Mosley | NFC East Stock Watch (2 Blurbs)

Bluefin

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How I See It: NFC East Stock Watch
October 13, 2009 11:53 AM


Posted by ESPN.com's Matt Mosley


Falling

1. Jim Zorn, Commanders head coach: This is such a mess that it's hard to single out any one player. I'll just go with Zorn since he's become the face of the Commanders' struggles. With left tackle Chris Samuels now injured, the Skins don't really have anything up front. Quarterback Jason Campbell can't deliver the ball and the Skins can't get any push in the running game. It's amazing that the Skins could play this poorly -- and be 3-3 at the end of next Sunday. This is a franchise in turmoil right now.

2. Mike Jenkins, CB, Cowboys: I probably should've gone with Wade Phillips, but that seemed too easy. From the folks I've talked to at Valley Ranch, Jenkins wasn't nearly as aggressive as he needed to be Sunday. He had a large hand in allowing Matt Cassel and the Chiefs to come racing back down the field at the end. The Cowboys may still be trying to decide between Jenkins and Orlando Scandrick for the starting spot opposite Terence Newman. On Sunday, Jenkins didn't get the job done.

3. The Eagles' defense: I know that's a strange thing to say when the team wins 33-14, but Bucs quarterback Josh Johnson taught Sean McDermott and his gang some valuable lessons. Johnson found some holes in the secondary -- especially when Kellen Winslow was involved. And there were way too many penalties. The Eagles ended up with 10 penalties Sunday -- and the majority were on the defense. If you're going to make a tackle, you can't grab the facemask. And the personal foul against Victor "Macho" Harris could've really hurt if the Eagles were playing a good team. Lots of good blitzes that put pressure on Johnson, but the Eagles need to finish the job.

Rising

1. Miles Austin, WR, Cowboys: The undrafted player out of Monmouth (class of '06) was brilliant against the Chiefs with 10 catches for 250 yards and a pair of long touchdowns. Austin basically saved the season for the Cowboys -- for now. He's shown flashes over the past few years, but Sunday was his first breakout performance. And that's an understatement. The guy ended up breaking the single-game record that Bob Hayes set in 1966. That's pretty amazing. The Jets had to give up a hefty price for Braylon Edwards. There's a chance they could've had Austin, an unrestricted free agent this past offseason, for a second-round pick. It's one game -- but it was a huge game.

2. Ahmad Bradshaw, RB, Giants:
Had 11 carries for 110 yards and two touchdowns. Let's not get crazy and start calling for Bradshaw to start, but it's OK to recognize him for being extremely talented. He's also been pretty elusive, but now he's added some more power to his game. And he can catch the ball out of the backfield and take off -- as he did Sunday on a 55-yard scamper. Yes, it was against the Raiders. But Bradshaw's well on his way to making folks forget Derrick Ward.

3. Jeremy Maclin, WR, Eagles: The Bucs decided to take DeSean Jackson out of the game by rolling coverage in his direction. That left Maclin in one-on-one coverage quite a bit, and he made them pay. I didn't know how long it would take Maclin to adjust to the West Coast offense after playing in the spread at Missouri. Now, it appears he's making a pretty nice adjustment. He had 142 yards receiving and two long touchdowns. And I loved watching him run his routes. He's taller than most people think and he sort of glides around the field before eventually racing away from cornerbacks. Elbert Mack vs. Maclin? That's the best you can do, Raheem Morris?
 
I thought Jenkins played well. I guess the coaches didn't???
 
Cover 2;3016794 said:
I thought Jenkins played well. I guess the coaches didn't???

I have no idea if Matt Mosley is just speculating or if his opinion comes from talking to sources at Valley Ranch.

I thought the tying touchdown resulted from a safety, I think it was Patrick Watkins, not being deep enough to help with inside coverage.

I certainly don't think Michael Jenkins played poorly enough to have coaches reconsidering who should be the starter.
 
Bluefin;3016788 said:
Rising

1. Miles Austin, WR, Cowboys: The undrafted player out of Monmouth (class of '06) was brilliant against the Chiefs with 10 catches for 250 yards and a pair of long touchdowns. Austin basically saved the season for the Cowboys
Mr. Brilliant had a good day but dropped two TD passes BTW.

And this saved the season stuff.....let's not get carried away.
 
Bluefin;3016806 said:
I certainly don't think Michael Jenkins played poorly enough to have coaches reconsidering who should be the starter.
They aren't. According to Aikman he thinks Jenkins is starting to really come on and will be a very good CB soon.
 
big dog cowboy;3016809 said:
Mr. Brilliant had a good day but dropped two TD passes BTW.

And this saved the season stuff.....let's not get carried away.
I thought he just dropped the fade. The other two would have been very difficult catches. But this has been debated quite a bit already so...
 
big dog cowboy;3016810 said:
They aren't. According to Aikman he thinks Jenkins is starting to really come on and will be a very good CB soon.

I agree.

It comes down to gaining experience and really growing comfortable playing the NFL game.
 
big dog cowboy;3016810 said:
They aren't. According to Aikman he thinks Jenkins is starting to really come on and will be a very good CB soon.
Okay good because that's what I've been seeing. I thought maybe the coaches saw something on the game tape I didn't.
 
big dog cowboy;3016809 said:
Mr. Brilliant had a good day but dropped two TD passes BTW.

And this saved the season stuff.....let's not get carried away.

He saved 'saved the season...for now.' That seems exactly right. I take the 'for now' part to mean that the season could be lost pretty easily, say, by hitting the halfway point at 4-4. Starting off 2-3 with a loss to the previously winless Chiefs would have murdered and buried this team.
 
he saved the season because this team would mentally implode with a loss to KC
 
I could have sworn it was Scandrick that allowed that big pass over the middle that got the Chiefs back in the game. Jenkins gave up the td but the one over the middle was the backbreaker imo.
 
Bluefin;3016806 said:
I have no idea if Matt Mosley is just speculating or if his opinion comes from talking to sources at Valley Ranch.

I thought the tying touchdown resulted from a safety, I think it was Patrick Watkins, not being deep enough to help with inside coverage.

I certainly don't think Michael Jenkins played poorly enough to have coaches reconsidering who should be the starter.

It was Ken Hamlin who did not drop deep enough, and both Jenkins and Bowe ran right by him. Watkins actually reacted to the ball from his side of the field and came into the picture a tad late. But that was all Hamlin, IF the safety was supposed to give help (although he was doing jack just staring off into space and standing flatfooted at the time).
 
BAT;3016891 said:
It was Ken Hamlin who did not drop deep enough, and both Jenkins and Bowe ran right by him. Watkins actually reacted to the ball from his side of the field and came into the picture a tad late. But that was all Hamlin, IF the safety was supposed to give help (although he was doing jack just staring off into space and standing flatfooted at the time).
Yeah, I noticed that too. It looked like Jenkins was expecting inside help, but Hamlin didn't drop back far enough.
 
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