Rodgers throws five touchdowns in Packers win 42-24

photo from sfgate.com: Oakland Raiders head coach Jon Gruden reacts during the second half of an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers Sunday, Oct. 20, 2019, in Green Bay, Wis.

By Jeremy Kahn

Daniel Carlson gave the Oakland Raiders the lead on their first series of the game, but after that it became the Aaron Rodgers Show.

Rodgers went 25-for-31 for 429 yards passing with five touchdowns, as the Green Bay Packers defeated the Raiders 42-24 at Lambeau Field.

Carlson got the Raiders on the board, as he nailed a 42-yard field goal just 2:35 into the game; however, Rodgers took the Packers right down the field and connected with Aaron Jones for a 21-yard touchdown pass.

That would be all the scoring in the first quarter, and then Foster Moreau was on the receiving end of a 10-yard touchdown pass from Derek Carr to give the Raiders a 10-7 lead; however, Rodgers decided that it was enough for that lead for the visitors.

Rodgers and the Packers scored the next three touchdowns to take a commanding 28-10 lead before Carr found Darren Waller for a seven-yard touchdown pass.

Once again, the Packers and Rodgers scored the next two touchdowns to give them a 42-17 lead, as Rodgers found Jimmy Graham for a three-yard touchdown and the last touchdown of the game, as he located Marquez Valdes-Scantiling for a 74-yard touchdown pass.

Waller caught his second touchdown of the game with just 1:32 remaining in the game, as he ended the week where he signed a long-term contract in style, when he and Mike Glennon hooked up for 17-yard touchdown pass.

Despite the loss, it was a good day for Carr, who went 22-for-28 for 293 yards with two touchdowns and an interception.

Josh Jacobs continues to shine in his rookie year, as he carried the ball 21 times and gained 124 yards.

Waller was the leading wide receiver for the Raiders, as he caught seven passes for 126 yards and those two touchdowns.

Jones was the leading rusher for the Packers, as he carried the ball 12 for 50 yards, while Valdes-Scantlingwas the leading receiver, as he caught just two passes for 133 yards, that included that 74-yard touchdown pass.

UP NEXT: Once again, the Raiders return to the road, as they face the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium on October 27.

San Francisco 49ers podcast with Joe Lami: After big win over LA, 49ers head to Washington to keep it going

Photo credit: nytimes.com

On the 49ers podcast with Joe:

#1 Last Sunday, the 49ers answered the bell and took on their biggest challenge of the year with a 20-7 win over the Los Angeles Rams at Los Angeles.

#2 The win puts the 49ers at 5-0 and what lent to their most recent success was the defense, who stuck to their game plan and shutdown the Rams to just one touchdown.

#3 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo said that the defense did such a good job that the offense had time to rest and not push running up the score because of the confidence in the defense

#4 Garoppolo went 24-33 and had thrown for 331 yards and an interception not a stellar game, but enough to win. Was it the Rams pass rush that kept Garoppolo off balance or was it just a mediocre game for Garoppolo?

#5 The 49ers head to Washington this Sunday. Washington beat Miami by one point and the 49ers are expected to win this one easily.

Joe Lami does the 49ers podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Undefeated Niners have potential trap game

Photo credit: @SNFonNBC

By Jeremy Harness

SANTA CLARA–The 49ers are riding a wave they have not experienced in almost 30 years, winning their first five games and getting a statement victory last Sunday against the defending NFC champions on the road.

The Washington Redskins, on the other hand, are 1-5, just fired their head coach a week and a half ago, and only got their first win after holding off a furious comeback against unquestionably the worst team in the NFL, the Miami Dolphins.

These are the Redskins that the 49ers will travel across the country to face on Sunday, and this can be safely classified as a potential trap game, for all the reasons illustrated above.

Washington has question marks all over the place, and based on the moves that are being made on and off the field, they are not expected to be solved any time soon. This should all equate to a convincing win, but stranger things have happened in the NFL over the years.

