The fourteenth week of the regular season eliminated more teams from playoff contention and solidified division leaders. The postseason is a month away and most franchises are getting ready for a higher playoff seed or the offseason. Time to break down this weekends’ winners and losers.
Winners: Tony Pollard
A lot of analysts will correctly discuss and break down how Cleveland rookie quarterback Shadeur Sanders is the real deal and leads, adapts and makes the Browns offense better even in a loss. Most of those analysts won’t talk about how runningback Tony Pollard almost single-handedly got Tennessee their second win of the season.
Tony Pollard is one of the few NFL offensive players who has shredded the vaunted Cleveland defense this season. Instead of a sack-fest on number one overall pick quarterback Cam Ward, Pollard led the offense and ran 25 times for 161 yards and two touchdowns. Every time the Browns defense seemed to stifle the Titans passing game, Tony Pollard broke out for a long run and put Cleveland back on their heels.
Yes it has been a season to forget for Tennessee’s offense, but most of the defenses that have played the Titans struggled to contain Tony Pollard and have had to account for his added strength and agility compared to previous years. If Tennessee adds more talent to the offense this offseason, Pollard could become a more dangerous player next year.
Miami Dolphins running game
Miami’s mid-season resurgence has been led by their running game. Many viewers know De’Von Achane is one of the NFL’s most underrated runningbacks, so it wasn’t surprising he had a good game. However, Achane had company that helped seal an early win.
The Dolphins’ leading rusher in New York was Jaylen Wright. Wright had 24 carries for 107 yards and a touchdown. When Wright wasn’t cutting through the Jets, Achane took over for one of his seven carries. De’Von Achane finished with 105 all-purpose yards and a rushing touchdown.
New York had nothing on offense and that gave Miami more chances to put scoring drives together. Even with the lopsided advantage, the Dolphins have put together a more sensible game-plan where the running game takes over and puts the passing game in easier situations. Head coach Mike McDaniel may have saved his job with this change.
Blake Corum
Los Angeles needed to regroup after a shocking road loss in Charlotte last Sunday. A great way to do that was to lean on the running game. With the now official, last place Cardinals on the schedule, the Rams constantly ran the ball and crushed their division rival.
Blake Corum was the best player in a dominant 45-17 win. Corum ran 12 times for 128 yards and two touchdowns. His first touchdown gave Los Angeles their first lead of the game and his last score sealed the easiest win of the late afternoon matchups.
The running game will be key for how far the Rams go in the postseason. Backs like Blake Corum and Kyren Williams are dangerous players for any top tier defense. The more Los Angeles relies on a runningback duo, the closer they will come to making the Super Bowl.
Losers: Baltimore Ravens defense
Serious NFL analysts struggle to cover a lot of objective game content without fixating on a losing team’s offense. Baltimore’s offense wasn’t good in a divisional home loss to Pittsburgh (the winner would lead the AFC North), but it was understandable that there were several issues ranging from injuries to terrible officiating calls.
The Ravens defense had no excuses. There are at least four former Pro Bowlers back healthy, yet an injured, mostly one handed Aaron Rodgers threw for almost 300 yards against them. The Steelers led almost the entire game. Whenever Baltimore’s offense tried to get back in the game or cut the deficit, Pittsburgh shredded the Ravens secondary and got their extended leads back. Receiver DK Metcalf had seven catches for 148 yards after three straight weeks of averaging 50 yards per game. Again, there is no excuse for former Pro Bowlers to play helpless against younger, more inexperienced division rival receivers.
Sunday’s home loss shows Baltimore shouldn’t make the playoffs. Whoever wins the fifth seed would want the Ravens to win the AFC North so they can have an easy wild-card weekend win. Nobody respects Baltimore’s defense, and they won’t be stopping any of the four remaining offenses on their regular season schedule.
Dan Quinn
Everything about Washington’s shutout road loss was awful. Jayden Daniels re-injured his left elbow, tight-end Zach Ertz may have suffered multiple career ending injuries in his right leg, and a Bobby Wagner led defense was obliterated by the NFL’s worst quarterback. When a team is shut out, that falls on the head coach.
Dan Quinn is revered by many and has earned a lot of respect. However, his game-plan for Minnesota was putrid. There were people publicly asking if the Commanders bothered to practice or plan against the Vikings. Washington has veteran, All-Pro leaders on every side of the ball, and most of them played lost on Sunday. That is not a common sight among Quinn’s players. It’s as if the coaching staff didn’t take that game seriously.
With Sunday’s humiliating loss, the Commanders are officially eliminated from playoff contention. It stuns that one of the most hyped teams before the regular season went from playoff favorite filled with older, All-Pro veterans on every side of the ball, to a flaming, crash-out mess in salary cap and free agent nightmare once the off-season begins. Dan Quinn has to better prepare for next year and make sure no one takes any “easy” games off.
4th quarter Cincinnati Bengals
Cincinnati had not lost a game with Joe Burrow as their starting quarterback since mid-December 2024. Burrow makes the team better and the Bengals were in command of a pivotal road game in Buffalo…until the fourth quarter.
Everything fell apart after tight-end Mike Gesicki scored Cincinnati’s fourth touchdown to take a 28-18 lead. The Bengals defense is now a top contender for worst defense of all-time and showed why on a Josh Allen 40 yard rushing touchdown the following possession. That meant Cincinnati’s offense had to seal the win and score again. And score they did…
…by giving up an interception return touchdown to the Bills two minutes later.
Buffalo didn’t end there. The Bills got their final score of the game after a second straight interception from Burrow five plays later. The Bengals’ playoff hopes were on the line against an opponent also fighting for a playoff spot, and squandered it in the worst way possible during the most important quarter of their season. What a devastating way to be eliminated from postseason contention!