What a win Saturday night on the road in a hostile environment against the NFC’s number one seed!

Washington came to play, and although not everything was perfect (the defense allowed a whopping 201 rushing yards and three touchdowns), Joe Whitt’s unit had five turnovers and the offense put 39 points on the board to come away with a convincing 45-31 win to advance to the NFC Championship game at Philly against the Eagles next Sunday.

The magical season continues…

Below are my Studs and Duds of the game, followed by some Notes.


Studs:

Jayden Daniels – Daniels was absolutely incredible, passing for 299 yards and two touchdowns while adding 51 yards on the ground. Most importantly, he took care of the football all game. In a hostile environment, he remained cool, calm and collected and never let the moment get too big for him. He is a special talent who is having a special season!

Terry McLaurin – As he’s done all year, Terry stepped up big and made some HUGE plays for the offense. He had a beautiful catch and run on a quick screen where he took it to the house from 58 yards out.

Brian Robinson – Robinson has had a really rough past five weeks, however he stepped his game up against Detroit, rushing for 77 yards on 15 carries and scored twice. He displayed good vision and burst on the evening and looked like the Brian Robinson of old.

Dyami Brown – Brown led all Washington receivers with six receptions for 98 yards. He’s really stepped up over the last four weeks, including both playoff games, and is beginning to look like a legit NFL receiver.

Mike Sainristil – Sainristil is becoming a frequent member of the Studs list – and for good reason. The rookie had another excellent game defensively recording five tackles and two HUGE interceptions, one of which happened in the endzone against Jameson Williams right before halftime.

Jeremy Chinn – Chinn led the Commanders in total tackles with 12 and recorded a game-ending interception off Goff. He’s been very good down the stretch and may have played his way to a new contract in D.C.

Quan Martin – Martin has quietly put together a very nice season. He had a big interception that he returned for a touchdown. That play set the tone for Washington’s defense.

Dorance Armstrong – Armstrong made an impact for the Washington defense all evening, recording three tackles, two of which were sacks (one a strip sack which Frankie Luvu recovered) and two pressures.

Brandon Coleman – The rookie has had a pretty rough season at left tackle, but he looked the part and played the part against the Lions, showing well in both pass protection and run blocking. It was one of his best games of the season.


Duds:

There will be no DUDS names in this playoff edition of Studs and Duds.


Notes:

  • Frankie Luvu was making splash plays all game, including a fumble recovery and a big hit on Goff during Martin’s interception return.
  • Zach Ertz continues to show his value for the rookie Daniels in this offense. He had five receptions for 28 yards and a score.
  • Austin Ekeler played a big part in the game as both a runner and receiver. He averaged 7,8 YPC on six attempts and caught four passes for 41 yards.
  • Dante Fowler recorded a nice TFL, a QB hit and two pressures in the game.
  • Again, Daron Payne recorded no meaningful stats.
  • Unlike his counterpart, Jon Allen was getting pressure on Goff and caused some hurried throws.
  • I was surprised to see Trent Scott play well when he came in for the injured Sam Cosmi at right guard.
  • Marshon Lattimore had a pretty nice game against Detroit’s receivers and looked like he’s not reeling anymore from the hamstring issue.
  • Bobby Wagner is the leader of this defense but make no mistake about it – he’s a liability in coverage.
  • Tress Way punted just once in the game and landed the 48 yarder inside the 20.
  • Prayers for a speedy recovery to Sam Cosmi who suffered a torn ACL.



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The official snap counts from the Philadelphia Eagles’ Divisional Round playoff win over the Los Angeles Rams are in! Let’s take a look and run through some analysis.

Get it?

Run?