The interim head coach across the sideline from the 49ers has Bay Area ties, as Bill Callahan, who previously served as the team’s offensive line coach until taking over for the fired Jay Gruden, was at the helm when the Oakland Raiders went to the Super Bowl after the 2002 season before he himself was fired after the team stumbled to a 4-12 mark the very next year.

Aside from missing their two starting tackles, starting fullback and starting right corner, the 49ers do have a few other injury concerns as they head into Sunday.

A pair of significant offensive players, tight end George Kittle and receiver Deebo Samuel, sat out Wednesday’s practice with groin ailments. Both are listed as day-to-day and are expected to play Sunday.

Running back Raheem Mostert did not practice Wednesday with a knee strain, and he, too, is day-to-day.

For the Redskins, cornerback Josh Norman was held out of Wednesday’s practice with hand and thigh injuries, while running back Adrian Peterson’s quad ailment kept him from practicing as well.

Busted Bracket Podcast Ep. 1 with Vasu Vaddiparty & Charlie O: “listen as we all suffer & celebrate together!

BustedBracketGrapic

 

Your hosts: Vasu Vaddiparty and Charlie O

Bracket Blues

  • HOW DO YOU FILL OUT YOUR BRACKET – OUTSIDE IN OR INSIDE OUT?
  • WHO DO WE THINK THE BRACKET BUSTERS WILL BE ON THE FIRST WEEKEND?
  • HOW DID THE COMMITTEE DO SELECTING THE TEAMS?
  • HOW MUCH SHOULD A TEAM’S CONFERENCE INFLUENCE YOUR DECISION?
  • WHO IS YOUR 5/12 UPSET?
  • WHAT ABOUT THE CONCEPT OF EVERY DIVISION I TEAM ENTERING THE TOURNAMENT?
  • WHO WILL GO TO THE FINAL FOUR AND WHO WILL WIN IT ALL?

SPEND A FEW MINUTES LISTENING & GET SOME HELP ON SAVING YOUR BRACKET

Washington escapes Maples with a 62-61 win over the Cardinal

Photo credit: @StanfordMBB

By: Eric Epstein

PALO ALTO, Calif. — The Stanford Cardinal fell to the Pac-12-leading Washington Huskies by 1 point on Sunday afternoon. KZ Okpala’s missed 3-point attempt as the buzzer sounded would have given Stanford the win had it been good, but with its miss, Washington walked away with a narrow victory.

Coming off a 3-point loss to Cal, yet still clinching the Pac-12 regular season title on Thursday, Washington was never able to fully pull ahead from Stanford and establish itself as the dominant team. In the first half, Stanford held a single-digit lead for the first seven minutes, until Washington took over and held a lead for all but a minute and a half of the remainder of the period. In the second half, Stanford managed to grab some brief leads throughout the first 15 minutes, but the scoreboard was still mostly controlled by Washington. However, down the stretch, the teams traded off buckets and experienced 4 lead changes—no margin higher than 3 points. 2 straight jumpers by sophomore Husky guard Jaylen Nowell in the final minute and a half of play proved to be too much for Stanford to come back from as they could only scrape together one basket in the rest of regulation.

Washington outscored Stanford 29-33 in a slow-paced first half that featured 17 total turnovers and a combined 29.8% shooting percentage from the field. Sophomores KZ Okpala and Oscar da Silva, as well as senior Josh Sharma, saw limited playing time in the first period as they all picked up 2 personal fouls.

Out of the 10 players that saw first-half time for the Cardinal, only 5 recorded points, and only 4 of those connected on any of their field goal attempts.

The teams played much cleaner basketball in the second half, shooting a combined 52% from the floor, including a remarkable 56% from downtown.

The Pac-12 leader in field goal percentage in Josh Sharma led the second half in total points with 10. He also pitched in 6 rebounds to finish with game-leading 16 points and 14 rebounds. Freshman guard Cormac Ryan caught on fire during the second half, shooting 3-4 from deep, finishing with 13 points. Da Silva was the third double-digit scorer for Stanford, totaling 15 points on 5-8 shooting along with 9 rebounds and 3 assists.

