Eagles could bring Jalen Hurts ‘doubt’ into third Giants meeting

Not all clichés are true, especially in sports.

Cheaters never prosper? Good things come to those who wait? It’s difficult to beat the same NFL team three times in a season? That’s not what the numbers say.

The NFC’s No. 1 seed Eagles swept the annual home-and-home from the No. 6 Giants and will host the third meeting Saturday in the divisional round of the playoffs. Try as some might to spin that into a Giants’ advantage, history shows that the two-time regular-season winner has won the playoff rematch in 15 of the 24 previous situations like this one since the NFL merger in 1970, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Giants head coach Brian Daboll predictably said Monday that there is no impact from the first two games on the third, but forgive a starved fan base for recalling one of the nine times revenge was achieved — when the 2007 Giants upset the No. 1-seeded and division-rival Cowboys in this round.

“The hard part about this situation is being the favorite and somebody that everybody expects to win,” former Giants receiver Amani Toomer, an analyst for MSG Network, told The Post. “If you’ve worked hard to get to the mountaintop, it’s hard to stay.”

Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts
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Sixteen years ago, the Giants tried to put even more pressure on the Cowboys leading into the game.

“It’s like an All-Pro Team versus an All-Joe Team,” linebacker Antonio Pierce quipped about the talent discrepancy.

“We’re not going down there to see Jessica Simpson,” defensive end Justin Tuck said, feeding the narrative of a distracted Tony Romo vacationing with Simpson during the bye week.

Just three days ago, the 49ers beat the Seahawks for a third time this season. The Giants-Eagles situation is a little different because the second game in the regular-season finale was a mismatch of Eagles starters playing to clinch the NFC East and top seed against Giants backups with starters resting for the playoffs — and yet that result (22-16) was much closer than when the two “A-teams” squared off (48-22).

Why? Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts didn’t look right coming back from a two-game absence with a shoulder injury. He had a bye last week.

“Everybody was like, ‘Jalen’s back, we’ll be back to the same team,’ and then they played the Giants and they weren’t,” Toomer said. “In the back of their mind, there is doubt. Early in these games, you have to punch them in the mouth.”

NFL playoff bracket
NY Post Illustration

It was Toomer who landed the first figurative haymaker — a tackle-breaking 52-yard touchdown catch — on the opening drive versus the Cowboys.

“Something big has to happen early,” Toomer said, “but the thing about the Giants is the in-game adjustments are usually what’s making this team win so, if they can just keep it close early in the game … the Giants are playing their best football of the year and the Eagles aren’t so that gives them a chance.”

Toomer has been on the other side of the coin. The 2000 Giants completed a three-game sweep of the Eagles in the playoffs.

Lawrence Cager of the Giants catches a pass in front of James Bradberry of the Philadelphia Eagles in their regular season finale.
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“Human nature is, ‘We already beat them twice, let’s just roll out the footballs and beat them again,’ ” Toomer said. “It’s not that way. It happens a lot because usually the team that won twice is the better team, but I remember that [third meeting] not being an easy game.”

It’s unlikely Daboll’s locker room will follow Pierce’s strategy to build up the Eagles for a letdown.

“You have matchups that you went against over the last two times you played,” Daboll said. “One game has nothing to do with the next game other than you take things from it. You learn from it, but it’s going to be how we execute on Saturday and how we prepare throughout the week.”

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Bengals’ Sam Hubbard sets record with 98-yard fumble recovery

Ninety-eight yards of running earned Sam Hubbard a spot in NFL history.

The Bengals defensive end returned a fumble from the team’s own 2-yard-line all the way into the end zone for a touchdown to give Cincinnati a 24-17 lead over the Ravens early in the fourth quarter of the teams’ wild-card matchup.

Ravens quarterback Tyler Huntley attempted a quarterback sneak on third-and-goal from the 1-yard line. He subsequently tried to leap and stretch the ball over the plane. As he stretched the ball out, however, Bengals linebacker Logan Wilson met him in the air and ripped the ball out.

