Fantasy football Week 13 waiver wire advice: Try these running backs

Quick hitters and waiver wire advice for a handful of notable players after Week 12 of the fantasy football season:

Looking good 

JaMychal Hasty RB, Jaguars 

A foot injury that forced out Travis Etienne on Sunday isn’t thought to be serious. But if he could have re-entered a close game Sunday and didn’t, why would we believe he will get full a workload in Week 13? 

Raheem Mostert RB, Dolphins 

Expected back this week from a knee problem. Though he plays second fiddle to his ex-49ers second fiddle Jeff Wilson. But expect both to get plenty of work — and some TD opportunities — against their former team next week. 

Brian Robinson RB, Commanders 

It wasn’t just his share of work Sunday that was impressive (20 touches to Antonio Gibson’s 12), his effectiveness and toughness also stood out. 

Brian Robinson
Getty Images

Zay Jones WR, Jaguars 

Had 14 targets and caught 11 of them (for 145 yards). Trevor Lawrence might be finding himself a new favorite receiver. 

Looking rough 

Christian McCaffrey RB, 49ers 

Don’t sweat his limited use and production of late. Elijah Mitchell likely sprained his MCL, coach Kyle Shanahan said. That should free up more touches — and fantasy production — for CMC. 

Alvin Kamara RB, Saints 

Has lacked efficiency on the ground in five straight games. turning into just a PPR product. Three single-digit efforts in the past four games. Worse, you can’t bench him either because of his breakout potential. Is it past your trade deadline? 

Dameon Pierce RB, Texans 

Two straight weeks of abysmal production numbers (1.1 yards per carry). Worse, split heavily with Dare Ogunbowale on Sunday. Keep him the lineup this week vs. a weak Browns run D, but if he goes belly up, park him at the end of your bench. 

Adam Lazard WR, Packers 

Chairman of the Brotherhood of Blah. His uninspiring production led to Aaron ridgers finding a new favorite (Christian Watson). And his prospects don’t get any brighter is Jordan Love is his QB.

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Giants’ Azeez Ojulari could return for Commanders game

Azeez Ojulari has been something of a forgotten man in the Giants’ 7-4 start, as he has been limited to two games by a series of leg injuries. But if the outside linebacker who led last year’s team with eight sacks as a rookie can stay healthy, it should greatly improve the Giants’ chances of making the playoffs. 

Ojulari was among three players, including left guard Ben Bredeson and safety Tony Jefferson, who were designated to return from injured reserve Monday, making it possible he could play against Washington on Sunday. For now, the Giants’ 2021 second-round pick is cleared to return to practice. But the idea that he might be available to enhance a middling pass rush in the crucial NFC East game at MetLife Stadium brightened at least one prominent teammate’s day. 

“It’s definitely exciting,” Kayvon Thibodeaux said. “He’s a great player. We have meetings, and we’re in practice every day together. So having him back out there is definitely going to be a one-up for the D-line and for the pass rush, and for the team. So I’m excited to see him really let it loose.” 

Azeez Ojulari could be set to return against the Commanders.
Getty Images

Bredeson, who missed four games with a knee injury suffered against Jacksonville, represents another big potential add to the lineup for the Washington game given the tattered state of the offensive line. 


As the Giants wait to meet later this week with free agent Odell Beckham Jr., they are exploring other options at OBJ’s position. According to ESPN’s Field Yates, the team tried out veteran receivers Adam Humphries and Malik Taylor. Humphries, who played with Washington last year, has 320 receptions and 13 touchdowns in his seven-year career. His biggest season came with Tampa Bay in 2018, when he caught 76 passes for 816 yards and 5 touchdowns. 


Nick Gates, undrafted fourth-year offensive lineman, was named the Giants’ winner of the Ed Block Courage Award, which goes to players who have shown uncommon strength in overcoming adversity. Gates suffered a grotesque injury to his left leg last year in a Week 2 game against the Commanders and endured seven surgeries before returning to play this year in a Week 8 game at Seattle.

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Jets look ready to finally in play meaningful December games

The Jets don’t play this Thursday. Thursday will be a practice day, Day 2 of their preparation for a critical game in Minnesota three days later. But in so many ways, Thursday will have profound meaning for the Jets.

Thursday, midnight, the calendar flips from November to December.

It will be Dec. 1. The Jets will be 7-4. They will be in position to make the playoffs for the first time in a dozen years, but best of all they will play games that matter in December. In some NFL precincts that would induce a yawn and a ho-hum.

Around here, it’s big news.

So, sure, disparage Sunday’s opponent, the woeful Bears, as much as you like. Yes, they are a bad team with an abysmal defense. Yes, they were absent the one player who makes them remotely watchable, quarterback Justin Fields, down with a bum shoulder.

But the Jets beat Chicago soundly, 31-10. They shrugged off an uncharacteristically slow start by the defense. They shrugged off the weather, the sky spitting rain from opening kickoff to final gun. They shrugged off a boisterous week in which the fair-haired quarterback of tomorrow became the street-clothes-wearing third-stringer of today.

