3 Takeaways from Jets vs. Steelers in Week 7

3 Takeaways from Jets vs. Steelers in Week 7

The Jets (2-5) lost to the Steelers (5-2), 37-15, in Pittsburgh in Week 7 on Sunday night. Here are three takeaways from the game.

Momentum Swing Before Halftime
Nearing the end of the first half, it seemed as if the Jets were on the verge of breaking the dam in Pittsburgh and climbing out to an insurmountable lead. Up by 15-6 with 1:21 remaining in the first half, QB Aaron Rodgers fired a ball over the middle of the field intended for WR Garrett Wilson that was deftly intercepted by Steelers rookie S Beanie Bishop at the Pittsburgh 46-yard line.

Bishop corralled the interception with one hand and put a pin into the Jets’ scoring chance. He, instead, gave newfound life to the home team, which scored the game’s final 31 points. QB Russell Wilson’s first touchdown pass as a Steeler came 5 plays after the pick with 32 seconds remaining in the half when he connected with WR George Pickens for an 11-yard score.

“Going into this game, we knew momentum would be a big part of it, especially the environment we’re playing in,” interim HC Jeff Ulbrich said. “In these games you can’t give up those plays because it’s a huge shift in momentum. If you do make them, you got to fight your ass off to fix it. We didn’t do that well enough. This has got to be an opportunity that we can grow from and become the team we’re capable of becoming because that is absolutely not good enough the way we reacted to the adversity.

“I felt like guys were fighting. I felt like execution was not good enough. I felt like we went into the mode of trying too hard. Sometimes that’s just as dangerous as not trying hard enough.”


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Ravens 41, Bucs 31 – Bucs Lose to Baltimore Ravens in Week 7

Ravens 41, Bucs 31 – Bucs Lose to Baltimore Ravens in Week 7

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers fell to the visiting Baltimore Ravens in Week Seven, 41-31. Overall, Baker Mayfield completed 31-of-45 attempts for 370 yards and threw three touchdowns and two interceptions for a 97.5 quarterback rating. The Buccaneers marched down the field on their opening drive, courtesy of a conversion on fourth-and-one off an 11-yard jet sweep by Jalen McMillan. The next play, Mike Evans capped off the eight-play, 70-yard scoring drive with a 25-yard touchdown – becoming the 11th player in NFL history to hit 100 career touchdown receptions. The Buccaneers defense followed suit, forcing a quick Ravens’ exit. Calijah Kancey dropped Derrick Henry in the backfield for a loss on first down and both Yaya Diaby and Antoine Winfield Jr. were credited with sacks on the two ensuing plays. On second down, Diaby came inside on a loop and dropped Lamar Jackson for a loss of eight yards and Winfield Jr. forced the punt on third down.

On the next possession, Mayfield hit McMillan, who boxed out defenders for a first down conversion. A roughing the passer penalty set the Bucs’ up at the Baltimore 34-yard-line. A shifty 14-yard gain by Bucky Irving post-catch helped set up Chris Godwin’s eight-yard touchdown. However, a holding penalty nullified the scored and led to an ensuing Chase McLaughlin 23-yard field goal, giving the home team a 10-0 advantage.

On the next drive, Baltimore marched down the field off a 14-yard gain by Charlie Kolar, an 11-yard scramble by Jackson and a 10-yard pickup by Isaiah Likely. Jackson finished the six-play, 70-yard scoring drive with a nine-yard touchdown pass to Mark Andrews, making it a 10-7 game.

Following a deep incompletion to Evans on the Bucs’ next offensive series, Godwin picked up the first on third down with a gain of 15 off a slant. The drive ended with a Marlon Humphrey interception in the end zone for a touchback. The Ravens followed up with a four-play, 80-yard scoring drive, courtesy of a 59-yard explosive play. Jackson rolled out of the pocket and scrambled to the right, keeping his eyes downfield. He threw the ball down the field to Rashod Bateman and the Ravens cashed in with a Jackson connection with Justice Hill on an 18-yard touchdown.

The Bucs’ next drive ended promptly with a turnover. Mayfield was intercepted by Humphrey at the Baltimore 40-yard line, putting Jackson and company right back on the field. Just before the half, Justin Tucker kicked a 28-yard field goal, extending the Ravens’ lead 17-10. After the Bucs started10-0 and outgained the Ravens 140-8, the tide shifted as the Ravens put up 17 unanswered and outgained the Bucs, 225-78 to conclude the first half.