Hubbard scooped the ball up at the 2-yard line and sprinted 98 yards for the touchdown. It’s the longest fumble recovery in NFL postseason history.

Huntley pleaded with the referees after the play, convinced that he broke the plane when he stretched out his arm.

According to a chip in the ball used by NFL’s Next Gen Stats, Huntley had the ball 0.6 yards away from crossing the plane and a go-ahead touchdown. Instead, he paved the way for the Bengals’ potential decisive score.

Sam Hubbard returns a fumble for a 98-yard touchdown.

Logan Wilson strips the ball away from Tyler Huntley.


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Tyler Huntley fumbles short of the end zone.


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In his third year, Huntley has largely taken over responsibilities under center for Baltimore since star quarterback Lamar Jackson injured his knee.



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Post expert’s Giants-Vikings predictions: Not quite a consensus

Here are The Post’s experts predictions on Sunday’s Giants-Vikings NFC wild-card showdown in Minneapolis:

Ryan Dunleavy: Giants 26, Vikings 23

Revenge is a dish best served cold — and it will be about 35 degrees outside the comforts of domed U.S. Bank Stadium. After Greg Joseph’s 61-yard field goal decided the game on Christmas Eve, Graham Gano (8-for-9 on 50-plus-yard field goals this season) gets his turn for a winner as time expires.

Ian O’Connor: Giants 27, Vikings 23

The Giants effectively played to a draw a few weeks ago in Minny, so the Vikings represent the ideal first-round opponent. The inexperienced underdogs might have a little postseason stage fright early, but my guess is the Giants will gather themselves in time to score the upset.

Brian Daboll and Kevin O’Connell
Corey Sipkin; Getty Images

Paul Schwartz: Giants 24, Vikings 20

Is there any doubt the Giants are an ascending team? Kirk Cousins has not played badly in his previous playoff games, but he is 1-3. Daniel Jones makes his playoff debut on an upswing. The Giants can follow his lead.

Steve Serby: Giants 27, Vikings 24

Daniel Jones and Saquon Barkley, the twin faces of the franchise, are peaking at the right time for their long-awaited first playoff game, and a healthy, ravenous defensive front four and coordinator Wink Martindale won’t allow Kirk Cousins to play catch this time with Justin Jefferson.

Mike Vaccaro: Vikings 28, Giants 24

What we’ve seen out of the Giants all year is not an illusion, but the Vikings aren’t one, either: They know how to win close games, and they’re home. Back at MetLife, the numbers would be reversed.

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Fran Tarkenton revived Giants when Jets were kings of New York

The Giants were desperate. You think things were bad the past few years? In 1966 they bottomed out, going 1-12-1 two seasons after they had been 2-10-2. They were surrendering the town, piece by piece, to the Jets — whose star quarterback Joe Namath was already a star off the field even as he worked to become one on it.

So the Giants pulled the trigger on a monumental deal on March 7, 1967. They sent the Minnesota Vikings two first-round picks, a second-rounder, and a player to be named for Francis Asbury Tarkenton, a 27-year-old quarterback who could run and pass with equal skill, who had made two Pro Bowls with the expansion Vikings, but had grown out of favor with their hard-line coach, Norm Van Brocklin.

“You give up a lot to get a lot,” Giants coach Allie Sherman said, beaming, at a press conference that day. “We happen to think that Fran can step in here and make this team make a run for it.”

Fran Tarkenton helped lead the Giants out of the wilderness when he was acquired in 1967, ending a 17-year playoff drought.
Kidwiler Collection/Diamond Images/Getty Images

The Giants and Vikings, who meet Sunday afternoon in Minneapolis in a wild-card playoff game, will forever be linked by that trade. The Vikings believed it would get them better in a hurry, and they were right — within two years they won the NFC under a most un-Tarkenton-like quarterback named Joe Kapp.

The Giants?

Well, the truth was, they immediately became watchable again. Tarkenton was a fearless player, and in many ways was the forerunner, by almost 60 years, of the kind of quarterback play we see routinely now — from Josh Allen to Lamar Jackson, Daniel Jones to Jalen Hurts. Van Brocklin called him, derisively, a “scrambler,” but Sherman was quick to say his new prize was more than that.