“We ignored all the noise,” Jets coach Robert Saleh said about 15 minutes after his giddy players sloshed off the MetLife Stadium field. “The guys did a great job executing.”

Jets
Mike White
Bill Kostroun

They did. They spotted the Bears a 10-7 lead even after Mike F. White led them on a 75-yard touchdown march on their first series of the game, the defense looking like maybe they still had a bit of a Thanksgiving hangover.

But the moment White hooked up with Garrett Wilson on a 54-yard scoring play with 4:57 left in the second quarter to give the Jets the lead back, the tenor and the feel of the game changed permanently. The defense allowed no more points. The offense worked as efficiently as it has in years, White piling up 315 yards and scattering his 22 completions to 10 different receivers.

Jets running back Ty Johnson (25) celebrates his touchdown with a spike during the third quarter.
Bill Kostroun

“That was too much fun, and it was reflected in the score,” crowed Elijah Moore, a forgotten man for much of the season who caught two balls, one for 42 yards, one a 22-yard touchdown that pushed the Jets’ lead to 24-10 in the third. “That’s real New York Jets football. That’s the definition of team football.”

Moore would get no argument from the other 52 men clad in green or any of the 77,963 inside MetLife who enjoyed a good three-hour soaking but still seemed to be having a hell of a time, chanting both for their J-E-T-S and for their quarterback, presently the leader in the clubhouse for the office of mayor of Florham Park.

“It’s awesome to go out there playing football with your friends,” White said. “It was a complete team win.”

The most encouraging part of Sunday is that the Jets, almost to a man, enjoyed their win without getting carried away by it, with the underlying understanding that there is still work to do, and a lot of it.

Playing meaningful December games is a lot different than winning them, and the assignment next week — against the 9-2 Vikings, at Minneapolis’ U.S. Bank Stadium — kicks off a stout two-week gauntlet that will include a return date with the Bills at Orchard Park.

Jets tight end C.J. Uzomah (87) and guard Laken Tomlinson (78) celebrate the win over the Bears.
Bill Kostroun

“Our guys don’t flinch,” Saleh said, and what’s also clear is they don’t much carry things over week-to-week — positively and negatively — from week-to-week, either. Part of that was undoubtedly the presence of White, who didn’t only play a terrific game but by his mere insertion as QB1 reflected a simple yet essential part of the meritocracy Saleh is trying to establish.

You perform well, you play.

You don’t, you sit. No matter your draft-day pedigree.

It is a fine lesson to teach a young quarterback like Zach Wilson, and it is an even greater message to send to the other folks on the team who have pushed the Jets to where they are, to the doorstep of December, to the precipice of a playoff push. The season stopped being about moral victories months ago. Only the real ones will do now.

“We need to keep the main thing the main thing,” said C.J. Mosely, the soul of the defense who had an interception, repeating a mantra he instills in his teammates often. “We haven’t scratched the surface of how great we can be.”

The best part of that? If he’s right, the Jets have the opportunity to back up those words. Next week in Minnesota would be wonderful place to start.

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Preview, predictions, what to watch for

An inside look at Thursday’s Giants-Cowboys matchup in Dallas.

Marquee matchup

Cowboys RB Tony Pollard vs. Giants ILBs Jaylon Smith and Micah McFadden

Move over, Ezekiel Elliott. The top back in Dallas is Pollard, who is establishing himself as a force in his fourth NFL season. Pollard had two touchdown receptions last week against the Vikings and is averaging a robust 5.9 yards per rushing attempt.

He ripped through the Giants (13-105) in Week 3 when Tae Crowder and Austin Calitro were the starting inside linebackers.

Perhaps Smith and McFadden can do a better job, although the run defense allowed 160 yards on the ground and four rushing TDs last week to a trio of Lions running backs.

Tony Pollard and Jaylon Smith
AP; Getty Images

Paul’s pick

The Giants need the Cowboys to be feeling overconfident and satisfied after trouncing the Vikings by 37 points. Otherwise, this is going to be exceedingly difficult. These Thanksgiving games in the Dallas area always have a circus-like feel to them — the Jonas Brothers are performing at halftime — and the home team will be in party mode. How can the Giants ruin the mood?

Cowboys 34, Giants 13.

Four downs

Passed over: Trading out of the No. 11-overall selection in the 2021 NFL Draft might go down as one of the worst moves in Giants franchise history. Once the Eagles traded up to No. 10 to take receiver DeVonta Smith — the player the Giants’ coveted — the Giants decided to make a deal with the Bears, who took quarterback Justin Fields at No. 11. The Giants passed up taking linebacker Micah Parsons and offensive tackle Rayshawn Slater and moved down to No. 20 and took Kadarius Toney.

Sure, the Giants gained additional picks the next year and used two of them on Evan Neal and Daniel Bellinger. Passing up on Parsons, though, is a killer. He is a beast and the Giants have to deal with him twice a season.

