eddy Piñeiro hurt


Niners coach Kyle Shanahan announced Monday that veteran kicker Eddy Piñeiro suffered a Grade 1 strain in his right (kicking) hamstring in Sunday’s win against the Arizona Cardinals. Piñeiro, according to Shanahan, will be week-to-week and is likely to miss some time.

That means the 49ers will once again have to go to the free agent market this week in search of help at a position that Piñeiro had finally stabilized after signing in Week 2.

“We’re going to bring in some guys for a workout,” Shanahan said. “They’re working on that now. They’re going to do it either tomorrow or Wednesday.”

Piñeiro is one of two kickers who has tried at least 10 field goals without a miss this year, and he set a franchise record for most consecutive makes to start his season. He does, however, have four misses (two of which were blocked) on 22 extra point attempts, including one that was blocked and one that was missed in Arizona.

Still, the Niners will undoubtedly miss Piñeiro, who settled their kicking situation after incumbent Jake Moody was waived following a shaky run of two-plus years in that position.


Discussion topics


ESPN

NFL players react to league’s grievance over team report cards


“It’s a great way to be transparent and a great way to keep everybody accountable.”

Pittsburgh Steelers defensive lineman Cameron Heyward, one of 10 NFLPA vice presidents, [said], “I think to stop it, it just kind of feels like you’re hiding something.”

The NFL filed a grievance against the players association claiming the report cards violate a collective bargaining agreement clause that states NFL owners and the union must “use reasonable efforts to curtail public comments by club personnel or players which express criticism of any club, its coach, or its operation and policy,” according to an August letter from the league’s management council to the NFLPA, obtained by ESPN. For the latest report card published in February, 1,695 players leaguewide responded to the surveys, which were administered from Aug. 26 to Nov. 20, 2024, and include grades on everything from head coach to team travel to the locker room. According to the NFLPA, answers were collected anonymously.

“The fact that there’s pushback shows it’s working,” one 10-year veteran, who asked for anonymity, told ESPN.

“We have responded to the grievance with our intention to fight against this action and continue what’s clearly become an effective tool for comparing workplace standards across the league and equipping you to make informed career decisions,” the NFLPA wrote in its email to its players.

In a graphic included in the email, the NFLPA illustrated some of the grade improvements made by teams since the surveys began.

The Los Angeles Chargers jumped from 30th to fifth after building a new training facility.

The Washington Commanders jumped to 11th from last place in large part because of improvements to travel, food, family and childcare.

“That goes to [team owner] Josh [Harris], honestly, and [general manager] Adam [Peters],” Commanders coach Dan Quinn said of Washington’s improved grades at the NFL combine in March. “There’s no gap in between what [Harris] says and what he does. And so, to have that type of reflection in a year is really big. We told him how important this was to us. He heard that from the players and then took action on that.”

Harris, who bought the Commanders in July 2023, received an A and ranked eighth out of 32 teams in the ownership category of the 2025 report card. Though players gave their locker room an F when the survey was conducted during the 2024 season, Harris’ average rating for perceived willingness to invest in the facilities was 9.24 out of 10. In July, the Commanders unveiled renovations to the locker room that had been ongoing since the end of the 2024 season.

Players, though, say they appreciate the visibility that comes with publicly publishing the report card grades and believe it creates accountability and also gives players a better picture of league happenings.

“The public pressure is the best part about our survey,” said Cleveland Browns offensive lineman Joel Bitonio, a 12-year veteran and alternate player representative.

As one of just three teams that didn’t provide childcare during games in the 2024 season, the Bengals received an F-minus for treatment of families in the February report card. This season, though, families of Bengals players can drop their children off prior to the game, receive updates from childcare providers throughout and pick them up either in the fourth quarter or after the game.

“I feel like it’s been something that we had to figure out logistically from an ownership standpoint, but it’s a big benefit for us,” said Burks, who has a 16-month-old daughter. “I know that my wife is really enjoying the game instead of running around with the little ones.”

The Bengals did not return requests for comment on whether the improvements for treatment of families were directly linked to poor feedback in the NFLPA report cards.

To the players whom ESPN spoke to, administering the surveys and publishing the results is similar to the evaluation process applied to them by their own team officials.

“They grade us all the time,” Lake said. “We get graded every single day, whether it’s at practice or during the game. It’s just interesting that now they don’t want report cards to come out about their organization and stuff like that. That’s like, to me, it’s a little disappointing because as players, our job is to get graded, but then when they ask us to grade something, they’re like, ‘Mmm, no.'”


aBit o’Twitter

Monday Night Miracle? More like a complete Monday Night Meltdown.

Raiders RB Ashton Jeanty finished with 7 rushing yards and scored only 2.3 more fantasy points than…Cowboys fullback Hunter Luepke.

PFSN Analyst @jasonkatz13 says it won't get any better — the Raiders don't… pic.twitter.com/dCEEhwZE6z

— PFSN (@PFSN365) November 18, 2025
#Giants RB Cam Skattebo got into it with Dominik Mysterio tonight on Monday Night Raw 😂😂

pic.twitter.com/xKh34h6smS

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) November 18, 2025
🎶 Here we go Bernie, here we go. 🎶 https://t.co/TsOfjEg2oX

— Andrew Siciliano (@AndrewSiciliano) November 18, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...-a-single-defensive-snap-against-the-dolphins
 
NFL Fantasy Football Week 12: The Playoffs Beckon

gettyimages-2247026265.jpg


Welcome back for another round of fantasy football ramblings. Hopefully, if you’re still following along, it’s because you are anticipating a playoff run and trying to find the right keys to unlock a championship. (I can certainly vouch for having teams in different positions down the stretch, from a Friends & Family League team that has already clinched a first-round playoff bye at 10-1, leaving a month of results that only matter for bragging rights before a Week 16 that actually matters, to a superflex league team that is desperately scrounging the likes of Tyler Shough for a second QB after Jayden’s injury and Justin Fields’ benching.)

A lot of the work to get across the finish line to the elimination weeks should be done already at this point, with only few remaining bye weeks to navigate and injuries now the primary obstacle to consider. Even so, we’ll take one last shot at identifying some names to keep an eye on for stretch run additions before planning to close this year’s fantasy ramblings with a Playoff Start/Sit primer in Week 15. Don’t know if there’s any interest, but I’ll also open it up to mailbag questions to be answered the Tuesday before Week 15 as well, should that prove helpful. (And I’ll again offer my thanks to those who’ve read through my maiden voyage into providing fantasy advice as well as to Hogs Haven for hosting – hope it has been at least a little bit helpful/entertaining!)

Last Session’s Grades:


Sam Darnold – 5/10 It’s been a pair of bad outings since this column recommended Darnold, but he’s still top half of the league at QB for the season and criminally under-rostered across ESPN leagues. He’ll have some usable moments yet.

Joe Flacco – 5/10 The Ja’Marr Chase suspension won’t help in Week 12, and you’re not starting him over less old-in-the-tooth options, but the volume remains there.

Bhayshul Tuten – incomplete Seemed to be starting to emerge, but picked up an injury in Week 11.

Emari Demercado – 3/10 Bam Knight jumped back in front in usage, but the real problem is that the Cardinals as a whole do not inspire confidence at this point.

Christian Watson – 8/10 Two touchdowns in a breakout Week 11. Still not enough targets for full confidence, but the trend is in the right direction.

Demario Douglas – 1/10 Turned out not to be the beneficiary of Boutte’s absence in spite of production the week of the injury. Instead, Mack Hollins returns from the dead.

Theo Johnson – 6/10 Concerned about the downtick in production with Jameis Winston at quarterback, but a season-high in yards the week before.

Colston Loveland – 5/10 Modest production the last two weeks after his breakout, but enough to not cost you from that lineup spot.

This Week’s Names:​


Davis Mills – You probably have better options if you’re in playoff contention, but especially in superflex formats, he hasn’t looked bad in relief of C.J. Stroud the last couple weeks. Goes without saying that Stroud’s full return to health would dim his prospects.

Sean Tucker – Multi-touchdown game despite Rachaad White being active makes him worth a look for as long as Bucky Irving remains out.

Emmanuel Wilson – Entirely about Josh Jacobs injury news, but could be a RB1 in a best case scenario the rest of the way.

Jaleel McLaughlin – Harvey remains the starter in Denver with J.K. Dobbins sidelined, but his yards per carry have been disappointing enough that McLaughlin could start to steal work. Harvey will remain the primary pass catching back either way though.

Darnell Mooney – If Drake London misses significant time, he’ll have a window to haul in an increase in targets.

Jayden Higgins – We were on the wrong Texans rookie (Noel) in this column a few weeks ago; since, Higgins has three 7+ target outings in his last four games.