“That’s a misused word,” Sherman said. “Rollout is a better word. In Fran’s case, the rollout is a quality. He knows when to come out of that pocket, and he doesn’t come out without a reason. It’s an instinct. He can turn a busted play into a productive play.”

And the thing is, Tarkenton did exactly what the Giants hoped he would do. From the ashes of ’66, they went 14-14 the next two years, and Tarkenton made two Pro Bowls. In 1970, the Giants went 9-5 and weren’t eliminated from the playoffs until the last day of the season, their one fulfilling year in a 17-year desert of playoff darkness.

Fran Tarkenton
Tony Tomsic/NFL Photos

Of course, as great as Tarkenton was, he didn’t help the Giants make their intended inroads against the Jets. In 1967, while Tarkenton had a masterful year (29 TD passes), Namath threw for a record 4,007 yards. In 1968 Tarkenton was again terrific, but the Jets went 11-3 and won the Super Bowl. Tarkenton, despite his colorful personality and elite skills, was the clear Other Quarterback in town.

It obscures what was actually a terrific Giants career for Tarkenton — who from 1967-71 threw for 13,905 yards, ran for 1,126, had 103 touchdown passes (and 10 TD runs) and 72 interceptions. (Namath’s numbers in those years: 11,684 yards passing, 56 yards rushing, 70 TDs passing, four rushing and 80 interceptions.)

But Tarkenton was 33-36 for the Giants, with zero playoff appearances; Namath 32-17-1 for the Jets, with a win in Super Bowl III.

That, as much as anything, soured Tarkenton on his Giants experience. After a subpar 1971 season, Tarkenton declared that he would retire if he wasn’t traded elsewhere — “elsewhere” turned out to be his old home, at Metropolitan Stadium in Minneapolis. The Giants got a three-player haul, including quarterback Norm Snead. The Vikings wound up riding Tarkenton to three Super Bowl appearances in four years from 1973-76.

Tarkenton is remembered, properly, as a forever Viking.

But for a brief shining moment he also breathed life into Big Blue, managing to stake a claim to his own share of the quarterbacking market in this town at a time when it seemed Joe Namath was everywhere, selling everything.

“I loved New York,” Tarkenton said a few years ago, “but in those days it was pretty clear that New York was a Jets town. More specifically, it was a Joe Willie town.”

Vac Whacks

You never really know how these things are going to work out, but come the spring we may look back at Wednesday night at the Garden — Rangers tie the Stars with less than a second to go, then win in OT — as a turnstile to some better things.


“Your Honor” (below) is back on Showtime tonight, a splendid void-filler now that “1923” is on vacation for a few weeks.

Bryan Cranston as Michael Desiato in “Your Honor”
Skip Bolen/SHOWTIME

Heart 9/11, an organization comprised of police and firefighters who served at Ground Zero, will send 12 of its members later this month to Mobile, Ala., to help Cleon Jones renovate houses in his birthplace of Africatown. The 9/11 group became aware of Jones’ good work because of an article written in The Post by gifted young Howie Kussoy.


I do believe the Eagles might all be wearing purple Carl Eller and Alan Page jerseys Sunday in the comfort of their own homes, don’t you?

Whack Back at Vac

Steve Harris: For the Knicks, 40-45 wins seems right and certainly better and more entertaining than the 25 years prior to this coaching staff. Still, without a true superstar, they’re not matching up with elite teams.

Vac: If the NBA were like a golf-club tournament, the Knicks might do well in the first flight.

Left to right: Julius Randle, Jalen Brunson and Mitchell Robinson
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Albert Carbone: Your column about the NFL season being too long was spot on. If I recall correctly, Pete Rozelle always said that his biggest concern was overexposure. He is up in NFL Heaven right now yelling “Stop!”

Vac: I’m pretty sure in NFL Heaven, the seasons are still 16 games long.


@therealSully66: After the 1997 Giants-Vikings playoff debacle, it took me damn near 1.5 hours to drag my brother from section 126.