Guarded pessimism: Did the Giants give too much too soon to Shane Lemieux? He underwent surgeries on his knee and toe and had not played since the 2021 season opener, and as soon as he was activated he was inserted at left guard against the Lions.

Lemieux did not exactly look ready for full-time work and now he’s out again with another toe injury. Rookie Josh Ezeudu — the player moved aside for Lemieux — is also out, with a neck issue. The Cowboys have a rugged defensive front. Will backup Jack Anderson (eight snaps this season) have to make his first start? It is either Anderson, Tyre Phillips moving from tackle or Devery Hamilton, signed from the practice squad. Gulp. Jon Feliciano (neck) did not make the trip, meaning Nick Gates will move in as the center, making his first start at center since Week 1 last season.

The prize: The Giants and Cowboys are both going to meet with Odell Beckham Jr. in the coming days.

The Cowboys could use another wide receiver option after CeeDee Lamb and Michael Gallup. The Giants need upgrades everywhere at that position. Will what happens in this game have any bearing on where Beckham lands? The Cowboys have outwardly been far more aggressive in their interest. The Giants are low-keying this and first need to find out if Beckham is healthy, coming off a second ACL surgery. There is no doubt he will be watching this game.

Numbers man: In some ways it seems as if Daniel Jones just got here, but the way the NFL is nowadays — a passing league, for the most part — Jones is quickly rising up the franchise quarterback charts.

He is the seventh Giants player to surpass 10,000 passing yards, and if he gets 105 passing yards in this game he moves past icon Y.A. Tittle and into sixth place. With 21 more completions, Jones moves past Fran Tarkenton and into fifth place on the Giants’ career list. Jones is only halfway through his fourth season. The debate rages on whether or not he is the long-term answer.

A big game on national television on a national holiday wouldn’t hurt the Jones Should Stay advocates.

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Packers’ Aaron Rodgers says he’s been playing with broken thumb

Aaron Rodgers confirmed what’s been widely suspected.

The Packers’ quarterback has been playing with a broken thumb, he told reporters on Wednesday.

Asked how big a challenge that has been, Rodgers said, “I think I’ve had worse injuries I’ve played with, so definitely a challenge but the days off definitely help this week.”

He believes this isn’t the most an injury has affected his throwing, however.

“When I hurt my knee in 2018, you throw from the ground up, so that was definitely difficult from the footwork,” Rodgers said. “When I broke my index finger in college, that was probably a slightly more important finger to deal with.”

He relayed that at the time this former Cal coach Jeff Tedford told him he could miss one day of practice in a week but if he missed a second, he would be out.

Rodgers said the thumb injury happened Week 5 in the Packers’ loss to the Giants in London, per The Athletic. He said he did not consider surgery, and that it will also not be necessary after the season.

Starting with that defeat to the Giants, the Packers have lost five out of their past six games to fall to 4-7.

Rodgers has not been performing up to the caliber of being the two-time defending NFL MVP in that stretch and played particularly poorly in a can’t-lose game at home against the Titans last Thursday night in which Green Bay fell 27-17. Rogers has completed 64.6 percent of his passes for 2,542 yards, 19 touchdowns and seven interceptions to just a 41.8 quarterback rating this season.

Aaron Rodgers confirmed that he has been playing with a broken thumb for the past five games.
Getty Images

The 39-year-old quarterback signed a massive contract extension with the Packers this past offseason for $150 million over three years.

Green Bay currently is a longshot to make the playoffs. Their odds on FanDuel to make the postseason are +660 and odds to miss are -900. This means they have about a 13 percent chance to make a run to the playoffs from here.



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Jets bench Zach Wilson feat. Darrelle Revis

Getty Images (2)

The only thing Zach Wilson will be holding Sunday is a clipboard.

Robert Saleh and the Jets coaching staff decided on Wednesday to bench the struggling quarterback. He doesn’t belong as the team’s starting QB and does not give the Jets the best chance to win games in the middle of a playoff race. Mike White deserves the shot right now and maybe we see Wilson again at some point this season. The 23-year-old out of BYU needs some tough love after his play and lack of accountability and the Jets are now giving it to him.

Oh yeah, and Darrelle Revis is going in the Jets Ring of Honor Sunday.

So why not react to the Wilson news and chat with Revis all in one? The Jets legend was our guest on a new “Gang’s All Here” podcast with Brian Costello and me. Revis talks about getting in the Ring of Honor, potentially getting in the Hall of Fame one day, Sauce Gardner, Rex Ryan, his career, and more. Tune in to the podcast below or subscribe to “Gang’s All Here” wherever you get podcasts.