Juwan Johnson – Quietly a Top 6 TE for the year, yet still unrostered in 2/3 of ESPN leagues, Johnson will get the safety blanket dumpoffs from a developing rookie QB and a friendly schedule down the stretch.

Saints DST – The Saints get a potentially Michael Penix and Drake London-less Falcons team in Week 12, and the Jets and Titans in Weeks 15 and 16. I’ve tried not to double up on recommendations in this column this year, but its worth another nod in the direction of a defense that is attached to a team so bad that many will not look their direction.

I’ve also mentioned Kenneth Gainwell and Chris Rodriguez in weeks prior, but will give them a smaller shoutout again with Jaylen Warren injury news to watch and Jacory Croskey-Merritt seeming to take a backseat in Washington.

That just about wraps it up for the fantasy regular season. Good luck to all for your playoff pushes! And again, if there are mailbox questions you want answered on the Tuesday before Week 15, leave them in the comments and I’ll be happy to offer my $0.02!

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/fantasyfootball/389653/nfl-fantasy-football-week-12-the-playoffs-beckon
 
Starting today, comments and Feed posts on Hogs Haven will have activity notifications

When you post on SB Nation, we don’t want you to miss all the conversations and responses that follow.

So starting today, whenever a user replies to your comment or to your post on the Feed, you’ll see a notification at the top right corner of the page.

And of course, this means that when you engage with other community members, they’ll get an alert too.

Our goal is to create more and better conversations on Hogs Haven and elsewhere across the SB Nation network. Anytime someone engages with your comments or Feed posts on another SB Nation community, you’ll see it in your notifications.

For instance, here’s what your notifications might look like on sbnation.com if you were getting replies across Arrowhead Pride, MMA Fighting, and sbnation.com. You will see the same expandable stack of notifications on any site in the network where you were logged in.

Screenshot-2025-11-13-at-1.57.16%E2%80%AFPM.png

If you want to dig into more of how this will work across the network and what’s next, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton.

You can log in or sign up here. Logged in users get fewer ads along with the ability to join the conversation.

Jump into the comment section below or post on The Feed to see notifications in action.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/general/3...n-hogs-haven-will-have-activity-notifications
 
Daily Slop: 19 Nov 25 – Mikey Sainristil, Dan Quinn, Jeremy Reaves, Jayden Daniels top Commanders headlines today

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Commanders links

Articles​


Washington Post (paywall)

Mike Sainristil’s unlikely path to the NFL added a special significance to the Commanders’ trip to Spain before an on-field mistake proved costly


The trip had a bitter ending for Sainristil, who muffed a punt late in the fourth quarter of the Commanders’ 16-13 overtime loss to the Miami Dolphins on Sunday in the NFL’s first game in Spain, but the hour he had spent teaching the sport he loves to children in a foreign country resonated. He could relate to those kids.

Sainristil, 25, was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. He immigrated to the Boston area when he was 7 months old, but his parents had lived in Haiti for their entire lives and were unfamiliar with football. He later learned about the sport through an older cousin who had grown up in the United States, but his parents thought it was too dangerous and denied his request to play.

Sainristil’s parents eventually relented, and he has been hooked ever since. He relished the chance to give a group of kids in a country where knowledge about football remains limited early exposure to the game.

“Opportunities like this just show you it’s all about just having fun at the end of the day. Take the rules and stuff out of everything and just have fun playing a sport with your friends,” Sainristil said. “Just seeing how much they’re enjoying it is cool.



A to Z Sports

Dan Quinn needs to do something he doesn’t want to do


The best move Quinn can make is by bringing in a younger, defensive-minded guy similar to Seattle Seahawks head coach Mike Macdonald, and adjusting to the league, not just another familiar face like Raheem Morris if he’s fired from the Atlanta Falcons. Whether that’s a coach in college, or someone on the rise in the NFL as an assistant or position coach, Quinn needs a fresh face, and not just another one of his guys from the past. Unless it’s Al Harris with the Chicago Bears, but that seems like a big ask.

It worked when they brought in Kliff Kingsbury as offensive coordinator to work with Jayden Daniels and revamp the offense. The success was there last season, and who knows what it would’ve looked like this year if Jayden Daniels and Terry McLaurin had stayed healthy. Quinn has to realize that what he’s done in the past hasn’t worked, and a drastic change needs to happen.

The new defensive coordinator needs to lay out his blueprint

Finding the right guy, which I will go more in depth on this week, is just the beginning of it all, and that’s when the work really starts. This is the most important offseason for Peters since he joined the Commanders, and he has to work with the new defensive coordinator to rebuild the defense. The new guy would come in, evaluate the roster, see who he likes and what role they would have in his scheme, and then find the missing pieces.



Heavy.com

Jeremy Reaves : Strong performance in loss


Reaves compiled seven total tackles (five solo) in Sunday’s 16-13 overtime loss to Miami. Reaves was able to finish second on the team in takedowns behind linebacker Bobby Wagner (8), recording at least seven tackles for the fourth straight week and sixth time overall this season. On the year, the safety has now produced 63 total tackles (38 solo), including 1.0 sacks, while also adding three passes defensed over 11 games.



Commanders Wire

Washington Commanders QB Jayden Daniels makes a big off-field move


The reigning NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year signed with 3 Arts Sports in an effort to launch his production company and grow his presence in media, business, and entertainment.

Regina Jackson, Daniels’ mother, agent, and business manager, released the following statement.

“3 Arts understands that today’s athlete is also a storyteller, investor, and cultural leader,” the statement read. “What drew us to their team is their ability to operate with precision, creativity, and scale to help Jayden expand his influence across every vertical of sport, business, and entertainment.”

Daniels isn’t the only big-name NFL star to sign with 3 Arts. Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and Browns defensive end Myles Garrett also joined.

Daniels made it clear his focus remains on football:

EXCLUSIVE: Commanders star QB Jayden Daniels just signed with one of the biggest players in talent and sports.⁠

The 24-year-old is officially joining 3 Arts Sports, aligning with a roster that already includes Travis Kelce and Myles Garrett. Daniels will partner with the… pic.twitter.com/guEkOHyF0e

— Boardroom (@boardroom) November 18, 2025

It’s been a frustrating season for Daniels and the Commanders. He’s missed five starts due to knee, hamstring, and elbow injuries. He dislocated his elbow in a Week 9 loss to the Seattle Seahawks and will be reevaluated after Washington’s bye for a potential Week 13 return.



ESPN

NFL Week 11: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game


Commanders

What more could go wrong for the Commanders?
Just when it looked like Washington could snap its five-game losing streak, the Commanders found new ways to lose. An overtime interception on the first pass by Mariota set up the Dolphins’ winning points. An injury to Jaylin Lane led to a new punt returner — and a fumble by Mike Sainristil. Washington would have had the ball at its own 40. But it followed a series that ended on a failed fourth-and-1 when Mariota’s pass to tight end Zach Ertz fell incomplete because the veteran slipped on his route. It has been that kind of season for Washington, which had 10 players considered starters entering the season sidelined by injuries or suspensions. And the losing streak has no end in sight.

Biggest hole in the game plan: Washington’s red zone offense. The Commanders failed to convert any of their three trips into touchdowns and it cost them. There was a false start on a fourth-and-1 that forced a field goal; there was a failed run by Mariota and the Ertz slip. Had he not slipped he would have been in position to score. The Commanders entered ranked 22nd in red zone offense. It cost them a game Sunday.

Best quote from the locker room: “I was going to walk in probably if I don’t slip like that,” Ertz said about his fourth-and-1 slip from the Miami 1-yard line with 6:06 left in a tie game. “A play I’ve ran probably 10,000 times in my career and never slipped like that. This is the first time they played an NFL game here. It was not ideal. There was a lot of slippage. But you can’t blame it on the field by any means.” — John Keim

Next game: vs. Broncos (Nov. 30, 8:20 p.m. ET)



ESPN

Midseason reports on NFL offensive coordinators, playcallers


Washington Commanders

Offensive coordinator:
Kliff Kingsbury

Playcaller: Kliff Kingsbury

What has gone right? Left tackle Laremy Tunsil, acquired in an offseason trade, has played well. Veteran tight end Zach Ertz and receiver Deebo Samuel combined for 81 catches, 741 yards and 8 touchdowns through Week 10. Washington needs more explosiveness around them. Seventh-round running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt has shown flashes with 470 yards and four touchdowns heading into Week 11.

What has gone wrong? Injuries. Washington quarterback Jayden Daniels has missed four games — and counting — with three different injuries. Receivers Terry McLaurin and Noah Brown have missed a combined 15 games — and counting. Running back Austin Ekeler (Achilles) was lost for the season in Week 2. Washington played only two games with all of these players healthy.