Coming out of the half, Trucker drilled a 52-yard field goal, extending the Ravens’ lead, 20-10. On the following drive for Tampa Bay, the Bucs sent out Chase McLaughlin from fourth-and-four at the Baltimore 37 to attempt a 55-yard field goal. The attempt was no good, keeping the Ravens with a 10-point advantage. The Ravens then moved down the field on a four-play, 55-yard scoring drive. Bateman worked over the top of the Bucs’ defense and Jackson heaved a deep 49-yard bomb to Bateman, who hauled in the grab for a touchdown, giving the Ravens a 27-10 lead. The Bucs next drive ended with a third-down sack of Mayfield by Odafe Oweh, forcing a punt. The Ravens put the exclamation mark on their lead, with a subsequent 92-yard scoring drive in five plays, spearheaded by an 81-yard run by Henry. He quickly bounced to the outside and accelerated down the left sideline. Henry was pushed out of bounds by Zyon McCollum, and the Ravens capitalized with a four-yard Andrews touchdown.

An unorthodox turn of events to begin the fourth shifted the momentum to the Bucs. A Jackson fumble and ensuing recovery by McCollum, put Mayfield and company back on the field. In what initially appeared to be a sensational touchdown in which half the defense pushed McCollum back into the end zone, was called back. He was ruled down, but the Bucs cashed in on the turnover with a White touchdown and successful two-point attempt to trim the deficit, 34-18. The Ravens immediately responded with an eight-play, 70-yard scoring drive of their own, culminating in a Derrick Henry 13-yard touchdown. He was wide open in the flat and Jackson passed to his favorite target, who turned upfield and crossed the goal line. On that play, the Ravens exceeded 500 total net yards and extended their lead, 41-18.

Late in the fourth, Bucky Irving plunged into the end zone on a one-yard touchdown rush after Cade Otton made a physical grab to bring the Bucs to first-and-goal. Mayfield was sacked on the two-point attempt, keeping the score at 41-24. Tavierre Thomas then recovered the onside kick, putting the Bucs’ offense right back on the field. The unit capitalized with a 23-yard touchdown. Mayfield hit White, who was wide-open in the flat and turned north after the catch. The Bucs trailed by 10, 41-31 after too many miscues sealed the team’s fate.


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Raiders sign QB Desmond Ridder in wake of Aidan O’Connell injury

Raiders sign QB Desmond Ridder in wake of Aidan O’Connell injury

HENDERSON, Nev. — The Las Vegas Raiders are signing quarterback Desmond Ridder, a former third-round draft pick, off the Arizona Cardinals practice squad, a source confirmed to ESPN on Monday.

Ridder, who has an 8-9 record in 19 career games with the Atlanta Falcons, joins the Raiders after starter Aidan O’Connell broke the thumb on his right (passing) hand in the first quarter of Sunday’s loss at the Los Angeles Rams.

O’Connell had replaced a benched Gardner Minshew last week but is expected to miss four to six weeks, a source told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.

Minshew, after throwing three interceptions and losing a fumble that was returned for a touchdown against the Rams, is tied for the league lead with 10 turnovers, along with Tennessee Titans quarterback Will Levis.

The Raiders also have undrafted rookie quarterback Carter Bradley on the practice squad.

Ridder, 25, has passed for 3,544 yards, while completing 64.0% of his throws, with 14 touchdowns and 12 interceptions in 19 games.

He was the No. 74 overall pick of the 2022 draft out of Cincinnati, the second of nine quarterbacks drafted that year, including Brock Purdy, the final pick of that entire draft. Ridder was also college teammates with Raiders receiver Tre Tucker.

The news was first reported by NFL Network.


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Trump works the fry station and holds a drive-thru news conference at a Pennsylvania McDonald’s

Trump works the fry station and holds a drive-thru news conference at a Pennsylvania McDonald’s

FEASTERVILLE-TREVOSE, Pa. — FEASTERVILLE-TREVOSE, Pa. (AP) — Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump manned the fry station at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania on Sunday before staging an impromptu news conference, answering questions through the drive-thru window.

As reporters and aides watched, an employee showed Trump how to dunk baskets of fries in oil, salt the fries and put them into boxes using a scoop. Trump, a well-known fan of fast food and a notorious germophobe, expressed amazement that he didn’t have to touch the fries with his hands.