Gang’s All Here Podcast with Jake Brown & Brian Costello:

  • JETS BENCH ZACH WILSON: This was the right decision. After how bad his play was and his lack of accountability, you could not trot him out against the Bears Sunday. Mike White will get the chance to start at least Sunday and potentially beyond. Wilson will be inactive and Joe Flacco is the backup.
  • JETS QB SAGA: How long will White get as the starter? Will Wilson get another shot this year? What does this mean for the future at QB? Jimmy Garoppolo would be the perfect fit here.
  • JETS-BEARS PREVIEW: It is finally happening…Coz is taking the Jets! I’m riding with him and we both are going with a score of 30-20. It is looking more and more like Justin Fields may play, which makes this a more intriguing game, but the Bears’ defense is terrible and the Jets should be able to take advantage, get to 7-4 and be right back in the playoff seeding.

Darrelle Revis Interview:
Jets legend, Jets Ring of Honor, Patriots Super Bowl champion, future Hall of Fame cornerback

  • THE 2015 JETS/YOUR RETURN: Beating the Patriots was special. A lot of record-breaking seasons from guys on that team. It was a great group of guys.
  • JETS RING OF HONOR: Excited to get in on Sunday, but there’s a lot of butterflies. Happy and humbled for it and appreciate to be in the Ring of Honor with other greats.
  • HIS DRIVE: Nobody practiced harder. Coming from a steel mill town, blue collar, tough people, tough neighborhood. Made that my DNA and who I am, not allowing a catch in not just the games, but in practice.
  • TODAY’S GAME: Too old to play now if he were asked to come back. The game seems more fun today with technology and media outlets and different feeds. Packed on a few pounds, might look more like a linebacker today.
  • YOU AND REX: Our relationship was very close. It was like playing chess for Rex Ryan. He let his skillset evolve playing for him. Never had a closer bond like the one with Rex. “He was a coach and a friend.”
  • TRADED TO BUCS: Wanted to stay with Jets. Didn’t want to go to Tampa Bay, but that’s how it worked out. Had loyalty to the Jets for drafting him. Hope was to bring a second championship to the Jets.
  • HALL OF FAME: It would mean the world to me. Would love to see his name in that group of guys.
  • SAUCE GARDNER: Think he can be a great cornerback in this league. I see the “it” factor in Sauce. We would love to have him in the Jets Ring of Honor one day.

SUBSCRIBE ON: 

       

Catch up on all episodes of “Gang’s All Here,” a New York Jets podcast, by subscribing to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow Coz and Jake on Twitter @BrianCoz and @JakeBrownRadio. New episodes of “Gang’s All Here” drop Monday and Thursdays.

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Preview, predictions, what to watch for

An inside look at Sunday’s Jets-Patriots Week 11 matchup in Foxborough, Mass. 

Marquee matchup

Jets QB Zach Wilson vs. Patriots HC Bill Belichick

Wilson has played three games against the Patriots in his career and is 0-3 with two touchdown passes and seven interceptions in those games. Three weeks ago, the Patriots picked off Wilson three times, raising doubts about his potential as the team’s franchise quarterback.

Wilson is just the latest young quarterback Belichick has made look bad. Jets fans know all too well about what he can do to them, including making them see ghosts. Wilson played well against the Bills the week after his New England meltdown. He now has a chance to slay the dragon that is Belichick, but Wilson said he is not approaching this game as a chance for atonement.

“I mean excited because it’s another challenge, and this is a big divisional game for us obviously,” Wilson said. “Not necessarily to feel like I have to prove anything of, ‘You know what, last game didn’t go great, I got to do something different this time,’ but just the progress of we won a big game last week and it’s on to the next and this is our next challenge. These guys are a great team, they do a great job defensively, so I am looking at it that way, I’m super excited for this game.”

Zach Wilson and Bill Belichick
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; USA TODAY Sports

Costello’s call

The Jets have not won in Gillette Stadium since the 2010 playoffs. Zach Wilson has shown no reason to believe he can carry the team to a win if Belichick’s crew successfully stops the run. This game will be close throughout, but the Jets will fall short for a 14th straight time against the Patriots.

Patriots 24, Jets 17

Four downs

You again? The Jets and Patriots did not need extensive scouting reports this week to prepare for this game. They just faced each other on Oct. 30, a game New England won, 22-17. The X-factor in this game will be what kind of new wrinkles the coaches can throw at each other.

“The challenge is they saw what worked for them last time and this team, in particular, they just have a lot of different looks defensively,” tackle Duane Brown said. “Things that might have given us trouble, we expect to see that again. We also expect to see some things we haven’t seen. The pros of it is that you know what to expect to a certain extent. You know the personnel. You know the tendencies of individuals, things like that. It’s a good challenge.”

Making a run: The Jets’ winning formula this season has been playing great defense, running the ball and having Zach Wilson not turn it over. You can bet Bill Belichick will be out to take the running game away from the Jets and force Wilson to beat the Patriots with his arm. In their first meeting this season, the Patriots held the Jets to a season-low 51 yards rushing. But in that game, the Jets got away from the run early and had only 15 rushing attempts. It will be critical in the rematch for Jets offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur to stick with the running game and find ways to get it rolling.

