Three almost upsets, two coaches in scary health situations and one of the league's sexiest records tied by a glorified backup ... another routine week in the NFL.
Yes, we almost saw three major upsets happen, except they didn't. The Texans couldn't hold the fort amid trying circumstances, the Vikings failed to deliver in Texas and the Bucs faltered in the late stages versus the 12th Man.
You'll find we didn't punish Seattle too harshly in this week's rankings, Phil. We went easy, up until this sentence I'm typing now, in which I clearly state that Guns N' Roses, in the early days, was better than any of the Seattle bands. As for Marco's comment, I can tell you that Vikings-Cowboys wasn't the lead highlight on the football shows Sunday, either. Hmmm, wonder why ...
There were so many other fun games over this football weekend, be it Nick Foles going off or Chris Johnson going off or the Chiefsbeing off all day, then playing offensive defense to steal a winin Buffalo. Meanwhile, we're finding that teams are starting to show who they really are, reducing the amount of wild movement up and down the Power Rankings ladder. So take a look and, of course, feel free to provide your thoughts on the matter ... @Harrison_NFL is the place.
Let the dissension commence ...
(Note: Arrows reflect change in standings from last week's Power Rankings.)
One more thing: While it's easy to attribute all of the Broncos' success to Peyton Manning, remember that players play for their head coach as much as, if not more than, they do for their quarterback, who is generally the highest-paid member of the team. Let us also not forget that Fox's presence was a huge reason behind Manning's decision to sign with Denver in the first place.
At the end of the day, the Chiefs belong because of their defense, which has done a great job holding opponents' scoring down. On Sunday, the unit did what championship defenses do: score points. #9-0
For the record, the Seahawks were my pick to represent the NFC in the Super Bowl all offseason, and I'm sticking with them.
Going forward, it would behoove head coach Mike McCarthy to get Seneca Wallace out of the pocket. Not to run, mind you, but to move the launch point, taking advantage of Wallace's legs while getting him out of the melee. Designed rollouts might alleviate the risks of playing behind that mediocre Green Bay offensive line. Otherwise, teams will continue to stack the box to stop Eddie Lacy, at least until Wallace proves he can beat them downfield.
Hate to say it, but this Jets team feels like the 2009 version, which went 9-7 and made it to the AFC title match behind a solid run game, a stout defense and a rookie signal-caller ... named Mark Sanchez.
What now? First, Sunday's home date with the Bengals becomes an absolute and certifiable must-win. Then, Baltimore must capitalize on what should be a manageable stretch of the schedule, with a trip to Chicago followed by a three-game homestand consisting of matchups with the Jets, Steelers and Vikings.
Wait, were you expecting us to address something else going on with this team? Yes, Charles Clay's lack of targets Thursday was a concern.
On another note, consider this stat from the win over the Chargers: the Redskins converted 12 of 17 third downs. That's a testament to good offensive line play right there ... kind of like what we saw on Darrel Young's winning touchdown run in overtime. Heckuva job. #HTTR
This is consistent with Kubiak's character throughout his career. He was a sounding board for Steve Young's frustrations during his tenure with the San Francisco 49ers, and he was a team player while serving as the Denver Broncos' offensive coordinator. There's a reason Kubiak has not one but three Super Bowl rings as an assistant coach, and there's a reason he was able to pull the Texans out of the doldrums they'd been left in by the previous regime. Hopefully Sunday's incident was a hiccup in his health and not anything to worry about in the long term.
By the way, Michael Strahan makes the Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2014. Count on it.
That said, it would be nice to see the Steelers run Le'Veon Bell 25 times, or maybe try some tight-end screens ... anything to make life a bit easier for their franchise quarterback. Otherwise, Roethlisberger is eventually going to go down and not get up.
The Vikings -- specifically Adrian Peterson on this spectacular scoring effort -- did show some fight. Still, they get in their own way as much as any team in the NFL. And who knows who their quarterback is?
Gus Bradley's club is going to surprise somebody at some point.
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Follow Elliot Harrison on Twitter @Harrison_NFL.