OFFENSE

  • Jalen Hurts did not miss a snap despite suffering a knee injury. Tough dude.
  • Lane Johnson was not on the field for victory formation. Fred Johnson took that snap at right tackle.
  • Despite missing just two snaps, A.J. Brown only had two catches for 14 yards. Both of them went for first downs. He was targeted seven times in total and would’ve had two more catches if not for drops.
  • Dallas Goedert led the Eagles in receiving. His four targets resulted in four catches for 56 yards. Efficient. Eagles need to keep feeding him.
  • DeVonta Smith’s four targets resulted in four catches for just 21 yards. But he became the Eagles’ new franchise leader in playoff receiving yards.
  • Saquon Barkley logged 30 total touches, which is tied (with two other times) for the second-most he’s had this season. He produced 232 yards from scrimmage and two touchdowns. Pretty decent player.
  • Jahan Dotson did not see a target despite playing 39 snaps. He should’ve been targeted at one point when he got wide open downfield.
  • Not as much 12 personnel this week with Grant Calcaterra being limited to his second-lowest snap count percentage of the season. The only time he finished lower was in Week 18 when he was rested for part of the game.
  • Johnny Wilson once again saw limited playing time as a blocking WR.
  • Kenny Gainwell only played six snaps but made the most of his two touches by gaining 20 yards and two first downs.
  • E.J. Jenkins has a very small role as TE3.
  • Reed Blankenship was lined up deep behind victory formation as a precaution in the unlikely event of a fumble.

DEFENSE

  • This was the first time Darius Slay played 100% of the Eagles’ defensive snaps since Week 11. It’s only the fourth time this season that he’s played the entire game on defense.
  • Jalen Carter was an absolute force despite getting just two plays off. He filled up the box score with five total tackles, three quarterback hits, two sacks, two tackles for loss, and one pass deflection. Carter had a season-saving sequence late in the game by sacking Stafford to turn 3rd-and-2 at the plus 13-yard line into 4th-and-11. Then he also pressured Stafford into an incompletion on fourth down. Still had gas left in the tank to take over the game at the end. What a beast!
  • Lots of nickel defense with Cooper DeJean nearly playing the entire game.
  • There was thought that Oren Burks might share snaps with rookie Jeremiah Trotter Jr. Not the case. And understandably so with Burks playing relatively well.
  • Josh Sweat played his highest snap count by far. His previous high was 51. The Eagles are starting to let him empty the tank a bit more with the end of the season in sight.
  • Nolan Smith continues to be awesome as a starting edge rusher for this team.
  • Isaiah Rodgers filled in for an injured Quinyon Mitchell for most of this game.
  • Moro Ojomo logged his first career sack.
  • Jalyx Hunt notched a sack as the third edge rusher in a three-man rotation.
  • Jordan Davis was limited to 17 snaps as DT4.
  • Kelee Ringo saw some playing time as both a dime cornerback and when Rodgers missed a few snaps before returning late in the game.
  • The Eagles will hope that Mitchell’s injury isn’t too serious. The rookie cornerback downplayed concerns about his outlook but his status will be worth monitoring on the injury report this week.

SPECIAL TEAMS

  • With Burks graduating from backup to starter, Jeremiah Trotter Jr. picked up the slack on special teams.
  • Nicholas Morrow logged two special teams tackles in his first game back with the Eagles.
  • No fullback snaps for Khari Blasingame in this one. Special teams duty only.
  • Braden Mann had some really good holds in addition to punting well.
  • No defensive role for Trevor Booker once again. The Eagles have shortened the DT rotation to four players.

DID NOT PLAY

INACTIVE: Tanner McKee, Nick Gates, Darian Kinnard, Trevor Keegan, Ainias Smith, Eli Ricks, Lewis Cine

ACTIVE: Kenny Pickett, Bryce Huff, Parris Campbell

  • The inactives were the same from the Eagles’ Wild Card game. They were all healthy scratches.
  • Pickett was warming up after Hurts got banged up and evaluated in the medical tent. But the backup quarterback didn’t enter the game.
  • After playing one defensive snap last weekend, Huff didn’t even see the field in this one. Just not ideal for a big money free agent signing to be such a non-factor.
  • Campbell played two special teams snaps last weekend before not playing at all in this game.



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CNN
 — 

The longest college football season in history has just one game remaining. One hundred and thirty two Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) teams have seen their seasons come to an end, and now only two remain: Notre Dame and Ohio State.