On the corner: The Jets’ defense has gone from the worst in the NFL to the top 10. A huge part of that turnaround has been the upgrade they made at cornerback. Sauce Gardner and D.J. Reed are in the conversation for best cornerback duo in the NFL.

Gardner has the third-best coverage grade this season (87.8), per Pro Football Focus. Reed is 10th (80). Among players with 350 coverage snaps, Gardner has the second-best reception percentage (43.5). Reed is fourth (52.2). Gardner’s 189 yards allowed are third in the NFL. Reed is sixth in yards allowed with 244.

Moore to say: The ongoing saga of wide receiver Elijah Moore hits another chapter as the second half of the season gets underway. The Jets have made a decision to play Moore as the slot receiver more. Will that spark something? Moore has not had a catch since Oct. 9 against the Dolphins. In their last game against the Bills, Moore played 27 snaps and did not get one target.

“He’s not making an official move to the slot, it’s just a lot more opportunities in the slot,” Jets head coach Robert Saleh said. “So, just trying to utilize him to put him in the best positions to be successful.”

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Kevin O’Connell’s brand of leadership has Vikings rolling

The father knows best why the Vikings are in good hands with first-year head coach Kevin O’Connell.

“He’s always been a natural leader, even from the time he was a young guy in junior high and high school,” Bill O’Connell told Serby Says of his son. “He was a captain at his high school and he was a four-year captain at San Diego State. And he’s perfected it, too. He’s been a student of leadership, and a student of the mentors he’s played for and coached with and coached for.

“He’s very, very in tune in the modern generation and his generation as to goal-setting and he’s more people-oriented. He believes you can do things being positive and supporting and reinforcing his players, reinforcing the staff and I think he’s a strong advocate that negativism is not gonna get you anywhere, you gotta come every day to the job with a positive attitude and again, not worried about mistakes, just working to avoid them, not repeat them and improve yourself and improve your team and the individual play of his players. He stresses that to his players every day.”

Bill O’Connell will be there Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium with his wife, Suzanne, and her 88-year-old father, watching his son’s 8-1 Vikings try to beat the Cowboys and close in on clinching the NFC North title.

“You want the best outcome for him,” Bill O’Connell said. “You want him to make good decisions. You want his team to respond. For me personally, there’s a lot of pressure.

“I haven’t drank an alcoholic beverage since he’s played or coached during the game, and I continue to do that. I will not have a beer until after the game,” he said with a laugh.

Viking coach Kevin O’Connell talks to Kirk Cousin.
Action Images via Reuters

Skol, Kevin O’Connell.

“First interaction with this man, you would understand that he’s a leader, or if you’re stranded on an island somewhere, this guy might be the one to coordinate how to get out of there,” Vikings defensive tackle Harrison Phillips told Serby Says. “Just his presence alone kinda demands respect, and then he gains respect by giving respect, and I think that’s a really cool trait he has.”

“I would say it’s a collaborative leadership,” Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen told Serby Says. “It’s a leadership that takes in account the other leaders of the organization to come with educated answers as far as how to do things, how to structure practice, how to maybe adjust things when they need to be adjusted. So you can really feel that even though that we’re not involved in a lot of those conversations. … It’s not just him making decisions off of emotions or different things like that.”

The town is still buzzing about their Miracle Vikings following the improbable comeback win last Sunday at Buffalo: a 33-30 overtime thriller featuring Justin Jefferson’s ridiculous one-handed catch on a fourth down to keep a fourth-quarter touchdown drive alive before Minnesota recovered a fumble in the end zone in the final minute of regulation.

“He kinda motivates you by just letting you be yourself and finding he best way to make the best version of yourself,” Philips said. “He’s not a big whoop-and-hollering, big-talking guy, so that when he does talk, when he does whoop and holler, you know that it’s big.”

“Sometimes it’s through visually, like showing us on film like, ‘Hey, this is how it’s done, showing examples of players making plays, doing things above and beyond to help his team win,’ ” Thielen said. “It’s a really good motivation technique because guys see that and they want to be on that film in front of the whole team.”

Kevin O’Connell, 37 now, was an Eagles fan who idolized Randall Cunningham, sitting at the Vet with his father, before becoming a 6-foot-5 quarterback who was drafted by the Patriots in the third round out of San Diego State in 2008.

Kevin O’Connell hugs receiver Justin Jefferson.
Getty Images

“Luckily he got drafted by the New England Patriots,” Bill O’Connell said. “Although unluckily, he got drafted by the New England Patriots.”

Luckily, he got to be a sponge alongside Tom Brady. He was 4-for-6 for 23 yards as a rookie and never threw another NFL regular-season pass at several other stops.

“At that point he viewed Brady as a definite icon and as a leader and as somebody who Day 1 when he walked on the facility at Foxborough, he was completely in awe of Tom,” the father said. “But Tom was fabulous. Tom took him under his wing, and they had a great relationship while he was there and he tried to exchange and teach Kevin quite a bit, as did [Bill] Belichick and the other coaches, Josh MvDaniels. They still have a very good relationship to this very day as friends.”