“It requires great expertise, actually, to do it right and to do it fast,” Trump said with a grin, putting away his suit jacket and wearing an apron over his shirt and tie.

The visit came as he’s tried to counter Democratic nominee Kamala Harris’ accounts on the campaign of working at the fast-food chain while in college, an experience that Trump has claimed — without offering evidence — never happened.

A large crowd lined the street outside the restaurant in Feasterville-Trevose, which is part of Bucks County, a key swing voter area north of Philadelphia. The restaurant itself was closed to the public for Trump’s visit. The former president later attended an evening town hall in Lancaster and the Pittsburgh Steelers home game against the New York Jets.

After serving bags of takeout to people in the drive-thru lane, Trump leaned out of the window, still wearing the apron, to take questions from the media staged outside. The former president, who has constantly promoted falsehoods about his 2020 election loss, said he would respect the results of next month’s vote “if it’s a fair election.”

He joked about getting one reporter ice cream and when another asked what message he had for Harris on her 60th birthday on Sunday, Trump said, “I would say, ‘Happy Birthday, Kamala,’” adding, “I think I’ll get her some flowers.”

Trump did not directly answer a question of whether he might support increased minimum wages after seeing McDonald’s employees in action but said, “These people work hard. They’re great.”

He added that “I just saw something … a process that’s beautiful.”

When aides finally urged him to wrap things up so he could hit the road to his next event, Trump offered, “Wasn’t that a strange place to do a news conference?”

Trump has fixated in recent weeks on the summer job Harris said she held in college, working the cash register and making fries at McDonald’s while in college. Trump says the vice president has “lied about working” there, but not offered evidence for claiming that.

Representatives for McDonald’s did not respond to a message about whether the company had employment records for one of its restaurants 40 years ago. But Harris spokesman Joseph Costello said the former president’s McDonald’s visit “showed exactly what we would see in a second Trump term: exploiting working people for his own personal gain.”

“Trump doesn’t understand what it’s like to work for a living, no matter how many staged photo ops he does, and his entire second term plan is to give himself, his wealthy buddies, and giant corporations another massive tax cut,” Costello said in a statement.

In an interview last month on MSNBC, the vice president pushed back on Trump’s claims, saying she did work at the fast-food chain four decades ago when she was in college.

“Part of the reason I even talk about having worked at McDonald’s is because there are people who work at McDonald’s in our country who are trying to raise a family,” she said. “I worked there as a student.”

Harris also said: “I think part of the difference between me and my opponent includes our perspective on the needs of the American people and what our responsibility, then, is to meet those needs.”

Trump has long spread groundless claims about his opponents based on their personal history, particularly women and racial minorities.

Before he ran for president, Trump was a leading voice of the “birther” conspiracy that baselessly claimed President Barack Obama was from Africa, was not an American citizen and therefore was ineligible to be president. Trump used it to raise his own political profile, demanding to see Obama’s birth certificate and five years after Obama did so, Trump finally admitted that Obama was born in the United States.

During his first run for president, Trump repeated a tabloid’s claims that Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s father, who was born in Cuba, had links to President John F. Kennedy’s assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald. Cruz and Trump competed for the party’s 2016 nomination.

In January of this year, when Trump was facing Nikki Haley, his former U.N. ambassador, in the Republican primary, he shared on his social media network a post with false claims that Haley’s parents were not citizens when she was born, therefore making her ineligible to be president.

Haley is the South Carolina-born daughter of Indian immigrants, making her automatically a native-born citizen and meeting the constitutional requirement to run for president.

And Trump has continued to promote baseless claims during this campaign. Trump said during his presidential debate with Harris that immigrants who had settled in Springfield, Ohio, were eating residents’ pets — a claim he suggested in an interview Saturday was still true even though he could provide no confirmation.

“It is a fundamental value of my organization that we proudly open our doors to everyone who visits the Feasterville community,” the McDonald’s location’s owner, Derek Giacomantonio, said in a statement. “That’s why I accepted former President Trump’s request to observe the transformative working experience that 1 in 8 Americans have had: a job at McDonald’s.”

Police closed the busy streets around the McDonald’s during Trump’s visit. Authorities cordoned off the restaurant as a crowd a couple blocks long gathered, sometimes 10- to 15-deep, across the street straining to catch a glimpse of Trump. Horns honked and music blared as Trump supporters waved flags, held signs and took pictures.