Key to second half: Health. There’s uncertainty over whether Daniels (dislocated left elbow) will return — or if he should, particularly if the team is out of the playoff race. But even if only McLaurin and Brown return, it will provide a major boost. McLaurin would give Washington the downfield boost it desperately needs. The Commanders’ offensive line needs to become more of a factor.



Pro Football Focus (Premium content)

Grading all 32 first-round rookies after Week 11


Pick No. 29: Washington Commanders: T Josh Conerly Jr.

  • Overall Rookie Grade: 54.2 (Rank: 7/7)
  • Principal Opponent: Chop Robinson
  • Week 11 Snaps: 67
  • Week 11 Grade: 74.3

Week 11 wasn’t a banner day for Washington’s offense as a whole, but Conerly recorded a season-high 74.3 PFF overall grade in the team’s overtime loss to the Dolphins. He continued his hot streak in the run game, where he recorded five positive grades. His lateral movement appears to be improving with each passing week. Since Week 8, Conerly has earned a 78.4 PFF run blocking grade — a top-15 mark among qualified tackles.



Pro Football Focus (Premium content)

NFL season-long statistical review ahead of Week 12

View Link
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The #Commanders rediscovered a successful run game formula against the Dolphins on Sunday, involving leaning on Chris Rodriguez and using a 6th OL. I broke it all down: https://t.co/EqYhwNcODS pic.twitter.com/QwMGZtprAc

— Mark Bullock (@MarkBullockNFL) November 18, 2025

Podcasts & videos

Join me and @RealBramW in our livestream at 7:30 tonight. Because who doesn't want to talk more about the season! Therapy Tuesday folks. That bill is getting expensive. But it is financing my new yacht. So thanks.https://t.co/uXGSfsHFSZ

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 18, 2025

NFL Week 11 Recap: Commanders fall to Dolphins 16-13 | Booth Review | Washington Commanders | NFL​


NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

Lane Johnson injury update: Surgery still not ruled out for Eagles RT


The Eagles All Pro right tackle could land on IR, but early thoughts are he’ll be able to return this season.

On Monday, it was reported that Johnson likely suffered a Lisfranc sprain and could miss 4-6 weeks — while that wouldn’t make the injury season-ending, it would likely land him on injured reserve through most of the back-half of the regular season.

However, that timetable is still very much in question, with Jeff McLane reporting on Tuesday that due to inflammation in his foot, Johnson hasn’t been able to get X-rays yet to determine if his injury requires season-ending surgery. It could be another week or so until they know more definitively.

The inflammation in Lane Johnson’s foot needs to go down before he can have X-rays to determine if his Lisfranc injury needs surgery, per NFL sources. So it could be a week or more before the #Eagles know exactly how long their all-pro RT is out this season.

Again, initial… https://t.co/6WIfvgJfFf

— Jeff McLane (@Jeff_McLane) November 18, 2025


Blogging the Boys

Cowboys playoff chances: Dallas has uphill battle, but hope nonetheless


The Dallas Cowboys were victorious on Monday night against the Las Vegas Raiders. It was “only” one win and was “just the Raiders”, but winning feels good and makes the sun shine a little bit brighter.

Something that is often more visible as a result of that sunlight is the box where we keep discussions about the playoffs. In times like these it feels less ridiculous to open it and poke around, but we can obviously do so with the context that the situation for Dallas is dire right now.

Let’s say the Cowboys can get to nine wins on the season. This is admittedly very optimistic, but it is going to in all likelihood take at least nine wins for the playoffs to be a possibility.

This scenario would involve the 49ers and/or Seahawks only winning two more times across the rest of the season.


One thing you should know Dom…

DON'T MESS WITH CAM SKATTEBO!!! 😤@Giants pic.twitter.com/4tFeiwnS5k

— WWE (@WWE) November 18, 2025
Aye, honestly if you don’t like that I’m having a good time while dealing with a tough time, then just go ahead and unfollow and casually move on. I’m not able to play football and have the fun I’ve been having my whole life so I am doing things outside the box trying to find…

— cameron skattebo (@camskattebo5) November 18, 2025

Upcoming opponent


The Athletic (paywall)

Is Broncos’ potential capped with Bo Nix?


Bo Nix is a conundrum.

The Denver Broncos quarterback, part of a historic 2024 draft class that might actually live up to the hype, has led his team to the best record in the NFL (9-2) despite enduring stretches that could succinctly be described as both very good and very bad.

Nix leads the NFL with 387 pass attempts, a 3.01 sack percentage and five fourth-quarter comebacks. It’s not easy to do all of those things at once.

In fact, it’s wildly bizarre.

Tom Brady (three times) and Peyton Manning (once) are the only quarterbacks since 2012 to lead the NFL in pass attempts and make the playoffs, so Nix has an opportunity to break an extraordinary barrier. Brady and Manning, arguably the two best quarterbacks in NFL history, accomplished the feat because of their unique value to their offenses.

But typically, the league’s leader in pass attempts is someone like…Jameis Winston (2019) or Ben Roethlisberger (2018), a QB on a mediocre (at best) team who is forced to over-chuck it because of the score. Pass attempts and team success don’t often go hand in hand.

Even Drew Brees (2007-08, 2014, 2016), who, like Nix, also commanded a Sean Payton offense, only led the league in attempts during down seasons for the Saints. New Orleans won just seven games in three of those four seasons and eight in the other.

Still, it’s worth pointing out that Brees was better equipped to take on that heavy passing workload in Payton’s scheme. Brees, who briefly held the league’s all-time passing title, was a pocket passer with all-time accuracy who delivered the ball with precise rhythm and timing because of his ability to read the field and anticipate the play.

Nix, a more gifted athlete than Brees, is at his best with the RPO game, utilizing play action and deep balls to carve out explosive plays. Nix doesn’t operate out of the pocket with timing and processing speed like Brees did. Not yet, at least.

Going into the draft, teams viewed Nix as more of a facilitator than a driver of the offense. Evaluators liked his potential in the right situation, with a good running game and defense, and Nix got that with Payton’s Broncos.

But strangely, they’ve put more on Nix’s plate than anyone would have anticipated. He’s completing 61.2 percent of his passes for 2,421 yards, 18 touchdowns and eight interceptions this season, and he has added 213 rushing yards and three scores.

The Broncos rank 17th in points, 13th in total yards, 17th in passing yards and 21st in net yards per attempt. More or less, they’re average across the board.

His comebacks are no fluke. Nix has high-end intangibles, according to those who scouted him before the draft, and he is comfortable in chaos. He also tallied three fourth-quarter comebacks as a rookie.

However, it’s not like the Broncos are saving Nix for the fourth quarter. He’s actually delivered more passes in the first half (205) than the second (182). The attempts aren’t disproportionately tilted like they may have been for previous leaders in pass attempts.

One struggle has been consistency, according to coaches and execs who have studied Nix, but that’s true for nearly all second-year QBs. The Broncos have gotten into trouble when defenses have forced them to methodically work down the field, taking away the bigger plays where Nix has been known to thrive.

On one hand, Payton should be thrilled that he’s been able to test his quarterback in a variety of situations while they’ve raced out to the AFC’s No. 1 seed. If Nix improves his pocket presence and the Broncos can add players who can gain yards after the catch, he could really take off in future seasons.

On the other hand, the scheme fit still looks a little funky. The dramatic ups and downs on offense could doom the Broncos in the postseason. And if there’s something to the “square-peg, round-hole” theory with Nix and the scheme, it’s fair to wonder if there’s a cap on the offense’s potential.

That’s the conundrum.


NFL league links

Articles​


Pro Football Focus

NFL Week 11: PFF Team of the Week


Offense


Defense


Special Teams


Discussion topics


Front Office Sports

NFL Refs Are Ruining the TV Experience


Take the Eagles’ 16–9 win over the Lions on NBC’s Sunday Night Football. Philadelphia iced the game after the refs made a “terrible” pass interference call, in the eyes of NBC game analyst Cris Collinsworth.

NBC replays showed Detroit cornerback Rock Ya-Sin hand-fighting with Philadelphia’s A.J. Brown—but nothing worth a pass interference. As a former WR himself, you’d think Collinsworth would have been on Brown’s side. Instead, he went off on the call.

“Oh, come on! Come on! That is terrible! That is an absolutely terrible call that’s going to decide this football game! If anything, it’s an offensive push,” said an exasperated Collinsworth. “I said offensive foul … if you want to call it, it’s an offensive foul. Wow.”

“It’s certainly hand-fighting, but not even at the level we’ve seen,” added play-by-play announcer Mike Tirico. “Rock Ya-Sin thought it may have been going the other way as well. He played a good game tonight.”