Luckily, Kevin O’Connell got to observe Belichick as up close and as personal as anyone possibly can.

“I think he learned how to come to work every day and to be expected to give 150 percent and just be the best you could be, cut down on the mistakes, always improve your execution, always improve your personal skills, and just discipline … discipline on the field, discipline in your life,” Bill O’Connell said. “And I think the general orderliness of how Coach Belichick runs a football team and runs a season and runs a game, frankly.”

Bill O’Connell mentions the impact Rex Ryan and Mike Pettine, now Vikings assistant head coach, made on his son when he was with the Jets for two stints in 2009-10 and back in 2011 after a quick stop with the Dolphins.

“It was funny, this thing about him coaching went all the way back to the days of Mark Sanchez when Kevin was kinda the quarterback whisperer if you will, or the father confessor to Mark Sanchez,” Bill O’Connell said.

Kevin O’Connell
AP

It is never easy surrendering your NFL quarterback dream.

“I think it’s tough for any young man like Kevin,” Bill O’Connell said. “There’s 32 starting jobs every season, and there’s many, many talented human beings who play quarterback in the National Football League. … I think he was a precursor to some of the guys that play today. However these guys that play today are highly, highly accurate.”

But the love of the game wouldn’t let his boy leave it after retiring in 2012.

“He just became more and more intellectually involved in the game, and eventually that transition was easy for him because he join realized when his playing days were over, he had a tremendous interest and a love for staying in the game intellectually and just loved the game, and that’s why he’s migrated to the coaching ranks,” Bill O’Connell said.

His son learned his craft at several different coaching venues before joining Rams head coach Sean McVay as offensive coordinator in 2020 and winning Super Bowl LVI this past February at SoFi Stadium.

“I think Sean and Kevin formed a very deep bond and lifelong friendship,” Bill O’Connell said.

Bill O’Connell, who lives in Carlsbad, Calif., developed a friendship with McVay and his staff and players.

“We lived and died and we cried and we cheered,” he said. “It was incredible. It was a fantasy year.”

Some 20 extended family members, including five of Bill O’Conell’s six grandchildren, got to watch Kevin O’Connell hold the Lombardi Trophy.

“The absolute tearjerker for the family was my daughter [Kelly] and grandkids, Kevin’s children, were allowed down on the field after the game and they ran out, and just to watch the whole family jump together and run, and run to him. It was a moment that my wife and I will never ever forget,” Bill O’Connell said.

Now Kevin O’Connell and rookie general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah have a team to believe in.

“Everyone’s bought in. … No one is bitching and complaining and talking about not playing or not starting or not getting the playing time they want,” Phillips said. “I haven’t heard any of that in our locker room, which I think is a rarity in this business.”

“It’s a real relationship from coaches and players,” Thielen said. “I’ve never really seen that before in my career.”

There is an easy relatability between the former quarterback, now head coach, and Kirk Cousins, who has five game-winning drives as the Vikings have won seven straight games by eight points or fewer.

“I think he really understands that everybody can’t be coached the same, and he knows that to get the best out of everybody individually you have to do things differently per individual,” Thielen said.

The postgame flights back home, on which first Cousins (aka Kirko Chainz) and then Patrick Peterson, posed shirtless with chains have been a viral sensation.

“The last few plane trips on the way back, I don’t think I sat down once,” Thielen said.

Kevin O’Connell has been a breath of fresh air following Mike Zimmer.

“As a father,” Bill O’Connell said, “your son has one of 32 jobs in the world.”

Bill O’Connell was a 220-pound strong safety and weak-side linebacker at Villanova with an NFL dream, but a neck injury shattered it at the end of his junior year.

“It was a very profound and sad moment for me,” the father said. “But to have a son, and then have him take up the game of football, and have him engage in the playing and then the coaching side of it, it’s the best of both worlds for me, I’ll tell ya.”

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Jets want to prove they’re for real vs. Patriots

Jets rookie receiver Garrett Wilson, who caught six passes for 115 yards in Gang Green’s loss to the Patriots on Oct. 30, goes deep for some Q&A from Post columnist Steve Serby ahead of the rematch.

Q: How would you describe the mindset of your team before the Patriots rematch?

A: Let’s go prove the world that we are who we know we are in the facility, but let’s go prove it to the world, that’s the mindset. We’re all a bunch of young guys, and a lot of us got something to prove in this league. We know we’re great players, but we don’t feel like we’re getting the respect we deserve and we want to gain that. This will be a good one to go get. I think it’ll be the right step towards proving the world that we’re for real.

Q: Your thoughts on the Jets losing 13 straight times to the Patriots?

A: I’ve been brought into this rivalry that the Jets and Patriots have, it’s been lopsided obviously for the last few years, but I was brought here along with a lot of other people to make that change, and that’s what I plan to do. None of the 13 games are gonna have any affect on tomorrow.

Q: What tells you that Zach Wilson is ready for Bill Belichick?