John Waters, of nearby Fairless Hills, had never been to a Trump rally and had hoped to see the former president so close to his house after missing other nearby rallies.

“When I drove up, all the cars, unbelievable, I was like, ‘He’s here’s, he’s coming, he’s definitely coming with this all traffic,’” Waters said.

Trump is especially partial to McDonald’s Big Macs and Filet-o-Fish sandwiches. He’s talked often about how he trusts big chains more than smaller restaurants since they have big reputations to maintain, and the former president’s staff often pick up McDonald’s and serve it on his plane.

Jim Worthington, a Trump supporter and fundraiser who owns a nearby athletic complex and chaired Pennsylvania’s delegation to the Republican National Convention, said he arranged Trump’s visit to the locally owned McDonald’s franchise.

The campaign contacted him looking for a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania and Worthington started looking for one. He got in touch with Giacomantonio through a friend and talked the franchise owner through some initial nervousness.

Giacomantonio needed to know that McDonald’s corporate offices would be OK with it, first. Second, he was concerned that being seen as a Trump supporter would hurt his business or a spark boycott, Worthington said.

“He certainly had concerns, but I eased his mind, and talked to him about the benefits,” Worthington said.

___

Associated Press writer Will Weissert in Washington contributed to this report.


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Donald Trump’s Long Love for McDonald’s, Explained

Donald Trump’s Long Love for McDonald’s, Explained

Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump’s campaign stop at a McDonald’s in suburban Philadelphia on Sunday has sparked bemusement and bewilderment from onlookers. But the Golden Arches photo op was far from random: it represents the culmination of a yearslong fascination Trump has had with the fast food chain.

Trading in his suit jacket for a yellow-lined apron, Trump, in a branch in Feasterville-Trevose, Pa., took a turn at dunking baskets of fries in oil, salting them, and scooping them into boxes—the well-documented germaphobe expressed delight at how it “never touches the human hand”—and he handed bags of food to a few preselected customers through the drive-thru window. The play-acting at working came as Trump has fixated on Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris’ claim of a brief employment at McDonald’s in the 1980s—something Trump has refused to believe is true.

Trump appears adamant to shake any notion that his rival could have a stronger connection to a brand he’s so long adored and patronized—and a potent symbol of America’s working class.

“I love McDonald’s,” Trump said. “I like to see good jobs, and I think it’s inappropriate when somebody puts down all over the place that she worked at McDonald’s.”

In apparent effort to boost her working-class bona fides, Harris and her campaign have said she manned the register, the fry station, and the ice cream machine in an Alameda, Calif., McDonald’s in 1983 during a summer while she was in college. “She’s a liar,” Trump has repeatedly argued on the campaign trail, with scant evidence (allies have pointed to a résumé that makes no mention of McDonald’s). “Birtherism, meet burgerism,” summed the New York Times in a recent story about the candidate who has a long history of questioning the biographies of his opponents. Trump, while at the drive-thru window on Sunday, said, “I’ve now worked for 15 minutes more than Kamala.” 

The fast food chain has become a strange point of competition for the Trump campaign. Speaking to Fox News last week, Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. said his father “knows the McDonald’s menu much better than Kamala Harris ever did.” That may actually be true given the public evidence of just how much he enjoys their food. In early 2023, Trump himself said the same thing to McDonald’s staffers in East Palestine, Ohio—“I know this menu better than you do”—before buying meals for frontline responders to the hazardous chemical accident caused by a train derailment in the area.

Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, wrote in his 2022 memoir Breaking History that when his father-in-law contracted COVID-19 in 2020, ordering in from the fast food chain signaled that he was on the way to recovery.  “I knew he was feeling better when he requested one of his favorite meals: a McDonald’s Big Mac, Filet-o-Fish, fries and a vanilla shake,” Kushner wrote. Former Trump campaign officials Corey Lewandowski and David Bossie said in their 2017 book Let Trump be Trump that the former President’s go-to McDonald’s order consisted of “two Big Macs, two Fillet-O-Fish and a chocolate malted [shake].”

In 2017, Politico reported that during Trump’s 2016 campaign, his former bodyguard and confidante Keith Schiller would routinely go to the McDonald’s near the Marine Air Terminal in Queens while Trump waited in the limousine. “Egg McMuffins were often the order in the morning, or two quarter-pounders and a large fries later in the day,” Politico reported, citing another unnamed former aide. The report also said Schiller would make fast food runs down Washington D.C.’s New York Avenue if “the White House kitchen staff couldn’t match the satisfaction of a quarter-pounder with cheese (no pickles, extra ketchup) and a fried apple pie.”