Kurt Warner serves as a game analyst for the league’s own 24/7 NFL Network. But he was appalled by the call, writing on X/Twitter that officials “just can’t make those calls in deciding moments.”

The strongest comment came from Albert Breer, senior NFL reporter for Sports Illustrated.

“I’ll reiterate my stance: Officiating needs to be torn down to the studs,” he tweeted. “They need to rebuild it with the technology that’s now available. What they’ve done instead—which is to continually add on to what they already have, and overcomplicate everything—clearly isn’t working.”

Then there’s the abomination known as the Tush Push. Even if the refs can’t see the Eagles frequently moving offside on their patented short-yardage play, viewers can. It’s frustrating that refs can’t or won’t make obvious calls while inventing others seemingly out of thin air.

Consider the ref’s controversial call during the Eagles’ 38–20 win over the Giants on Oct. 26. On a fourth-and-1, Kayvon Thibodeaux of the Giants appeared to strip the football from Jalen Hurts as the Eagles QB reached for the first down. But the refs swooped in with one of the most atrocious calls of the season, ruling that Hurts’s forward progress had been stopped—and the play couldn’t be reviewed. Social media exploded.

As frustrated NFL analyst Jordan Schultz tweeted: “You can’t possibly call this forward progress and call the play dead. You just can’t. He’s literally getting pushed. The point of the TUSH PUSH.”

The NFL’s in great shape. Through Week 10, game telecasts were averaging 17.6 million viewers, up 7% from last season, and the best mark since the 2015 season. But maybe the league should be concerned.

NBC’s Sunday Night Football is the league’s marquee package, ranking No. 1 in prime time for an unprecedented 14 years. Does the league really want tens of millions of viewers to avidly watch a game for three and a half hours—only to throw up their hands over a bad call that decides the game?


aBit o’Twitter

Led by the Broncos’ win over the Chiefs, “NFL ON CBS” continues its record-breaking season with the most-watched program of the week with nearly 29 million viewers.

CBS Sports’ national game at 4:25 PM ET is #1 program in all of TV with 26.568 million viewers through Week 11. pic.twitter.com/S9QoqYWMUz

— CBS Sports PR (@CBSSportsGang) November 18, 2025
🚨 NEW: The NFL game generated €150 MILLION in Madrid City.

42,000 out of the 78,610 fans who came to the Bernabéu were tourists. €21M was generated in bars and restaurants.

The NFL Madrid game at Bernabéu is considered a HUGE success. @diarioas 💰 pic.twitter.com/q71jfsqoyj

— Madrid Zone (@theMadridZone) November 18, 2025
National Anthem Singer, Criticized Over 'Stripper Look,' Says NFL Approved Outfit | Click to read more 👇 https://t.co/AhJeex9TiL pic.twitter.com/CDPBKE8d9p

— TMZ Sports (@TMZ_Sports) November 19, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...jayden-daniels-top-commanders-headlines-today
 
Daily Slop: 20 Nov 25 – ESPN’s Dan Graziano and Jeremy Fowler discuss potential post-bye return to play for Jayden Daniels

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Commanders links

Articles​


ESPN

NFL Week 12 latest buzz, questions, news and fantasy tips


Graziano: As for Daniels, the Commanders have a bye this week and will examine everything. They’ve lost six games in a row to drop to 3-8 in what looked like a promising season, and there has been external debate about whether it makes sense to bring back Daniels at all this season. From what I’ve been told, the plan in Washington is still that Daniels will return to the starting lineup once doctors clear him from his elbow injury.

Fowler: Washington’s situation with Daniels is more complicated from my view. Sources have maintained that while Daniels could return as quickly as three weeks from the occurrence of the injury (so, Week 13 vs. Denver), the team has loosely braced for an absence of five to six weeks just in case. That tells me that shutting him down remains a possibility, based on his durability this season (three separate injuries) and the team’s current standing. Big-picture talks about how to proceed will play out over the coming days and provide clarity one way or the other.

Graziano: I’m pretty sure the way this season has unfolded has thrown the Commanders for a loop. They did not see a 3-8 record coming. So this bye week offers a chance to reset and make some longer-lens decisions without having to prepare for a game. Daniels will lobby to get back on the field as soon as he can, and the fact that the injury he’s dealing with right now isn’t to his legs or his throwing arm certainly offers grounds for encouragement.



A to Z Sports

3 younger players have emerged for the Commanders after impressive showing in brutal loss to Dolphins


Rookie right tackle Josh Conerly Jr. has had a roller coaster of a season after a rough start, but he’s started to find his groove over the last few weeks. Conerly Jr. allowed four sacks and 11 pressures in his first two games of his rookie season, and had some hiccups along the way, but the last two weeks have shown his potential.

Conerly Jr. held Detroit Lions pass rusher Aidan Hutchinson in check with zero sacks and only one pressure, and followed it up with another impressive showing against the Dolphins. The right tackle once again didn’t allow a single sack and only two pressures. His upside has been trending up, and that’s something the Commanders needed to see.



Riggo’s Rag

4 bright spots (and 3 harsh truths) as Commanders hit critical bye week


Bright Spot No. 3

Dorance Armstrong Jr.’s breakout before injury


There were serious concerns about the Washington Commanders’ pass rush before the season. Fans didn’t believe that general manager Adam Peters did enough to strengthen this unit, and they’ve been proven right.

The Commanders aren’t generating consistent pressure. This became more glaring when breakout star Dorance Armstrong Jr. suffered a serious knee injury that ruled him out for the entire campaign. It was a highly disappointing development that Washington’s defense couldn’t recover from in its current state.

Armstrong was a legitimate bright spot before getting hurt. There was explosiveness and urgency in everything he did. His ability to set the edges on running plays improved drastically. He was also among the league’s sack leaders before an unfortunate development.

Hopefully, Armstrong can make a full recovery in time for the 2026 season. Regardless, Peters cannot neglect the defensive end position this offseason. That would be organizational malpractice with severe ramifications attached.

Harsh Truth No. 3

Commanders need a rethink at safety


Another gamble from Adam Peters this offseason saw dynamic safety Jeremy Chinn walk for the Las Vegas Raiders in free agency. The front-office was counting on young players to progress and free-agent signing Will Harris to fill the void. Neither has happened.

At least Harris has an excuse. He got hurt early in the season and is only just nearing a return. The others have nowhere to hide, and their glaring flaws have been exposed almost constantly.

The biggest letdown of all is Quan Martin. Washington’s fan base and the broader media were anticipating a breakout campaign from the 2023 second-round pick this season. Instead, he’s turned into a liability, and head coach Dan Quinn’s decision to decrease his reps in Week 11 represents a damning indictment of how his performances are being perceived by those in power.

Washington’s other options consist of unknowns and special-teams players. If the same trend continues over the remaining six games, bolstering the safety unit will be among Peters’ most pressing priorities.



Pro Football Focus (Premium content)

NFL Chip and Double-Team Rates: Ranking the defensive linemen who overcome extra attention


Elite defensive linemen don’t just have to beat their blockers — they often have to beat double teams and chip blocks designed specifically to stop them.

By analyzing chip-block and double-team rates, we can identify which NFL defenders consistently face extra attention in the trenches and still manage to make an impact.

temp-double-team-rates.jpg



Pro Football Focus (Premium content)

NFL offensive line rankings ahead of Week 12


11. Washington Commanders (Up 2)

Projected starters entering bye:


LT Laremy Tunsil
LG Chris Paul
C Tyler Biadasz
RG Sam Cosmi
RT Josh Conerly Jr.

Center Tyler Biadasz kept a clean sheet in the Commanders’ defeat to the Dolphins. He did not allow a single pressure against Miami and earned an 83.4 PFF pass-blocking grade, which led the Commanders and ranked fourth among all centers in Week 11.

Right guard Sam Cosmi played his best game this week since returning from his injury. Cosmi gave up just one hurry against Miami and earned an 83.4 PFF overall grade, which ranked second among all guards.

Best player: Laremy Tunsil


Tunsil’s 78.5 PFF overall grade in Week 11 ranked fourth among left tackles.


Seen a lot of criticism for #Commanders DT Javon Kinlaw lately that I'm not sure is justified, so I broke down his performance against the Dolphins to see how he's playing: https://t.co/EMEBbICN0N pic.twitter.com/wz3U8lJu4A

— Mark Bullock (@MarkBullockNFL) November 19, 2025


A to Z Sports

Austin Ekeler to be a guest on Netflix during the Commanders’ Christmas Day game


Just because Ekeler’s season is over, that doesn’t mean he can’t take part in the team, just in a much different way. The Commanders are hosting the Dallas Cowboys at home for a rivalry game on Christmas Day, and Ekeler will be there. He won’t be on the field, but instead he’ll be working on his life after football skills as a desk analyst for the game on Netflix.