A: The way we practiced, we were really crisp in our practice, and Zach was the main component of that on the offensive side. He had a really good week of practice, and just his mindset, he’s not thinking about whatever happened, he’s just ready to go.

Q: What’s the biggest obstacle or adversity you’ve had to overcome?

A: I fight my battles every day, man … and go through things internally and stuff like that every day that I gotta push through.

Q: Are you talking about mentally, physically, emotionally? What kind of internal battles?

A: Yeah, just mentally. There’s a lot personally that I go through. Football is great, don’t get me wrong. I’m just saying there’s things I go through that we all fight our own battles, but personally I can’t pinpoint exactly one thing for you, I’m sorry.

Garrett Wilson
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Q: Did you go through those same things playing basketball?

A: I did, yeah. It’s a lot that comes with the things that we’re blessed to do.

Q: Is chasing perfection part of the struggle?

A: Most definitely. Most definitely. Everyone kinda puts an expectation on you, a tag on you, and they pay you to do certain things and you gotta do it perfectly.

Q: Is part of it being a first-round pick and do you wish maybe you were not a first-round pick because of that?

A: Oh, no … I mean, like I said, it is a lot of expectation and stuff that comes with it and personally, initially I struggled. I know I struggled, on a surface level it might not look like I struggled, but I know I was. And yeah, man, I wouldn’t have it any other way. I feel like everything happens for a reason and I needed to go through that to get to where I’m at and eventually going to be. I wouldn’t have it any other way, but like I said, that is a real thing, and a lot of other things as well. You put a lot of pressure on yourself early. Honestly, no one puts more pressure on me than me. A lot of that was internal. I had to work on that.

Q: Why have you guys been so successful on the road?

A: Because we’re a young group and we go out there and just play like there’s nothing to lose.

Q: What drives you?

A: Just my love for the game and want to be the best to do it. My love for football and competition specifically, it’s been that way since I was a young kid. I always wanted to be the best at what I do, and as I’ve grown up, that hasn’t really changed.

Q: Do you visualize greatness?

A: Yeah man, I often just think about football all day, even once I leave, if I messed up a play or if I did something wrong, that stuff haunts me. When we play on Sundays, I visualize what I want to do in the game. I don’t know if it’s greatness, but I try and visualize the plays and things that are gonna happen and try to get a look at it before it actually happens, stuff like that.

Q: But you believe you can become a great NFL player?

A: Yes, I do believe that. There’s a lot of work to do, and a lot of learning that I have ahead of me, but eventually I do think that I could get to that point.

Garrett Wilson escapes the Patriots defense.
USA TODAY Sports

Q: Why do you love big games so much?

A: Because this is the opportunity I’ve dreamed of since I was a young kid. And the big games are the ones that I watched growing up and that I wanted to have an impact in, and I’m blessed to be able to be a part of them now. With us winning some games and the division being really good, this is a big one this weekend, and these are the ones that you need to make plays in if you want to be considered that great player, and that’s what I want to do.

Q: Your on-field mentality?

A: I want to have fun while I’m out there. I always want to make sure that I’m putting my best foot forward, and for me, that’s making sure that I’m not thinking about too much and just going out there and doing what I love and playing.

Q: What is Sauce Gardner’s special sauce?

A: His love for the game. It’s easy to wake up and do it when you love it, and you can tell that he brings the same energy every day, he’s the same person every day.

Q: What is his special sauce on the field?

A: His length. Even if you do got a step on him, it’s hard to make a play on him with his arms’ ready and his ability to see the ball and play the ball through receivers’ hands. He’s a really great player. Everything that everyone’s seeing I’ve known since I met him.

Q: Same question: D.J. Reed?

A: D.J. is super twitch, man, he’s really quick, and he studies the game like a legendary player, he knows his opponent going into each week and it shows on Sunday.

Q: What is your special sauce on the field?

A: I think it is my passion for the game, and that I’m not afraid to show it while I’m playing. I feel like it exudes out of me, and I have fun out there and that’s my special sauce. I was given ability from God and to play and I’m blessed and I love doing it.

Q: You can go 1-on-1 with any cornerback?

A: We got a real good one here in New York with Sauce and getting to go against him often, that’s always good for him. But I feel like Jalen Ramsey has that effect on the media, at least to where he’s the No. 1 corner, so it’d be nice to go up against Jalen Ramsey.

Q: How about further back in time?

A: It’s gotta be [Darrelle] Revis, man. I feel like he’s the all-time GOAT.

Q: If you could pick the brain of any cornerback in NFL history?

A: Deion [Sanders]. I feel like he’s got a lot of knowledge and now going into coaching. Deion was a special talent when he played, and playing baseball and football, and still got the best out of himself.

Q: If you could pick the brain of any wide receiver in NFL history?

A: Definitely Randy Moss. His plan in attacking DBs and what he thought about while he was out on the field. I watch him on TV a lot, he’s very intuitive.