@MikeVacc: For all their glory, the past four decades the Giants have three playoff losses — this one, the Flipper Anderson game and the blown lead in Candlestick in 2003 — that still cause some long-term migraines among the believers.


Marty Gavin: What a shame the Jets’ finale wasn’t in the Meadowlands as it was a perfect football afternoon for a flyover —SELL … THE … TEAM …

Vac: We are getting closer and closer to that, aren’t we?

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Brian Daboll saw it all before overcoming long odds to lead Giants

MINNEAPOLIS — Among the hundreds of people I interviewed for a book on Bill Belichick, one stood out for his ability to scout Patriots personnel and to read them … well … like a book. He had a great feel for the strengths and weaknesses of Belichick’s executives, assistants, scouts, and staffers, and for how much (or little) each figure meant to the dynasty. 

But in reviewing those old interviews, there was one and only one Patriots person that this source missed on — a guy by the name of Brian Daboll. The source said that Daboll’s reputation as a significant contributor was “a head scratcher” to many in the know, and that, as an aside, some of his former co-workers in Cleveland had almost no use for him. 

Of course, the same could be said about another former Browns coach — Belichick — back in the day. 

Daboll did indeed lose his job in Cleveland after two years as offensive coordinator, and again after one year in Miami as the OC, and again after one year in Kansas City as the OC, and his teams did go 18-46 over those four seasons. 

But Belichick and Nick Saban rebuilt him in New England and Alabama, respectively, and Daboll took it out on the rest of the league by turning Josh Allen into a monster in Buffalo. That got him the head-coaching gig with the dog-ass Giants, at age 46. At summer’s end, fans were merely hoping Daboll would win five games. 

Brian Daboll saw it all before becoming head coach of the Giants.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

He won nine instead, and tied another, and landed the Giants in the playoffs for the first time in six years. You can argue that it was a better rookie job than Rex Ryan did with the Jets in 2009, after he inherited a 9-7 team and went 9-7 with it … before making the first of two straight trips to the AFC Championship game. 

Daboll did what he did after inheriting a 4-13 team, and a franchise that had lost 59 games over the previous five seasons. He still has a chance to match Ryan’s run in the postseason, however unlikely a trip to the NFC title game appears right now for the sixth seed. 

But whatever happens inside U.S. Bank Stadium, where the third-seeded Vikings are favored to beat the Giants the way they beat them on Christmas Eve, Daboll’s job will stand the test of time. Given that some thought the Giants owned the league’s worst roster, Daboll’s Year 1 work is right there with Jets coach Bill Parcells’ in 1997 (followed Rich Kotite’s 1-15 with his own 9-7), and with Yankees manager Joe Torre’s in 1996 (overcame three firings, and an owner who didn’t want him, to win his first of four World Series titles). 

On a certain level, it makes sense that an improbable season was shaped by an improbable coach. Daboll didn’t just weather those four brutal years as the Browns/Dolphins/Chiefs coordinator, and the firing of his Jets boss, Eric Mangini, before following Mangini to Cleveland. He also overcame Belichick’s earlier decision to promote Josh McDaniels ahead of him on the Patriots’ coaching depth chart, after Daboll had helped bring McDaniels into the organization. 

Brian Daboll as Browns offensive coordinator.

Brian Daboll as Patriots tight ends coach.


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Brian Daboll as Chiefs offensive coordinator.

Brian Daboll as Dolphins offensive coordinator.


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The man had really seen it all in the NFL — the good, the bad and the very ugly — before getting the call from the Giants. As proud as Daboll is of his five Super Bowl rings and his national championship ring with ’Bama, he’s just as proud of his scars, too, and rightfully so. 

“I’ve done this for 25 years, so it’s not like I was a coach for five years and got on a hot swing,” he told The Post in June. “This is 25 years in the making, a lot of good ups and some downs that you learn from. A lot of ‘nos,’ a lot of not getting jobs. So every day I thank my lucky stars that … I’m the head coach of a football team, let alone the New York Football Giants.” 