Ekeler will join Kay Adams, Devin McCourty, and Michael Irvin to discuss the Commanders vs. Cowboys game, which promises to be very entertaining. We all know Ekeler has a strong screen presence, and he’s known for his activity in the fantasy football community, as well as podcasts and shows when he’s not on the field. This gives him a big stage to show what he can do on the media side of football whenever he decides to hang it up. We aren’t sure if Ekeler will come back to keep playing after his gruesome injury, and maybe this is it for him.

It’s weird to see a player in the media talking about a game involving a team he’s still technically part of, even if his season is over. Ekeler tore his Achilles tendon during the Week 2 matchup against the Green Bay Packers, and that’s a tough injury to come back from. He will also be 31 heading into next season, so maybe this is a preview for what’s to come if he decides to call it a career.


Podcasts & videos

Episode 1,203 – Guest: @MarkBullockNFL. Great All-22 analysis.
– how the defense w/ Dan Quinn as DC was different
– benching of Quan Martin
– is Commanders' OL for 2026 already set?
– Josh Conerly's progress
– why Laremy Tunsil is worth a big-$$ extensionhttps://t.co/WJxwJFQPqL

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) November 20, 2025

From the Feed


Hogs Haven

How do you know if they are zone blocking?


If everyone on the line is moving laterally in the same direction, either left or right, it’s zone blocking. The linemen look like synchronized swimmers for the first step or two. To the defense, it’s like a river flowing to one side trying to wash them away. The RB gets to a point where he chooses one of three creases in the defense to run through.

If the blockers are moving in multiple directions, it’s probably gap blocking. For example, the center may double team a DT with an OG; they pin him from two sides. If the OL double teams both DTs, the blocking scheme is called called Duo and it’s surely an inside gap run. If you see a pulling guard who is moving behind the other blockers to come around and help create a hole in the defense, usually by blocking the LB, that’s a classic gap play.



Hogs Haven

Pimp my Franchise: Defensive Coaching Staff Edition


The bye has begun and there’s a lot of changes that will commence next season. The defensive side in particular will most likely seen vast changes come underway. While a new Defensive Coordinator is all but certain now, I don’t believe majority of this staff will be retained in the process. With that being said, I wanted to create a coaching staff on that side of the ball (while it may seem unrealistic and some stretch of imagination for some hires, I think this is the best possible outcome for this team’s future.

Defensive Coordinator: NEW Al Harris

This will not be easy ask for someone to take on especially a first year coordinator but I certainly believe in Al Harris to be the perfect man for this job. Al Harris has been praised for his work with DBs the Bears are leading the league in takeovers with 4 players in the top 10 of takeovers as well. He led Trevon Diggs and Daron Bland to historic seasons in their careers as well. He is respected and widely regarded for his work. Even more important, he’s extremely loyal to Dan Quinn. We might be looking at a different staff had Dallas allow Al to leave with Quinn last year. This is the obvious choice for me.

Assistant Coach/ Defensive Pass Game Coordinator: NEW Raheem Morris

Here’s where the stretch of imagination begins.



Hogs Haven

Bye Week 5 Questions – For YOU!


Given that it’s the bye week, there won’t be a 5 Questions with an opposing fan site. But I thought it might be interesting to ask you, a HH reader and Commanders fan, 5 questions on what you think about the state of the team.


NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

Eagles, Cowboys thoughts from a Dallas point of view


We are down bad. We are hopeful. But we are tired.

It is universally understood that the Eagles take NFL matters way more seriously than the Cowboys from a leadership standpoint. This may change in the future, but right now the proof is pretty obvious. I could go on and on about how the Cowboys delay things like contract extensions that serve only to hurt them in the long game, I could obviously reference the Micah Parsons trade, there are a number of examples that run counter to Howie Roseman’s “nothing is ever enough” mentality that we all respect (even if we hate the Eagles) so much.

The Cowboys trading for Quinnen Williams (and Logan Wilson, he gets lost in these discussions so I am trying to show him some love) definitely excited people, but more so with regards to 2026 and 2027. It isn’t out of the question to say that 3-5-1 (their record when they made the trade) was too deep of a hole to climb out of, but with a win on Monday night in Las Vegas they took the first step. We will certainly see there.

As noted 2026 and 2027 are where excitement lies as those years line up with the primes and majority of windows for players like Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb, the young offensive line, George Pickens (please), you get the picture. Nobody would turn down a playoff appearance or magical run if it came to be here in 2025, but we are all mostly understanding that this is too much of an ask.



Blogging the Boys

Cowboys and Eagles thoughts, from a Philly perspective


As someone familiar with the benefits of two wide receivers playing very well (A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith in the past), I can understand why Cowboys fans are excited about the duo of CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens. I still think it’s crazy the Cowboys didn’t pay Pickens at the time of acquiring him and I wonder if they’ll be able to keep him. If they do, that’ll be pretty annoying from an Eagles perspective. Even if they don’t, the Eagles will obviously have to deal with this duo this weekend. And that’s a concern since starting cornerback Adoree’ Jackson could be a weakness, even though on the whole he’s been more competent than originally expected.

The Eagles’ defense looks awesome. Really, way better than it has any business being since the Eagles have the youngest defense in the NFL and the least expensive defense in the NFL. But defensive coordinator Vic Fangio is really good at this job. And Philly’s pass rush has been boosted by the trade for Jaelan Phillips, the reintegration of off-ball Nakobe Dean (who’s really good as a blitzer), the unretirement of Brandon Graham, and the return of Nolan Smith from injured reserve. Also a very big deal: Jalen Carter, who presumably will be available for this game after not being able to play in Week 1 since he foolishly got ejected for spitting on Dak Prescott, looks much more healthy and effective following Philly’s Week 9 bye. The battle of the Cowboys’ offense versus the Eagles’ defense is a great matchup on paper.

The Eagles’ offense, however … it’s hard to be optimistic about that group right now. It’s the most expensive offense in the NFL and they’ve way under-performed reasonable expectations. What’s the issue? It’s not just one thing. Jalen Hurts has to play better, sure. But it’s impossible to argue the coaching staff is doing a great job at helping him. The Eagles haven’t been able to run the ball effectively this season in no small part due to the offensive line being banged up and worn down from last year’s massive workload. The OL outlook is no worse with Lane Johnson banged up and starting center Cam Jurgens dealing with a knee injury.



ESPN

Jalen Hurts won’t ‘run away’ from Eagles’ reported frustration


Some players have grown frustrated by Hurts’ approach this season, according to a report by The Athletic, specifically when it comes to his hesitancy to throw the ball into tight windows against zone coverage. Reporter Derrick Gunn added that the frustration stems primarily from Hurts playing “his game” instead of taking what is discussed during the week and transitioning it to game day.

The offense has been a disappointment this season. The Eagles rank 25th in total yards (300.1 per game), 28th in passing (184.9) and 29th in third-down conversion rate (33.87%). They are averaging 115.2 rushing yards per game (17th in NFL), compared with 179.3 in 2024 (2nd).

He has been held to under 200 passing yards six times this season, including the past two weeks against the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions. The Eagles scored a total of 26 points in those games, relying mostly on a red-hot defense to help pull out wins.

Hurts said he has not been approached by anyone inside the organization about the reported frustrations.



Big Blue View

6 early candidates said to emerge for New York Giants head coaching job


Jay Glazer report indicates Giants will stay in NFL ranks, won’t look for a college head coach.

Everybody and their cousin can put together lists of candidates for the New York Giants full-time head-coaching job. When NFL insider Jay Glazer does it, though, it is time to pay attention.

Glazer did exactly that during Sunday’s NFL pre-game show on FOX. He listed six names as early candidates, and said college coaches like Lane Kiffin of Ole Miss and Marcus Freeman of Notre Dame would not get consideration.

Glazer’s list:

  • Mike McCarthy, a Super Bowl-winner with the Green Bay Packers.
  • Matt Nagy, former Chicago Bears coach and current offensive coordinator with the Kansas City Chiefs.
  • Lou Anarumo, current defensive coordinator of the Indianapolis Colts. A former Giants assistant, Anarumo is a Staten Island native who interviewed for the job in 2022.
  • Steve Spagnuolo, the two-time Giants defensive coordinator and former interim head coach.
  • Arthur Smith, former Atlanta Falcons head coach and current Pittsburgh Steelers offensive coordinator.
  • Chris Shula, 39-year-old defensive coordinator of the Los Angeles Rams.

Glazer indicated that the Giants will have to choose between a culture-setter or an offensive coach brought in to develop quarterback Jaxson Dart.