Overall, Stanford shot 40% from the field and after going 0-8 on threes in the first half, they shot 6-9 from deep in the second period to bring their percentage up to 35%.

Nowell, who finished with 13 points on 6-11 shooting, was the leading scorer for Washington. Disturbed by primary ball handler and point guard David Crisp’s assist-less effort, Washington did not pass the ball well at all and finished with only 7 points at 14 turnovers.

Like Washington, the Cardinal also dealt with passing and playmaking struggles. Stanford played the whole game without their starting point guard in sophomore Daejon Davis, who is still hurt from a foot injury that he suffered in Stanford’s last game against Washington State. The Cardinal greatly missed Davis’ playmaking abilities, as they tallied a terrible assist to turnover ratio at 10:19.

To round out their regular season and make one final push for Pac-12 tournament seeding, Stanford will host Cal on Thursday evening at Maples.

NCAAFB podcast with Michelle Richardson: It was the Pitts for Pitt upended by Clemson; Ohio’s offensive unit does the trick in laying out Northwestern; plus more

photo from Yahoo! Sports: Washington Huskies head coach Chris Peterson hoists the Pac-12 Championship Trophy after defeating the Utah Utes at Levis Stadium in Santa Clara on Friday night.

On the NCAAFB podcast with Michelle:

#1 Clemson (13-0) got a huge win over Pitt (7-6) Saturday 42-10 to their fourth straight ACC title. Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence went 12-24 for 118 yards and Pitt’s quarterback Kenny Pickett struggled, throwing 4-14 for for just 14 yards.

#2 The Ohio State Buckeyes (12-1) finished off Northwestern (8-5) 45-24. The Buckeyes dominated, thanks to fine offensive quarterbacking of Dwayne Haskins throwing for 499 yards, was picked off just once and had five passing touchdowns but the amazing thing was he got one touchdown on a shot gun and his offense did the rest of the work.

#3 The Washington Huskies (10-3) hoisted the Pac-12 Championship trophy on Friday night at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara with a 10-3 win over the Utah Utes (9-4). Huskies quarterback Jake Browning threw for 187 yards and a touchdown as that was enough to get past the Utes in defensive game. Plus Michelle’s final thoughts.

Michelle Richardson does the NCAA football podcasts each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal’s come a long way: Defense shines in surprising 12-10 upset win over No. 15 Washington

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, Calif. — Jake Browning passed for nearly 400 yards and six touchdowns on his previous trip to Memorial Stadium. With his pair of fleet receivers repeatedly making big plays, an overmatched Cal defense was completely taken apart, allowing 66 points for only the second time in school history.

Flash forward two years, and Browning’s field of dreams morphed into a house of horrors, as the senior quarterback was intercepted, and benched briefly in Cal’s jaw-dropping, 12-10 upset win.

One touchdown allowed as opposed to nine? Browning on top of the world, then benched in the return engagement? Clearly, Cal’s defense has come a long way in a short period, just ask Coach Petersen and the Huskies.

“Obviously, they had good players and I just think we just did not execute in a lot of stuff,” said UW’s Drew Sample. “We missed some blocks from a tight end perspective. We just, as a whole, were not in good positions so you know it showed. We couldn’t sustain drives. We couldn’t get in rhythm and we had shots at the end. We couldn’t execute.”

Still, Washington led at the half, 7-6, in part due to Cal’s Greg Thomas missing a 41-yard field goal attempt on the final play before halftime. But when Petersen saw his offense sputter on two possessions in the second half, the one-point lead mattered little. Browning, the senior leader with 90 career touchdown passes, was briefly benched.

“That had more to do with me trying to do something to help this offense way more than it did with Jake,” said Petersen. “Jake is a competitor. Jake does everything we ask. But, you know, we got to try help this offense out somehow, someway.”