Fans are busy thanking the same stars. They’d been lost in the wilderness since the second Super Bowl victory over the Pats more than a decade ago, and Daboll is the one who came out of nowhere and led them home. 

Giants fans of a certain age who recall Belichick’s role in Bill Parcells’ two title teams, as defensive coordinator, could thank Little Bill again for his role in developing their current head coach. 

“I learn stuff every day from him still,” Daboll said during his final season in New England, right before the Patriots completed their historic comeback against Atlanta in Super Bowl LI. “He still demands your best. There’s a process you go through as a young coach with him, when you’re starting. It’s really invaluable what he teaches you, and you grow and grow and grow. 

“It’s everything. Leadership ability, and how he deals with guys in front of the team. Good times, bad times, situational football. It’s nonstop.” 

Daboll’s gifts as a leader and communicator were missed by some, including my Patriots insider with an All-Star batting average. But now it doesn’t matter. 

Win or lose against the Vikings, Brian Daboll’s rise is a head scratcher no more. 

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Dolphins QB ruled out for Bills playoff match

Tua Tagovailoa will not be returning for the Dolphins’ wild-card game against the Bills.

Miami head coach Mike McDaniel ruled the third-year quarterback out of the playoff matchup on Wednesday, as he has not been cleared for football activities after suffering multiple concussions this season – most recently in the Week 16 game against the Packers.

“It’s very frustrating for Tua,” McDaniel told reporters, according to The Palm Beach Post. “He wants to be with his team for the playoffs.”

Teddy Bridgewater, the team’s backup quarterback, appears unlikely to be ready to play as well after suffering a finger injury the following week against the Patriots. So, the team is preparing as if seventh-round rookie Skylar Thompson will start.

Miami lost five straight games heading into Week 18, but slipped into a playoff spot with an ugly 11-6 victory over the Jets. Their reward is now to go into Buffalo with a third-string quarterback, who has completed 57.1 percent of his passes this year for one touchdown and three interceptions.

Tua Tagovailoa
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Skylar Thompson
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Tagovailoa’s playing future appears murky going forward, as he suffered a number of high-profile head injuries throughout the year. He was transported to the hospital after slamming his head on the ground in a game against the Bengals. A week earlier – in a victory over the Bills – he appeared wobbly while standing up after taking a hit from linebacker Matt Milano. He briefly left that game with what the Dolphins claimed was a back injury.

“Tua is learning that he needs to listen to the advice of doctors and medical professionals, he understands the severity of doing that,” McDaniel said.

Tagovailoa was placed in the concussion protocol again after the Packers game despite having finished the whole contest. He has yet to play since.

The Bills went from being a nine-point betting favorite to being -13.5 at some books after the quarterback decision was announced.

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Jets offense will improve with injured players back

Reinforcements are on the way for the Jets. 

Unfortunately for the Jets, they’re too late to save this season, which crumbled in the form of the six-game losing streak to end it. 

But the Jets expect dynamic running back Breece Hall to return from his knee injury in time for 2023 as well as Alijah Vera-Tucker, their best offensive lineman, and Mekhi Becton, their mammoth tackle, who’s missed the past two seasons with knee issues. 

The Jets were 5-2 and rolling when Hall and Vera-Tucker were lost for the season in the same game, at Denver. Without them, they closed the season 2-8. 

Hall, a rookie, finished the season as the Jets’ leading rusher with 463 yards and four TDs — despite missing the final 10 games. 

“After I went down, I feel like the offense wasn’t the same,’’ Hall said Monday. “I took part of that blame on me. That’s what they drafted me for — to be a game-changer, to be a big part of the offense, to be a playmaker. So, when one of your playmakers goes out and we lose AVT at the same time … the offense has lost two of its best players.’’ 

Breece Hall is confident the Jets’ offense will improve with the return of their injured players.
AP
Breece Hall speaks to reporters on Monday.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

Asked if he’s optimistic about the team’s core, Hall said, “With me and AVT coming back healthy and Mekhi coming back healthy and all the pieces we have … we’re a playoff team. We have a top-three defense in the league and with me playing we had a top-10 offense. So, I think with me and AVT and Mekhi coming back we’ll be fine.” 