Upcoming opponent

Goal: Keep Bo Nix upright

Outcome: Success ✅ pic.twitter.com/N1zBtmEhGL

— PFF (@PFF) November 19, 2025

NFL league links

Articles​


NFL.com

Joe Jacoby among 9 senior semifinalists for Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026


Nine individuals have reached the Semifinalist stage in the Seniors category for the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026 presented by Visual Edge IT. To be considered, each former player last could have appeared in a professional football game in the 2000 season.

The Hall of Fame’s nine-person Seniors Blue-Ribbon Committee will meet Nov. 25 to determine the three former players who will be Finalists for the new class. Those names, and the names of the Finalists in the Coach and Contributor categories, will be unveiled in early December.

Advancing as Semifinalists are: Ken Anderson, Roger Craig, Henry Ellard, L.C. Greenwood, Joe Jacoby, Eddie Meador, Stanley Morgan, Steve Tasker and Otis Taylor.

Joe Jacoby, offensive lineman (1981-1993): During his 13-year career, all with the Washington Redskins, Jacoby won three Super Bowls, twice earned first-team All-Pro honors and was named to the Pro Bowl four consecutive seasons (1983-86).

Reduction voting also is occurring in the Modern-Era Players category. Eventually, 20 Finalists will be presented at the Selection Committee’s annual meeting next year in advance of Super Bowl LX: 15 Modern-Era Players, three Seniors, one Coach and one Contributor.

While there is no set number for any class of enshrinees, the Hall of Fame’s selection process bylaws currently stipulate that between four and eight new members shall be selected.


Discussion topics


ESPN

2026 NFL mock draft: Miller’s first-round pick predictions


7. Washington Commanders (3-8)

Rueben Bain Jr., Edge, Miami*


The Commanders have needs along their defensive front seven, specifically at edge rusher and linebacker. Bain has three sacks, 40 pressures and a time to first pressure of 2.58 seconds this season (32nd in the FBS) despite facing constant double-teams. The 6-3 275-pounder is versatile, with the strength to align as a 6-technique along the right side of the defense and as a 3-technique in speedier defensive line packages. With Von Miller nearing the end of his career (he turns 37 in March) and Jacob Martin entering free agency, Washington needs to upgrade on the edge.


aBit o’Twitter

Kinlaw "had 1 good run stop vs Miami" and "can't stop the run all year". Here's nearly 2 mins of cut ups of Javon Kinlaw stopping the run from various games this year https://t.co/cGNgJl6X1P pic.twitter.com/BE3HSlmZ2A

— Mark Bullock (@MarkBullockNFL) November 19, 2025
This is not a no. https://t.co/abiBErmdHO

— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) November 20, 2025
Vikings QB J.J. McCarthy believes his leap is coming: "A cork about to come off a bottle"https://t.co/aidhHQBShs pic.twitter.com/XzBCQ9SMBF

— Around The NFL (@AroundTheNFL) November 20, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...al-post-bye-return-to-play-for-jayden-daniels
 
All aTwitter: 21-Nov-25 – 3rd down percentage: Commanders offense 2nd-best, defense 2nd-worst

usa_today_17604747.jpg


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 WR Jacoby Jones to the practice squad
– Released S Daryl Worley from the practice squad pic.twitter.com/Z2M0po4rBP

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) November 20, 2025
Jacoby Jones has had a hell of a week:

– Catches first pass in the NFL on Sunday
– Highest-graded Commander against Miami
– Released on Tuesday
– Signed to the practice squad on Thursday#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/VSqxjIj8Y2

— SleeperCommanders (@SleeperWSH) November 20, 2025
It's sad that we're excited Jacoby Jones is back…that how bad the season has been #RaiseHail

— Tony (@soupgfx) November 20, 2025
Offense and defense 3-and-out percentage ranks this season.

Example: The Colts have the lowest (best) percentage of offensive drives ending in 3-and-outs this year, but rank 26th (bad) on defense. pic.twitter.com/8pGzSgkH84

— Ian Hartitz (@Ihartitz) November 20, 2025
Adjusted EPA + Grade Leaderboard after week 11

— Darnold no longer lapping the field and is now barely on top
— PFF really has not liked Mahomes this year pic.twitter.com/WxuJeaYr5E

— Computer Cowboy (@benbbaldwin) November 19, 2025
We have Oregon legend and 2014 Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota joining us as this week's guest picker‼️ pic.twitter.com/VzUDOGEbrn

— College GameDay (@CollegeGameDay) November 20, 2025
Right the wrong. He belongs in Canton. It's way past time. https://t.co/wgnChBz53N pic.twitter.com/JFpudpicUB

— TheHogsdotNetv2 (@TheHogsdotNetv2) November 19, 2025
The Madrid Diaries…

Game chat, Madrid chat, long term
outlook and the Madrid diaries portion of the episode with live recordings throughout the weekend. Shoutout everyone we met and talked to who made the trip so memorable!#RaiseHail #Commandershttps://t.co/07eV9L7K5C pic.twitter.com/jOPmkiFdJa

— Hail on Three Podcast (@HailOnThreePod) November 20, 2025
The Bengals list Joe Burrow as a full participant in practice for a second straight day. The chances of him being able to play on Sunday against the Patriots seem to be increasing.

— MarkMaske (@MarkMaske) November 20, 2025
"[Joe Burrow] is gonna start. I mean there's no way he's practicing fully today if he's not gonna start on Sunday."@danorlovsky7 is confident Joe Burrow will be under center for the Bengals during Week 12 🔥 pic.twitter.com/4QeNVKJ98O

— ESPN (@espn) November 19, 2025
The Bears at Packers game on Dec. 7 has been moved to 4:25 p.m. ET and will be carried by Fox, the NFL said. The Bengals at Bills game has been moved to 1 p.m. ET on Fox.

— MarkMaske (@MarkMaske) November 20, 2025
Darren Sproles is expected to accept Sean Payton's offer to join the Broncos coaching staffhttps://t.co/vb542uhfCH

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) November 21, 2025
Referee Adrian Hill in the #Bills#Texans game suffered a non-contact injury and had to be carted off. pic.twitter.com/6zTHla9eN2

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) November 21, 2025
CALEN BULLOCK ENDS IT! pic.twitter.com/hLCvyyWraH

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
THE BILLS GET TRICKY ON 4TH AND 27!

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/VMchZoIxYZ

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
SEVEN SACKS!

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/2SFzKnjmnx

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
SIX SACKS!

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/uQjlvC1TsZ

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
Shakir shakes his way for a 44-yard gain!

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/JgWhPmTQQy

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
The Texans say NO on 4th down 🛑

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/BNxOwL16hB

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
Josh Allen is 1 yard from a 1st down and runs backwards 5 yards to hand it to Cook who promptly loses 2 yards pic.twitter.com/FHRX1EgDic

— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) November 21, 2025
Josh Allen using his legs on 3rd and 13

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/1jBFO9ukDL

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
Entering the fourth quarter, Josh Allen has already traveled more yards by distance from snap to whistle (566.6 yards) than any Bills wide receiver (Elijah Moore, 503.1).#BUFvsHOU | #BillsMafia

— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats) November 21, 2025
It's a catch and FUMBLE! The @HoustonTexans defense comes up big once again.

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/35yBvin0oP

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
This @HoustonTexans defense is cookin' 🔥

Danielle Hunter chases down Allen for the sack.

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/6XuFlpjjYv

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
The last four minutes of the first half were filled with CHAOS 😱 pic.twitter.com/aC42bEO2CQ

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
Will Anderson Jr. was relentless on this sack 😤

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/FO56ePtVI7

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
RAY DAVIS TAKES IT ALL THE WAY BACK! 97-YARD KICK RETURN TD!

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/TYbdqXsOkb

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025
Josh Allen with a perfectly placed ball to Ty Johnson on 4th and 2

BUFvsHOU on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/0Q8SkA4xuI

— NFL (@NFL) November 21, 2025

Bronco Nagurski Award finalists (best defensive player):

Caleb Downs, Ohio State
Cashius Howell, Texas A&M
Leonard Moore, Notre Dame
Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech

— Bryan Fischer (@BryanDFischer) November 20, 2025
I consume sports content all day, everyday. I had no idea Cam Newton was on First Take. https://t.co/PMIegUJGLl

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) November 20, 2025
Ovechkin x3, Frank x2, Milano x2 and Chychrun scored for the #ALLCAPS, who earned a wild 8-4 victory in MTL. Ovi and Frank also recorded primary assists. Ovi now has 6 goals (!) in 4 games. Strome had 3 helpers. Lindgren made 25 stops. WSH is now 4-1-1 in their last 6. Next up:…

— Tarik El-Bashir (@Tarik_ElBashir) November 21, 2025
Alex Ovechkin is doing the thing again.