In October 2023, during Trump’s fraud trial in Manhattan, several large bags of McDonalds were hauled into court. And in 2019, on more than one occasion, Trump controversially catered McDonald’s meals for champion college athletes visiting the White House. In 2002, the billionaire even appeared in an ad for the McDonald’s dollar-menu.

As to why Trump loves McDonald’s—and fast food in general—so much, there are multiple, seemingly related explanations. In his 2018 book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, author Michael Wolff said Trump “had a longtime fear of being poisoned.” When he ate at McDonald’s, Wolff relayed Trump’s thinking, “nobody knew he was coming and the food was safely premade.”

Trump, for his part, has justified his tastes by citing the standards of food preparation. “I’m a very clean person. I like cleanliness, and I think you’re better off going there than maybe someplace that you have no idea where the food’s coming from. It’s a certain standard,” Trump told CNN in a 2016 town hall. “One bad hamburger, you can destroy McDonald’s.”


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Steelers Spoil Davante Adams’ Debut with the Jets

Steelers Spoil Davante Adams’ Debut with the Jets

The former Raiders and Packers receiver was targeted 9 times, tied for the team lead. Additionally, he drew the attention of talented Steelers second-year CB Joey Porter Jr. for portions of the game, which allowed WRs Garrett Wilson (5 receptions for 61 yards) and Allen Lazard (4 for 58) to get more opportunities against limited double-teams.

“You could see the great synergy between Aaron and Davante,” HC Jeff Ulbrich said. “You could see the relationship that they have by being on same page. And at the same time, it’s been a second since they played together so I imagine that that relationship and the production between those two is just going to go up.”

Adams added: “We can continue to get on a better page, but I didn’t think there was rust. It is just football, and it doesn’t always work perfectly. We had a really good week of practice, and we are going to continue to go and have a good week of practice next week and see what we can do to turn this thing around.”

Now in his 11th NFL season, Adams brings his years of experience and relationship with Rodgers to the Jets, and believes the team has what it takes to bounce back.

“We have got a lot of talent,” Adams said. “The weapons that we have, I mean, I’m in the huddle today and multiple times I was just looking around and thinking it’s kind of crazy. Knowing that you got those type of weapons and to come up short and to put up 15 points against the team that I mean, there is a lot more we can do for sure.”

Trailing the Buffalo Bills by 3 games in the AFC East, the Jets have much work to do and 10 games left to do it. Adams believes it’s all about the details.

“You don’t get 20 opportunities to make it right in this league,” Adams said. “Sometimes you just got to get out there and take the defense that’s presented, figure out a way to make it work. And we didn’t do that enough. We had no issues moving the ball. I felt like this was the ultimate, shot-ourselves-in-the-foot type of day.”


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Game Recap: Rams defeat Raiders 20-15

Game Recap: Rams defeat Raiders 20-15

INGLEWOOD, Calif. – The Rams (2-4) held on to defeat the Raiders 20-15 on Sunday at SoFi Stadium, with safety Jaylen McCollough’s second interception of the game – with 1:28 left in the fourth quarter – clinching the victory.

Los Angeles converted a pair of interceptions off Las Vegas quarterback Gardner Minshew into touchdown drives on each of the ensuing possessions – one late in the first half and another midway through the third quarter – to build a 20-6 lead. Coupled with L.A.’s defense holding Las Vegas’ offense to five field goals – and 0-for-2 in the redzone – and McCollough’s late interception, it was enough to overcome near-costly self-inflicted mistakes in the second half.

Cornerback Cobie Durant also had a big game for L.A.’s defense, recording one interception and one forced fumble that was returned by safety Kam Curl for a touchdown.

Running back Kyren Williams finished with 21 carries for 76 yards and two rushing touchdowns; his pair of rushing scores moved him past Eric Dickerson most touchdowns by a Rams player in their first 17 starts.

Rams wide receiver Cooper Kupp (ankle) was inactive for this game.

Here is the complete game recap, presented by Corona:

After a scoreless first quarter, the Raiders gained an early 3-0 lead via a 38-yard field goal by kicker Daniel Carlson with 14:04 left in the 2nd quarter.

The Rams reached the Raiders’ 49 on the ensuing possession, only to give the ball back on a failed attempt to convert on 4th and 1 from that spot.