Becton, speaking publicly on Monday for the first time since training camp, looked like he’s lost a lot of weight and sounded confident despite being out of the lineup for two seasons. 

“I know what I’m about to do and what I’m gonna do, that’s what I’m looking forward to,’’ he said. “I know what I can do. I’m very motivated. You all seen me do it before, so why can’t I do it again?’’ 

Jets general manager Joe Douglas on Monday called this “a big offseason for Mekhi, and I think he understands that,’’ adding, “Certainly, our offense line has missed what he can do these last two seasons. This is a big offseason for him and it’s going to be important that he’s … in the best shape he can be in. That’s going to make for a healthy 2023 for him.’’ 

Hall said he spoke to several other high-profile running backs who’ve dealt with knee injuries seeking advice. 

Mekhi Becton speaks to reporters on Monday.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

“I talked to Saquon Barkley, Christian McCaffrey, LeSean McCoy, Melvin Gordon, a lot of guys around the league, and they were devastated for me,’’ he said. “Just hearing what they had to say about attacking rehab and keeping mentally right, it was a lot [of help]. 

“You see some guys may not come back the same [from knee injuries], but some guys come back even better. For me, I want to attack it and have that mentality that I’m going to come back better, and I feel like I am.’’ 

Asked if he’ll be physically ready by training camp, Hall said, “I’ll be ready for whatever the coaches need me for. I feel like I’m recovering at a faster rate than normal, so I feel like I’ll be fine.’’

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Packers’ Quay Walker apologizes after shoving Lions trainer

Packers linebacker Quay Walker issued an apology Monday morning after shoving a Lions athletic trainer in Sunday night’s season finale.

In a message posted on Twitter, Walker — who was ejected in the Packers’ 20-16 loss as a result of the push — said he takes “full responsibility” for the incident.

“I want to apologize publicly about what happened Sunday night. I reacted off of my emotions again and take full responsibility of making another stupid decision,” Walker began.

“Since then I’ve questioned myself on why did I do what I did when the trainer was doing his job!! I was wrong!!”

The situation unfolded midway through the fourth quarter, when Lions running back Jamaal Williams remained on the ground after catching a short pass. When the athletic trainer reached the field to check on Williams, attempting to squeeze past Walker in the process, the former Georgia product shoved the staffer from behind.

Walker, who added in a separate tweet that he understands he’ll “have to face everything that comes with the decision” he made, later elaborated on how he felt in the tunnel at Lambeau Field as he exited the game.

Packers linebacker Quay Walker is seen pushing a member of the Lions medical staff on Jan. 8, 2023.

Walker was ejected from the Packers-Lions game as a result.


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“Also to explain my frustration in the tunnel. I wasn’t upset about being kicked out, I just knew I messed up again and was wrong for what I did and couldn’t believe I did it again. To the Detroit lions and to the entire training staff including the person I did that too. I’m sorry,” Walker wrote.

Sunday’s incident comes about two months after Walker was ejected from the Packers’ 27-17 loss to the Bills in late October, when he shoved a member of Buffalo’s practice squad on the sideline following a play.

Head coach Matt LaFleur, whose Packers fell short of a postseason berth, chastised Walker’s conduct following Sunday’s game.

Packers coach Matt LaFleur talks with Quay Walker after he was disqualified on Jan. 8, 2023.
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Quay Walker is seen walking in the tunnel at Lambeau Field on Jan. 8, 2023.
Twitter/SNF on NBC

“I’ve got a much higher standard for our players than to do silly things like that,” LaFleur said. “I mean, we’ve had a guy get ejected twice. I don’t think I’ve ever seen that in my career. And we’ve got to be much more mentally tough.”

The Packers finished the year at 8-9, with speculation beginning to percolate about quarterback Aaron Rodgers’ future.



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Steelers perform CPR celebration days after Damar Hamlin collapse

Not the best timing.