🚨 33rd career hat trick tonight
🚨 He's got 6 goals in his last 4 games
🚨 He's got 7 goals in his last 6 games
🚨 He's now within 4 goals of the NHL lead

He is 40 years old. pic.twitter.com/vDmkvmSwqD

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) November 21, 2025

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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/openthrea...commanders-offense-2nd-best-defense-2nd-worst
 
Daily Slop: 21 Nov 25 – Replacing Joe Whitt in Washington no longer seems to be a question; the question is who gets the job?

gettyimages-2227439038.jpg

Commanders links

Articles​


A to Z Sports

The Commanders could very likely land one of these three candidates as the next defensive coordinator


Dan Quinn has already made coaching and roster changes after releasing Matt Gay, and we saw an improved defense after he took over as the defensive coordinator. Quinn won’t be the defensive coordinator, however, and he needs to find his next guy.

We already know Quinn loves working with guys he knows, especially on defense, and that was a big reason he brought Joe Whitt Jr. with him from the Dallas Cowboys. If Quinn decides to stick with his coaching tree, there are three possible candidates to keep an eye on.

Atlanta Falcons HC Raheem Morris

It’s been a disaster of a season for the Atlanta Falcons, and the writing could be on the wall for Raheem Morris. His seat has been hot for a while now, and it could get even hotter when the season ends. They just lost quarterback Michael Penix Jr. for the rest of the season with a torn ACL, and he might not be ready by the time the season starts next year. The Falcons are 3-7, don’t see many more wins in sight this season, and their first-round pick is going to the Los Angeles Rams.

If Morris is fired, Quinn will probably be on the phone within the hour to get him an interview.

Chicago Bears DB coach Al Harris

Al Harris has left his mark on defenses over the last few seasons, including his time with the Dallas Cowboys with Quinn. We saw the Cowboys’ secondary create a ton of turnovers in 2024 with 13 interceptions and 18 forced fumbles. Harris was with Quinn from 2021-2023, and honestly should’ve been the top choice for defensive coordinator over Joe Whitt Jr. when Quinn first arrived in Washington. Instead, Harris went to the Chicago Bears, and he’s doing the same thing there.

Atlanta Falcons defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich

Jeff Ulbrich is another coach who was with Quinn from 2015 to 2020 in Atlanta, before he re-joined the Falcons this season with Morris. Remember, a coach can’t make a lateral move to another team; it has to be a promotion of some kind, so Ulbrich would have to be fired for this to happen, which is likely if Morris goes.



Riggo’s Rag

3 winners (and 4 losers) at the Commanders’ rock bottom 2025 bye week


Loser No. 1

Joe Whitt Jr. – Commanders DC


Let’s get the most obvious one out of the way first. Joe Whitt Jr. went from receiving head-coaching interest during the 2025 hiring cycle to being demoted from defensive play-calling responsibilities in just a few short months. That is a damning indictment of how things have unfolded throughout the campaign.

Whitt was devoid of ideas or inspiration. While this isn’t the most talented defense, its flaws have been ruthlessly exposed. The required adjustments weren’t made, and the alarming frequency with which opposing offenses put up points at will was a complete embarrassment.

Dan Quinn had seen enough. The head coach took over the defense in Week 11 against the Miami Dolphins, and the improvements were evident. That’s not an excellent look for Whitt, who could potentially leave the franchise in 2026 unless he accepts a lesser role on the coaching staff.

There is no doubt that Whitt’s reputation around the league has been tarnished. He respects Quinn, but perhaps a parting of the ways could be the best possible solution for all parties.

Winner No. 1

Bobby Johnson – Commanders OL coach


Adam Peters prioritized the protection in front of Jayden Daniels during the offseason. The Commanders had their franchise player, so protecting him at all costs was crucial. Significant investments were made, and offensive line coach Bobby Johnson was tasked with molding this revamped group into a cohesive unit.

Johnson’s primary objective was ensuring that Josh Conerly Jr.’s switch from the blindside to the right tackle spot went well. It was a baptism of fire for the first-round rookie, but the progress made in recent weeks is a testament to talent and coaching.

When things didn’t go well at the start of the campaign along the interior, Johnson urged change. Chris Paul and Andrew Wylie became the new guard tandem, and they instantly provided the consistency needed. It’s not perfect, but it’s been a massive improvement.

While other Commanders coaches are coming under fire, Johnson continues to enhance his credentials.



Riggo’s Rag

Cornerback prospects for the Commanders to monitor in the 2026 NFL Draft


Day 1: Jermod McCoy, Tennessee

Jermod McCoy hasn’t played a snap in 2025, yet he remains the consensus for NFL teams as the top corner available next spring.

While a torn ACL in January threw a wrench into his development, he’s nearing full strength and could make an appearance for the Tennessee Volunteers before things are all set and done. It would also put many general managers at ease, as drafting a player on Day 1 that failed to play a snap in his final collegiate season is worrisome to say the least.

Day 2: Daylen Everette, Georgia

A flat-out burner at the position, don’t be surprised come NFL Scouting Combine time that Daylen Everette sits in the top five of the fastest 40-yard dash times run in Indianapolis. But make no mistake, he’s much more than speed.

Day 3: Tacario Davis, Washington

A few years ago, Tacario Davis was talked about as a late Day 1 pick. Now, a few seasons later and at a different program (Arizona transfer), his stock has slipped into the Day 3 bucket at this point in his evaluation.

As physically impressive a corner as you’ll find in the class at 6-foot-4, Davis’ change of direction ability is sensational for his size. His length can disrupt both timing at the line of scrimmage and beyond the contact window.

He needs work in press, where he can get grabby at times, and his footwork can be inconsistent downfield when triggering, but the traits are there for him as a scheme versatile talent to make an impact. For Quinn, Davis’ body profile fits the archetype he loves in long, aggressive, Cover 3 corners.



Commanders.com

Hail Mail | Bye week musings


The opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of the team.

I don’t understand the notion that last year’s success set the franchise back in any way. I wouldn’t trade the success the team had in 2024 for anything, aside from winning the Super Bowl of course, and I am positive that everyone on the football operations side of things (the people who actually won the games) feel the same way. Fans had been praying for a season like that for decades, and I think it’s a little odd to wish for less success in hindsight just because this season didn’t go as planned.

But this year’s lack of success is where that thought stems from, and to be honest with you, I don’t believe this year’s issues have much, if anything to do with how the team fared last year. To me, the problems originated from a lot of bad luck.

The point is this: any team that sustains that many injuries to that many important players is going to run into problems. That’s certainly not an excuse to lose games, but it does make things much more difficult.

the Commanders have the most important position in sports figured out. Jayden Daniels has proven that he can be the team’s long-term answer at quarterback. I still believe that the team’s draft picks over the last two seasons can develop into long-term starters. Washington’s injured players will not stay injured forever. I also believe in Peters’ ability to draft talented players and Dan Quinn’s ability to coach them into competent professionals. What’s more, if the Commanders do get a high draft pick this year, there’s so much they can do with that capital, from taking the best player available at positions of need to trading back and acquiring more picks.

Are there still some things to figure out on the roster? Absolutely. I would have said that even if the Commanders didn’t sustain a barrage of injuries. But Peters, Quinn and their staff are smart people. After all, they did put together the roster that got them to the NFC Championship last year. They can figure this out, and I’m genuinely not just saying that because I work for the team.

Fans should feel upset about the season. I’m not going to take that away from you, and you should feel upset about your team being 3-8. But I’m not going to write off the franchise’s future because of a bad season, especially when I believe there is a strong foundation.


Podcasts & videos

Five thoughts: a more disciplined d— why?; yes, when healthy Jayden Daniels should play. Here’s why…; on Jordan Magee and more. @ESPNRichmond https://t.co/Gzy5vM6HZd

— John Keim (@john_keim) November 21, 2025

NFL International series


Front Office Sports

NFL Morning Games Break Ratings Record As Global Slate Grows


The NFL’s Sunday morning international game broadcasts saw record TV ratings this season, as the league continues to explore expanding and further monetizing its presence abroad.

NFL Network averaged 6.2 million viewers for the six European games that started at 9:30 a.m. ET. That’s up 32% from last season’s slate, and narrowly beat out the previous record of 6.1 million in 2023, when a Dolphins-Chiefs matchup produced an audience of 9.6 million, still the most-watched NFL Network international game on record.

Here’s the viewership breakdown for this season’s games:

  • Vikings-Steelers (Dublin): 7.9 million
  • Vikings-Browns (London): 6.4 million
  • Falcons-Colts (Berlin): 6 million
  • Commanders-Dolphins (Madrid): 5.9 million
  • Broncos-Jets (London): 5.7 million
  • Rams-Jaguars (London): 5.26 million

Not included in the NFL Network’s international average is Week 1’s Chargers-Chiefs game in Brazil, which drew 16.1 million viewers on YouTube in the U.S. and an audience of 17.2 million globally on the streamer.