Garrett Wilson hugs Zach Wilson after the Jets’ win over the Bills.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Q: What are you thankful for on this Thanksgiving?

A: I’m thankful for a lot of things, man. The best for my family, my loved ones that support me and got me to this point. It took a village to raise me and I’m really grateful for my upbringing and the people around me that I grew up with. Obviously, the ability and the opportunity to play this game that I love and do it for a career, I’m blessed, and I know that.

Q: Your favorite childhood Thanksgiving?

A: Cam Newton beat Alabama in the [2010] Iron Bowl, I think the day after, or two or three days after Thanksgiving, whatever year Cam Newton threw the touchdown to the tight end [Philip Lutzenkirchen], and they beat ’em 28-27, they were down whatever, came back.

Q: You used to be a quarterback?

A: Exactly, exactly. And I kinda tried to model my game after Cam Newton.

Q: Three dinner guests?

A: Martin Luther King; Biggie Smalls; Alexander The Great.

Q: Why Alexander The Great?

A: He was so young conquering the world, I feel like it would be cool to hear his lingo. He was a young dude conquering the world. He’s definitely got some stuff to say.

Q: Well, you’re a young dude conquering the world.

A: (Laugh) I’d never make that comparison … that’s hilarious.

Q: Favorite movie?

A: “Interstellar.”

Q: Favorite actor?

A: [Matthew] McConnaughey.

Q: Favorite actress?

A: Jennifer Lawrence.

Q: Favorite singer/rapper/entertainer?

A: Dave Chappelle.

Q: Favorite meal?

A: My mama’s sweet potato casserole. She’s gonna make it on Thanksgiving this year.

Q: What will it be like for you going up against your Ohio State buddy Justin Fields next week?

A: Yeah, I can’t wait for that. Obviously he’s having a great season — it doesn’t surprise me at all to see him doing all that, man, that boy is a different breed back there, he can make either way, whatever the defense gives him, he’ll make that play. I’m really excited to play against Justin.

Q: And the best is yet to come for Garrett Wilson?

A: It is. It is. God willing, it is.

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Shane Lemieux hoping diet helps him stay healthy in Giants return

Shane Lemieux is hoping a gallon of whole milk a day keeps the injuries away. 

Playing in just one game for the Giants over the last 14 months left Lemieux plenty of time to focus on other ways to make sure he was committed to his football career. He experimented with three options before settling on “The Vertical Diet” created by former bodybuilder Stan Efferding — emphasizing nutrient-dense, easily digestible foods — and became a weight-room junkie with a full setup at his offseason home in Arizona. 

“All the guys give me a hard time because I’m always drinking whole milk. They think I’m a psycho,” Lemieux said after practice Friday. “It’s like, ‘Beef, it’s what’s for dinner’ [commercials]. Milk, it’s what for dinner.” 

Lemieux, who is practicing while on injured reserve, is expected to be activated in time to play Sunday against the Lions. He was penciled in as the starting left guard each of the last two preseasons, but escaping training camp healthy has proven tricky. 

Shane Lemieux is closing in on his Giants return.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

A partially torn patellar tendon wiped out nearly all of last season — Lemieux’s attempt to play through the pain in Week 1 lasted just 17 snaps — and the combination of turf toe and a fractured big left toe suffered in August sidelined him for at least the first nine games of this season. He needed surgery both times. 

“It’s been a hard couple years,” Lemieux said. “I’m a ballplayer. I love football. Being on the field is the best feeling in the world. When you get taken away from the game, you realize how important it is to you. I’m ready to get back out there, for sure.” 

The disruption was especially unsettling to a creature of habit such as Lemieux. Lunch every day is the same — a stew-like mixture of ground beef, rice, onions, peppers, spinach and bone broth called “monster mash” that he brings from home in a warm thermos. He washes every meal down with three pints of milk. 

“I’m naturally a skinny guy,” said the 6-foot-4 Lemieux, who played at a maximum of 295 pounds as a rookie fifth-round pick in 2020, but feels more comfortable now at around 310. “Anything I could to keep my weight up. I needed all the extra calories I could get.” 

The Giants are without Ben Bredeson, who is on injured reserve (knee) after starting the first seven games in Lemieux’s place. Two-game starter Josh Ezeudu (neck) was a limited practice participant Thursday and Friday and is listed as questionable, but he will be a backup with a possible role in jumbo packages, if available. 

“He’s had a good week this week. I think it was better than last week,” head coach Brian Daboll said. “If we need him to be ready to go, he’ll be ready to go.” 

Lemieux credited trainers and strength coaches for helping him stay in shape while missing 25 of the last 26 games and teammates for keeping him positive when a “Here we go again” mindset set in for about a week when he returned to injured reserve. He felt he was having the best training camp of his career before then. 

“I’m just more confident,” Lemieux said. “All the time on IR, I’ve game-planned like I’m playing the game. That’s really just mentally put me in a spot where I’m more mature and have a better football IQ than I did my rookie year.”

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