During the Steelers’ 28-14 win over the Browns at Acrisure Stadium on Sunday, Pittsburgh linebacker Alex Highsmith received a questionable CPR celebration after sacking Deshaun Watson in the game’s fourth quarter. 

The celebration comes less than a week since Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed on the field while playing against the Bengals. The safety received life-saving CPR after he went into cardiac arrest.

Immediately after the celebration, social media users began giving their takes. One football fan mocked Pittsburgh by calling the action “real classy” after Hamlin’s incident. 

Radio host Isaac Wenzel questioned what he just saw and asked: “Did a Steelers player just do CPR in a big play celebration?”

“The Gunz Show” host Mike Gunz chimed in as well, saying “Of all weeks… not a great look. Yikes.” He later added Highsmith “obviously didn’t have any ill intention towards Hamlin. Just saying it happened and the timing wasn’t the greatest.”

The Steelers performed a CPR celebration days after Damar Hamlin collapsed on the field.
CBS

Despite the celebration, Highsmith has been supportive of Hamlin’s recovery with the linebacker posting that he is “praying” for the 24-year-old safety on Twitter.

Many NFL teams, including the Bills’ division rival Jets, honored Hamlin on Sunday.

According to the Bills, Hamlin recently had his breathing tube removed and was cheering on Buffalo during its regular-season finale win against the Patriots.



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Jets running back Michael Carter struggled in second season

There were some high expectations for Jets running back Michael Carter entering this season.

Carter showed a lot of promise as a rookie in 2021 and figured to be a big part of the offense this season. But things have not gone as planned. Carter has 111 rushes for 398 yards and three touchdowns, all a drop off from his 147-carry, 639-yard, four-touchdown rookie season.

“I feel like I did some stuff well,” Carter said this week before Sunday’s finale against the Dolphins. “I feel like I could have done a lot more, but opportunities are something in this game, of course they’re earned, but sometimes it’s not.”

Carter said he was not complaining about a lack of touches. He led the team with 150 touches this season. He sounded more upset that he was mostly a third-down back this season and was not given the chance to do some different things.

The Jets had Breece Hall rolling early then traded for James Robinson before playing Zonovan Knight then Ty Johnson late. It felt like all season the Jets did not trust Carter to be the lead back.

Michael Carter
USA TODAY Sports

Some of that clearly bothered Carter, something he said he has to learn from.

“I feel like I had a really good offseason,” Carter said. “The preparation has to meet opportunity. I feel like I was prepared. I feel like I came in in really good shape during OTAs and minicamp. I feel like I had one of the best camps. I just feel like it’s a long season and things happen. There are things that are out of my control. I feel like I do my best to control what I can and try not to let the external factors get to me.

“I think I kind of let stuff like that get to me.”

Carter said this season was a learning experience and he is excited about applying those lessons going forward.

“Sometimes you have to get knocked down to know if you’re going to get up,” Carter said. “I feel like that’s what this season has been about, showing myself who I am and proving to myself that I know I am who I say I am regardless of what goes on around me.”

Coach Robert Saleh said this week that sometimes a player’s second season is a challenge, and he expects Carter to rebound.

“He’s still someone that I think is going to have a really good bounce back in terms of, he still has a chance this week, but he is not done writing his story,” Saleh said. “He’s not the first nor the last second-year player to kind of get sidetracked or not have the year he wanted to have.

“But he’s got all the capability in the world, he’s got the speed, the body contact balance, breaks tackles, has great vision, he’s very smart, he’s got all of those tools and I think just another offseason for him, but again, that goes back to development and why I always say it takes three years because for some reason league-wide that second year, there’s always kind of a hiccup for one reason or another, but he’s one of those kids where you just feel confident that in year three he’s going to, he’ll bust loose.”


The Jets signed safety Will Parks, DE Bradlee Anae, OL Eric Smith, OL Adam Pankey and WR Irvin Charles to the active roster. They placed the following players on IR: S Lamarcus Joyner, CB Brandin Echols, OT Duane Brown, OT George Fant and G Nate Herbig.

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