The Fighting Irish will be looking to end a long drought, having not been national champions since 1988. The Buckeyes won the inaugural College Football Playoff (CFP) in 2014, but they will have been disappointed not to add at least one more title in the years since given their consistently solid teams.

Monday night offers the chance to change all of that. Here’s everything you need to know about the CFP National Championship.

The National Championship between Ohio State and Notre Dame begins at 7:30 p.m. ET on Monday at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. It will be broadcast live on ESPN.

Recent results indicate that Ohio State is the strong favorite for the title. The Buckeyes have defeated the Fighting Irish in each of the last two seasons, have not lost to Notre Dame since before World War II, and have enjoyed a more straightforward postseason.

After comfortably overcoming Tennessee and Oregon in the first round and Rose Bowl, respectively, Ohio State beat an excellent Texas team 28-14 in the semifinal thanks to two touchdowns in the fourth quarter.

In Will Howard, the team has a quarterback whose rating is second only to Miami standout Cam Ward this season. The 23-year-old has racked up 3,779 passing yards, 33 passing touchdowns and 10 interceptions to add to his 169 yards and seven touchdowns on the ground.

Wide receiver Jeremiah Smith is often on the end of Howard’s passes – the true freshman has 71 receptions for 1,227 yards and 14 touchdowns.

On paper, the Buckeyes simply have more quality than their opponents. But the Fighting Irish’s postseason has been characterized by grit and determination, and head coach Marcus Freeman will be instilling the same never-say-die attitude in his players.

A comfortable 27-17 win over the Indiana Hoosiers was followed up by a 23-10 victory against the Georgia Bulldogs in testing circumstances – the Sugar Bowl was delayed by a day due to the New Orleans terror attack.

In the semifinal, the Fighting Irish found themselves 10-3 down to Penn State at halftime but a big second half from Riley Leonard and a field goal from Mitch Jeter with seven seconds remaining proved the difference as Notre Dame won 27-24.

Leonard will be crucial once again if ND is to get anything from this game. The senior has 2,606 passing yards, 19 passing touchdowns and just eight interceptions this season. Combined with his 16 rushing touchdowns and leadership skills which teammates and coaches routinely highlight, it is no surprise that Leonard was named the offensive MVP in both the Sugar Bowl and the Orange Bowl.

In a twist of fate, Leonard and Howard were roommates at the Manning Passing Academy last summer. The former revealed this week that he has even been texting Archie Manning every day ahead of the final.

Nonetheless, despite the offensive quality on the field, there is a good chance that Monday’s game will be decided by whichever team has the better defense.

Statistically, the Buckeyes have the best defense in college football this season, across a number of metrics. Never has that been more evident than in the semifinal, when Jack Sawyer took down Texas QB Quinn Ewers on fourth-and-goal with two minutes left, forcing a fumble before recovering the ball and running 83 yards for the touchdown to secure the win, as well as his own place as a school legend.

The Fighting Irish are also defensively excellent, second only to Ohio State in both average points allowed and average pass yards allowed. But Notre Dame fans will be hoping that long-term injuries to the likes of Benjamin Morrison, Jordan Botelho and Boubacar Traore do not finally catch up with their defense.

Ryan Day had defensive end Jack Sawyer, middle right, to thank for the Cotton Bowl's game-defining play.

“We’ve got to play our best against Notre Dame. This is a very, very good team. They are a very resilient team. They play together. I think Riley Leonard is a tremendous leader and a tremendous player and a winner, and their coaching staff does a great job. Got a lot of respect for their players and their coaches. This is going to be a complete battle, and we know that. We’ve got to play our best game this season in the last one.”

“These are the types of games where that stage is set to become a legend. I think these guys know that. But again, all the focus, and I know I sound like a broken record when it comes to this, has got to be on the next game. If we think anything that we’ve done leading up to this point has anything to do with what’s going to happen in this game, we are dead wrong. So wipe that slate completely clean, and then we’ve got to go back and have the discipline to continue to do the work that we’ve done in the last three games going into this game right here.”