Instead redshirt freshman Jake Haener helped Cal’s defense. On his second pass attempt, Haener overthrew his man and was picked by Cal’s Evan Weaver. Weaver deftly worked his way to the end zone, reaching for the corner pylon.

Cal assumed the lead, 12-7, add stubbornly held on even as their offense managed just 245 yards the entire game. And that’s after Browning missed just two series before Petersen relented, and put his senior quarterback back in the game.

Cal’s defense never snapped, erased the issues stopping the run they experienced against UCLA, and did it from the start. The Huskies–again without top runner Myles Gaskin–scored just seven points in the opening, their fewest this season. The Bears allowed three points in the second half, the fewest they’ve surrendered after halftime this year.

“It’s a great environment in the locker room as you would expect but I also don’t think anybody’s surprised,” coach Justin Wilcox said. “We weren’t perfect but found a way to win.”

Cal embarks on a brief, two-game road trip starting with a Saturday, November 3 matchup against No. 10 Washington State at 7:45 pm PT on ESPN.

Stanford Cardinal Podcast with Matt Harrington: Taking a look at how Reid Travis is faring during current Cardinal win streak

Photo credit: GoStanford.com

On the Stanford Cardinal Podcast with Matt Harrington:

With the Stanford Cardinal (10-8), who won their fourth straight game over Washington (13-5) 73-64 in Alaskan Airlines Arena tonight, the Cardinal’s leading scorer Reid Travis 16 points on Saturday night has held up even in the some of Stanford’s tougher moments earlier this season. Regardless of the circumstances that faced the Cardinal earlier this season Travis has come in prepared to throw down or throw up his game as he leads with 30.1 points per game.

Travis is one of two players who started all 27 games in his junior year in the Pac-12 that finished in the top six in scoring, rebounding, and field goal percentage. Travis has led Stanford in nine separate categories (470, 17.4 ppg), rebounding (239, 8.9), offensive rebounding (93, 3.4 orpg, defensive rebounding (146, 5.4 drgp), field goals made (176), field goal attempted (304), field goal percentage (.579), free throws made (118), free throws attempted (181).

Matt Harrington does the Stanford Cardinal podcasts each Saturday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Sports Headlines with London Marq: Stanford goes for four straight at Washington tonight

Photo credit: GoStanford.com

Sports Headlines with London Marq:

1 Stanford’s Dorian Pickens had a night on Thursday against the Washington State Cougars with 78 points and a winning three-pointer with 76 seconds left in the Cardinal’s 79-70 win

2 The Cardin have turned things around with three straight wins beating UCLA, USC, and WSU. They have improved their record to 9-8 and are over .500

3 Pickens three points are a big help for Stanford going 10-35 from three-point range and seven of 10 for three-pointers

4 Stanford got fired up when WSU’s Kwinton Husso hit Stanford’s Reid Travis with a hard foul both players had to be separated and Stanford got fired uo and went on a 21 point run over a 9:57 period

5 Stanford faces Washington at Alaskan Airlines Arena tonight at 5 pm London gives us his take on this upcoming game from Seattle

London Marq does the Sports Headlines and covers the Stanford Cardinal each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

 

Washington wins the Pac-12 title, CFP spot likely assured while Colorado hopes for Rose Bowl bid

wooching-whoop

By Morris Phillips

SANTA CLARA–On the occasion of winning the Pac-12 Championship Game, the Washington Huskies conducted themselves as if they’d won a CFP quarterfinal matchup.

Coach Chris Petersen while happy to be a winner, bemoaned his pass offense in the 41-10 pasting the Huskies put on Colorado at Santa Clara, CA Friday night, saying “our pass game was awkward, for lack of a better word.  I don’t know.  Just it wasn’t what we hoped it to be.”

While Petersen nitpicked, star running back Myles Gaskin didn’t have much particular to say, and freshman safety Taylor Rapp whose two, big interceptions in the third quarter helped turn the game into a rout, didn’t have much rap making him the least verbal Pac-12 Championship Game MVP in the event’s short history.

