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Lions top Vikings in defensive slugfest

October 2, 2017 by  
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In an edgy bout between two NFC North rivals, the Lions (3-1) knocked out the Vikings (2-2) in a game that saw Minnesota suffer a season-altering injury on offense. Here’s what we learned from Detroit’s 14-7 victory:

1. This divisional clash took a pivotal turn five minutes into the second half when Minnesota rookie workhorse Dalvin Cook crumbled to the turf with a non-contact knee injury. The second-round running back was quickly ruled out following a play that saw him lose a second fumble, sending the Lions on their way toward a five-play, 29-yard touchdown march that put Detroit up for good at 14-7. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero reported after the game the Vikings believe Cook tore his ACL based on the initial diagnosis.


Back to Cook, whose loss cannot be understated: After the game coach Mike Zimmer told reporters that they are “concerned about his ACL, will get an MRI.” The initial diagnosis is a nearly complete ACL tear, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport and NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported. The former Florida State star leads the team this season with 354 yards on the ground at 4.8 yards per rush with another 90 yards through the air off 11 receptions. The drop off from Cook to Jerick McKinnon and Latavius Murray is steep and puts Minnesota’s season in a truly dark place. From an injury perspective, this feels like one of the unluckiest franchises league-wide.

2. Detroit’s backfield came into Sunday having gone a “league-leading” 55 straight games without a 100-yard rusher. The Lions came painfully close to snapping that streak after Ameer Abdullah gashed Minnesota for 94 yards at 4.7 yards per attempt. While the Lions struggled in pass protection, the line successfully opened holes for Abdullah, who gained extra yards with his highlight-reel cutting ability, despite failing to cross the 100-yard threshold. It was a rare sight to see Matthew Stafford checking down into successful run plays to keep the offense chugging.

3. This was a sleepy affair out of the gate with both teams combining for three points and six punts over the first 29 minutes of play before Cook raced off left guard for a five-yard score before the half. Coming off his monstrous, 369-yard, three-touchdown explosion in Week 3, Case Keenum (16-of-30 passing for 219 yards) returned to the land of mortal signal-callers. Sam Bradford’s backup was out of sync with his wideouts for multiple drives at a time, especially on Minnesota’s final two possessions. On third-and-goal from Detroit’s 3, with 2:31 left in the game, Keenum drifted backwards before taking an 11-yard sack from Anthony Zettel. On the following play, Keenum sailed the ball high out of the end zone. The Vikings got the ball back with 1:51 on the clock, but it was not to be as Adam Thielen caught a 11-yard strike from Keenum only to fumble the pigskin away. Game over.


4. Making his 100th consecutive start, Matthew Stafford (19-of-31 passing for 209 yards) struggled against the Vikings, taking six sacks from an active Minnesota pass rush and looking stuck in the mud before finding Marvin Jones on a 38-yard laser that led to a field goal, Detroit’s lone first-half score. That wound up as the team’s longest gain through the air, with no Lions pass-catcher topping 42 yards. This attack looked nonfunctional with Stafford taking punishment from wire to wire, but some of those sacks and hits came as the result of the Lions quarterback holding the ball forever.

5. Vikings pass-rusher Everson Griffen turned heads this week after calling Lions left tackle Greg Robinson a “lazy” athlete. Griffen wound up with one sack on the day, but Minnesota’s Danielle Hunter — with two takedowns — wound up as the much bigger headache in a dominant performance against right tackle Ricky Wagner. Detroit spent much of the game employing two-wideout sets to bring in extra blocking help.

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Denver’s spectacular run defense leads way to 3-1 start

October 2, 2017 by  
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DENVER — Melvin Gordon, Ezekiel Elliott, LeSean McCoy and now Marshawn Lynch.

This otherwise fearsome foursome — an enviable group of running backs that collectively rushed for nearly 4,000 yards and 38 touchdowns last season even with Lynch on a one-year hiatus — has been bruised, battered, bombarded and bulldozed by the Broncos in 2017 .

Denver limited Lynch to a dozen yards on nine carries Sunday in a 16-10 victory over the Oakland Raiders, who gained just 24 yards on the ground.

“Our run defense has been stout the entire year,” Broncos coach Vance Joseph said. “So, I have been very proud of how those guys have played the run. With a back like that and an offensive line like that, that’s really special, 24 yards.”

Nose tackle Domata Peko, the gem of Denver’s offseason free-agent additions, marveled, “We’re going against guys who have been to Pro Bowls and we’re shutting them down. It’s been great. Big shout-out to the defensive line and the front seven. Shout out to our defense, because stopping the run is not just up front, it’s the whole team. This defense is playing great.”

Together, Gordon, Elliott, McCoy and Lynch managed a measly 96 yards on 49 carries for a 1.9-yard average and zero touchdowns against the Broncos (3-1).

“That’s really four special backs and really four special offensive lines,” Joseph said. “Our run defense has been really stout.”

Joseph noted the additions of Peko, Zack Kerr and Ahtyba Rubin along with a change in coaching philosophy have been the big difference this season.

Broncos running back C.J. Anderson, who led Denver’s 143-yard rushing effort with 95 yards on 20 carries, saw something special in training camp as Joseph and new coordinator Joe Woods installed a more aggressive run defense.

Anderson said Denver’s linebackers “are playing the run completely different this year.”

“I’m not going to go into detail and give up how they’re playing the run, we’ll let you guys figure that out … but they play the run completely different this year and I think that’s what’s helping them,” Anderson said. “I noticed that maybe the first three or four days in training camp because of the way they were making us cut.”

OK, so here’s what Denver’s doing differently:

Peko replaced Sylvester Williams and is playing the same responsible, consistently good defense he did all those years in Cincinnati. He’s never getting his hips turned and he’s absolutely eating up double teams.

Inside linebackers Todd Davis and Brandon Marshall are playing closer to the line of scrimmage on early downs, attacking the ball instead of inching back in the read-and-react style they played under former defensive coordinator Wade Phillips.

This means the guards have to account for the linebackers and that, in turns, means defensive ends Derek Wolfe and Adam Gotsis are getting way fewer double teams than they used to.

Add outside linebackers Von Miller and Shaq Barrett pinching the edges and keeping the backs from bouncing outside.

Of course, they’re able to load the box because cornerbacks Chris Harris Jr., Aqib Talib and Bradley Roby can cover anyone 1-on-1.

The result is that since ever Gordon reeled off a 21-yard run on his first carry in the opener, the Broncos have allowed opponents’ lead backs a paltry 1.5 yards per carry.

Denver’s inability to stuff the run last season defanged their famed “No Fly Zone” secondary and premier pass rush and ushered in an end to their five-year playoff run.

It’s what’s guiding their turnaround this season.

“I think the energy and culture is different” this year, Miller suggested.

The Broncos have manhandled two of the best offensive lines in wins over the Raiders (2-2) and Cowboys in a three-week span.

“We just have the mindset that we don’t care if they’re the best,” Barrett said. “We want to be the best defense, and in order for us to be the best defense, we have to take out all the top dogs on offense. We have those guys on our schedule, so we can prove against the top offensive lines that we are great.”

Notes: In addition to QB Derek Carr (back), Raiders CB David Amerson left the game with a concussion.

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Follow Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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