NFC East links


ESPN

CeeDee Lamb spills the beans on disciplinary matter


Dallas Cowboys wide receiver CeeDee Lamb said he and George Pickens missed curfew Sunday, which resulted in both players missing the first series of Monday’s game against the Las Vegas Raiders.

Lamb told reporters that he and Pickens were at Red Rock Casino having dinner and drinks. He denied he was throwing up outside the casino, which had been mentioned on social media.

Pickens was not asked why they were benched when he spoke to the media Thursday. Asked how it felt to watch the game start from the sideline, Pickens said, “It definitely wasn’t nice. Me and CeeDee definitely wanted to be out there.”



ESPN

Eagles’ A.J. Brown scoffs at question if he’s same player he was


Eagles receiver A.J. Brown offered a quick retort when asked about speculation he isn’t the same player he once was.

“I guess Saquon [Barkley] ain’t the same player either, then,” Brown said at his locker Thursday.

“I guess Saquon ain’t the same player either, then.”

A.J. Brown on speculation he isn’t the same player this season. pic.twitter.com/S4nxMj4cYR

— Tim McManus (@Tim_McManus) November 20, 2025

It’s been slow going for the star-laden Eagles offense. Philadelphia ranks 25th in total yards (300.1 per game), 28th in passing yards (184.9) and 29th in third-down conversion rate (33.87%). The Eagles are averaging 115 rushing yards per game (17th in NFL), compared with 179 in 2024 (second).

Brown was asked if he pays attention to what other receivers around the league such as CeeDee Lamb are doing, and he smiled and said no because “it gets me upset.”

“There’s a time and place for it, but right now, I’m just trying to stay focused,” he said.

Barkley, to Brown’s point, is not having a superb statistical year either by his standards. He is on pace for 1,125 yards after rushing for 2,005 yards last season.

Brown has shown his frustration at various points this season both through social media platforms and at times during his interviews with reporters.



The Athletic (paywall)

Giants Joe Shoen one of four GMs who could be on hot seat


After last year’s 3-14 finish, Giants owner John Mara said his patience was running out. With the Giants off to a 2-8 start this year, he fired coach Brian Daboll but left Schoen in place, saying the general manager would oversee New York’s coaching search.

There are some around the league, however, who question the sincerity of those intentions. Schoen has certainly had a fair share of swings and misses. He gave Daniel Jones a $160 million deal following the 2022 season, then cut Jones last season, taking a $22 million cap hit. He let Saquon Barkley walk in free agency and then watched him sign with the Philadelphia Eagles and help them win a Super Bowl. His misses in the draft and free agency have kept the Giants stuck in neutral as well.

Time will tell if Mara does indeed give Schoen more time to turn things around. But his status could hinge on whether the Giants’ top choice for a head coach insists on bringing his own personnel man with him.


Upcoming opponent


Mile High Report

Ballad of the Quarterback Nix


In the highland streams of Colorado,
Where the snowmelt sings and the aspens bow,
There rose a Nøkk with a spiral arm,
A bard of touchdowns, swift and calm.

He wore no harp, but a helmet bright,
His cleats struck chords in the Sunday night.
Defenders danced to his silent tune,
And fell like reeds beneath the moon.

From Oregon’s mist to Denver’s flame,
He carried the echo of Nix’s name.
Not to drown, but to lift and lead—
A water-spirit with lightning speed.

So let the fans cry out his lore,
From locker room to mythic shore:
Bo Nix, the Nøkk, who sings with throws,
And turns gridiron into river flows.


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Bills’ Josh Allen roughed up, sacked 8 times in loss to Texans


Quarterback Josh Allen took a beating as he was sacked a career-high eight times and hit four other times. He also had his third career game with no touchdowns and multiple turnovers.

The Bills orchestrated an improbable last drive that included converting a fourth-and-27 but ultimately came up unsuccessful. Left tackle Dion Dawkins was called for a false start on what would have been a fourth-and-1 from the Texans’ 17-yard line, and Allen’s second interception of the day sealed the defeat.

Allen struggled against a standard pass rush, with the Texans blitzing on only seven of his 45 dropbacks (16%). He threw both interceptions against four or fewer rushers and was sacked a career-high six times on those plays.

The offense couldn’t get much going even when it got into Texans territory. Allen went 5-of-11 for 36 yards with an interception and two sacks after crossing midfield.



Pro Football Talk

Josh Allen was frustrated the Bills got the play in late on failed fourth down


Bills quarterback Josh Allen was seen on the sideline asking, “What are we doing?” after a fourth down attempt went nowhere. After the game, Allen said he was upset because the play call came too late to get everyone on the Bills’ offense on the same page.

“Just frustration on my part,” Allen said. “In a situation like that we probably should have just banged a timeout. We got the play in late. Didn’t give ourselves a chance there.”

Allen didn’t say who he was frustrated with, but Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady calls the plays and is responsible for making sure the Bills have a good play called, and that it gets to Allen quickly. On that play, Brady did neither.


Discussion topics


ESPN

Why is Nick Sirianni seen differently than other successful NFL coaches?


Argument 4: We’re not really sure what he does here

I can see a case for this one, but I’d also argue that it’s partly perception. Sirianni wasn’t widely regarded as a hot young coaching candidate before joining the Eagles. He’s an offensive mind who didn’t call the plays in Indianapolis and hasn’t been the primary playcaller since Year 1 in Philly.

If fans can’t pin you to great plays on the offensive or defensive side of the ball, there isn’t going to be much in the way of your visible impact on game day. Sirianni doesn’t help by being (likely deliberately) muddled when he discusses his role within the offense. It’s his scheme, but it’s also the coordinator’s scheme. Sirianni doesn’t call plays, but he has a voice, and sometimes, he does call plays. That might work fine in the building, but that uncertainty is going to lead to complaints about Sirianni when the offense does struggle.

Argument 7: When they were bad, it poisoned the well of public opinion

I do think there’s some truth to this one. I don’t recall there being much criticism or frustration toward Sirianni through the first 2½ years of his tenure, when the Eagles had made it to the Super Bowl and started Year 3 by going 10-1. There were underlying factors to be concerned about, but Sirianni had gone 32-8 in his prior 40 games. The Eagles were flying high.

And then, well, everything collapsed in ugly fashion. The Eagles got blown out by the 49ers and suddenly couldn’t stop losing. They lost five of their final six games, falling to teams like the 6-11 Giants and 4-13 Cardinals along the way. The defense looked hopelessly lost, and Sirianni’s move to promote Patricia was widely panned. The Eagles blew a comfortable lead in the NFC East, and when they went on the road to Tampa Bay in the wild-card round, the Bucs beat them 32-9.

It was a roller coaster of a season, and it felt like Sirianni was along for the ride instead of being the person at the controls. Every coach has a bad game or two, but for a guy who has the sort of résumé we mentioned earlier, losing the plot so quickly and significantly without having to turn to a third-string quarterback or dealing with a brutal stack of injuries felt disqualifying. There were legitimate concerns that the Eagles were going to fire Sirianni, one year removed from a Super Bowl, despite the fact that he had gone 34-17 over his first three years in charge.

Did that create a perception that Sirianni wasn’t cut out for the role? Maybe.


aBit o’Twitter

.@BuffaloBills @texans this is what "PHYSICAL" looks like….The Texans are more physical than their opponents. #BaldysBreakdowns pic.twitter.com/5gFipiXGnI

— Brian Baldinger (@BaldyNFL) November 21, 2025
“Well, he's got some SIGNIFICANT mechanical issues with his lower body.”@GregCosell on what he’s seen from JJ McCarthy: pic.twitter.com/WNp6IJhH0o

— Ross Tucker Podcast (@RossTuckerPod) November 21, 2025
After this bye week I want to see HEAVY doses of Ja’Corey Brooks, Jacoby Jones, Jaylin Lane and Treylon Burks (assuming he’s healthy and ready to go).

Deebo will get his, but gotta see if these young guys can play!

I’m DONE with AARP Chris Moore and Robbie “Chosen”! PERIOD!

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) November 21, 2025
TV Should Be Top Priority as NFL Takes a Beat Before Rights Talks 🏈https://t.co/AbhEQUl83l via @sportico @crupicrupicrupi

— Scott Soshnick (@soshnick) November 21, 2025
A 3-game winning streak inside of a 4-1-1 stretch has the #ALLCAPS back in playoff position. It’s early but, maaannn, is the East jammed up. pic.twitter.com/KheSkK0npV

— Tarik El-Bashir (@Tarik_ElBashir) November 21, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...e-a-question-the-question-is-who-gets-the-job
 
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