Cornerback Cobie Durant came up with a huge takeaway for Los Angeles late in the first half, after outside linebacker Jared Verse’s pressure forced an errant throw by Las Vegas quarterback Gardner Minshew, who had replaced Aidan O’Connell after O’Connell sustained a thumb injury and was questionable to return. The Rams converted the turnover into points with a 13-yard touchdown run by Kyren Williams to take a 7-3 lead with 3 minutes to go in the first half.


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Philly-area officials prep for Election Day voter intimidation

Philly-area officials prep for Election Day voter intimidation

What questions do you have about the 2024 elections? What major issues do you want candidates to address? Let us know.

With Election Day drawing near, local officials in Pennsylvania and New Jersey have taken precautions to guard against any potential voter intimidation at the polls.

“Election Day is a beautiful community event and of course, we hope it will stay that way,” said Philadelphia City Commissioner Lisa Deeley.

But she said Election Day also presents a growing security challenge. Voter intimidation does not necessarily involve threats of violence, and Deeley said city elections have not been marred by acts of violence in the recent past.

“As with anything, you should always be alert,” Deeley said.

In 2020, Philadelphia experienced a ballot-counting process that reflected the polarizing national election cycle and a delayed result that hinged, in part, on the final vote tally in the city. This involved two weeks of hand-counting mail-in ballots at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, which drew protests and counter-protests outside the Convention Center, death threats against the city commissioners and a lawsuit that briefly halted the count.

On Monday, the FBI arrested and charged a Philadelphia man with threatening to kill and “skin” a political party operative who recruited Election Day poll watchers.

This year, the city hired a security expert and is collaborating with state, federal and local law enforcement to address issues surrounding the count, as well as any type of potential voter intimidation on Election Day.

“If you’re outside the polls, you want to reach out to the police department or the district attorney’s office,” Deeley said. “If you’re inside the polls, you want to let the judge of elections know so that they can reach out to the proper people.”


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Anthony Richardson returns as Colts beat Miami Dolphins, move to 4-3 on season

Anthony Richardson returns as Colts beat Miami Dolphins, move to 4-3 on season

After one quarter, Richardson was just 1-of-7 for 15 yards and led the team with four carries for 30 yards.

The Colts and the Dolphins traded possessions throughout the second quarter with nothing to show for it until the Dolphins connected on a 33-yard field goal to go up 10-0 with 22 seconds left in the half.

But the Colts quickly got into field goal position with a touchback and a 33-yard completion to wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr., and kicker Matt Gay sent a 52-yard kick straight through the uprights to put the Colts on the board heading into halftime.

Richardson completed four passes for 61 yards in the half and the Colts combined for 74 total rushing yards. By comparison, the Dolphins had 115 rushing yards and Huntley completed seven passes for 87 yards.


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Chris Godwin to undergo season-ending ankle surgery: Reports – NBC10 Philadelphia

Chris Godwin to undergo season-ending ankle surgery: Reports – NBC10 Philadelphia

One of the NFL’s best receivers could be done for the season.

Buccaneers star Chris Godwin will undergo ankle surgery this week, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, and he’ll see a doctor Tuesday to determine the damage.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero added that the injury will “most likely” end Godwin’s 2024 season.

Bucs head coach Todd Bowles confirmed in his post-game press conference that Godwin dislocated his ankle late in Monday’s loss to the Baltimore Ravens. The 28-year-old receiver was carted off with his left leg in an air cast, just 43 seconds before the end of the blowout loss after being tackled following a catch.

For Godwin and the Bucs, the timing of the injury makes it that much worse. He’s in the midst of a career year, totaling 576 receiving yards though Week 7 — second in the league behind Ja’Marr Chase. Godwin leads the league with 50 receptions and 350 yards after catch.

The Bucs, meanwhile, are now tied atop the NFC South with the rival Atlanta Falcons at 4-3. Tampa Bay and Atlanta will face off for the second and final time this season on Sunday at Raymond James Stadium in Florida, just three weeks after the Falcons’ overtime win over the Bucs.

Godwin is set to become a free agent after this season, so Monday night might have been his final snap for the Bucs. A third-round pick in 2017, Godwin has surpassed 500 receiving yards in each of his first eight seasons (including 2024). He has four 1,000-yard seasons and helped Tampa Bay win the Super Bowl in 2020.

The Baltimore Ravens showed up to Tampa with an offense that was stopping for nobody.


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