Make no mistake, Petersen, Gaskin and Rapp were elated, just not overly so.  For one, the Huskies had been here before: in a 12-1 season-to-date, on Friday night, Washington won by at least 30 points for the sixth time, and by at least 24 points for the ninth time.   And since blowing good teams out is nothing new, beating No. 8 Colorado—the highest rated team Washington has won against this season–wasn’t particularly special either.

And besides, Petersen or his players can’t control what happens next.  The nation’s No. 4 team coming in is expecting to remain at least No. 4 and be tabbed for the College Football Playoff, but that’s not something that’s decided after the first game of a college football weekend.  Gaskin knows that all too well, which well, contributed to his non-committal answers.

“That’s up to a whole bunch of people I don’t even know, and they’re going to do all their voting and a whole bunch of stuff like that, but I don’t really care personally,” Gaskin said.  “We’re just going to play whoever we have next.”

“That’s the way it is.”

Beating Colorado, should mean the Huskies get top-rated Alabama next—in one of two CFP semifinals.  But that’s just Friday night speculation as opposed to Sunday’s mandate.  Here’s what we know now: according to Petersen, the wind at Levi’s Stadium Friday was a non-factor, and no excuse for poor, passing numbers, Rapp’s two, game-changing interceptions were just pure reaction, and Gaskin can’t get enough of taking the field, competing with his teammates, and enjoying the process.

“Coach P preaches to us that hard work is going to get you where you want to be,” Gaskin reiterated.  “You have to sacrifice for what you want to do and where you want to be at.  We really bought into what he had to say, and this is where we are right now.”

And right now, the Huskies are conference champions for the first time since 2000. In the 16 seasons since that Pac-12 title, the Huskies won as many as nine games (9-4 in 2013) once before winning 12 this year.  Petersen, a landmark hire for UW when he finally agreed to leave all his successes at Boise State, did it all in just three seasons.  The Huskies are past Colorado, and not anticipating Alabama, not yet.  That’s straightforward, just as the Pac-12 champs would prefer.

NOTES: Among the surprises Friday: how easily Washington got past Colorado, and how poor Heisman candidate Jake Browning’s numbers were.  The Huskies led by 7 at the half, but Rapp’s two picks broke the game open—the first going for a 35-yard touchdown return—and Washington cruised by 31 points.

Browning threw two touchdowns, and the second one appeared to be the poorest decision any quarterback could make—while struggling to regain his balance, Browning cut loose a pass to the boundary that hung up and appeared to give Colorado corner Chidobe Awuzie a chance to intercept and return.  But UW receiver John Ross—at 5’8” a towering presence for Washington– went up and snatched the ball then eluded the surprised Awuzie for a 19-yard score.

Browning would go on to misfire on 15 of his 24 pass attempts, finishing with 118 yards passing, hardly the norm in a season in which he’s thrown 42 touchdowns, tying Marcus Mariota and trailing only Jared Goff on the Pac-12 list for single season touchdown passes.  But what Browning didn’t do, the Huskies’ run game did, rushing for 148 yards before halftime, and finishing with 265 yards on 54 attempts.

Gaskin and Lavon Coleman both eclipsed 100 yards rushing, becoming the first set of teammates to both rush for 100 yards in the Pac-12 Championship Game.

Washington eclipsed 40 points in a game for the 10th time in 13 games this season.  The rank third nationally with 44.8 points per game.

Colorado’s Sefo Liufau injured his ankle when tackled five minutes into the game by UW’s Psalm Wooching.  He briefly left the game, and the field, but returned only to struggle.  Liufau finished 3 for 13 with three picks, including Rapp’s pick six.  Steven Montez, Liufau’s replacement, didn’t have much impact, finishing 5 of 12 for 60 yards.

The Buffaloes finished with just 163 yards in total offense.  It marked the second time UW has held an opponent to fewer than 200 yards in offense this season.