“There will be time to tell the story after the season, but the only way the story is told is if we win.”

Will Howard had his doubters while at Kansas State, but has proven to be one of the best quarterbacks in college football this season.

“I do have to kind of pinch myself at times and be like ‘Man, I’m in the national championship.’ But at the same time, it is where we expected to be. We got ready for this season saying that if we were going to come out of it saying it was a success, we were going to have to play 16, 17 games, and here we are. So I’m just proud of our guys, that we got to this point. But like I said last week, the job’s not finished. It’s not finished until we win.”

“We’ve come all this way, but it means really nothing if we don’t finish it the right way and win this last one. It’s the national championship, I would hope that we don’t need much more motivation than that. All of our goals and aspirations are right here in front of us.”

“(Notre Dame’s defense) do a great job. They play a lot of men, and they want to challenge you. I think they do a really good job of being physical, but also being smart. They don’t get a lot of penalties. They shadow guys really well. Obviously, they’re missing their guy, Morrison, but I think 29 (cornerback Christian Gray) and 15 (cornerback Leonard Moore) both do a great job too. Number 1 (safety Jordan Clark) in the slot’s a solid player. Number 0’s (safety Xavier Watts) a stud. All across the board they’ve got guys. But we’ve got guys too.”

The National Championship will see Marcus Freeman face off against his alma mater, having spent five seasons between 2004 and 2008 as a linebacker for Ohio State.

“If you need that (Notre Dame’s loss to Ohio State last year) to motivate you to get ready for this game, then you’re not the right person. That’s the reality of it. We don’t need motivation to be prepared for this game.”

“We’ve got a chance to play in the national championship game. This isn’t about the past. This is about this opportunity we have right in front of us, and we’ll continue to focus on this opportunity right in front of us.”

“It would be something special. Obviously, this place hasn’t won a national championship since 1988, and every year the aspirations are to win a national championship. That’s why all these players choose to come to Notre Dame, one of the reasons, is to be a part of a program that can win a national championship.”

“I think it’s something that they’ll be able to say for the rest of their lives is they were part of a national championship football team. There’s a lot of work that goes into getting to that outcome, and that’s what we’ve got to focus on, but it would be special for this university and for these players that have poured so much work into getting the results that we have.”

Riley Leonard was named offensive MVP in both the Sugar Bowl and the Orange Bowl, as well as MVP in the 2022 Military Bowl while at Duke.

“I thought this (getting to the national championship) would happen. That’s why I came here. Even my girlfriend, I was talking to her the other day, and a bunch of people were texting her like, ‘Oh, my gosh, I can’t believe you guys made it, this is crazy.’ Even she was like, ‘Riley, this isn’t that surprising. We expected this.’”

“It’s really cool to have those late-night conversations with him (Ohio State QB Howard, while the two were roommates at the Manning Passing Academy) just about life and whatever. To see where we are now, it’s really cool because he’s a person I respect a lot, and obviously, I always try to root for other quarterbacks in college, especially after I meet them at that camp because you realize we’re all just dudes, all just kids trying to play the best for our teams and our universities. Any chance I can to see how he’s doing, I try to look.”

“Obviously, it would mean the world to me (to win). It’s kind of something I’ve dreamed of my whole life. To be at a school like this and be able to represent a school like this and lead them to a national championship so far, it’s truly an honor and something I don’t take for granted.”

“I take a lot of pride in wearing the blue and gold. I know our fans for a very long time have been very loyal to this program, through the ups and downs since 1988. It would be an honor to deliver them another one.”



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Saquon Barkley has stayed classy since the Giants’ disrespected him and he went on to sign with the Eagles in free agency. While it’s something that has clearly motivated him at times this season, he’s maintained it’s all love with the guys in New York.

That proved to be true, with at least a few of his former Giants teammates, who showed up to Lincoln Financial Field to cheer on Barkley against the Rams on Sunday. Reports note that Daniel Jones and Sterling Shepard were among those in the RB’s suite.

Even Odell Beckham Jr. tweeted his support of Barkley during the game. Barkley is such a great teammate and it’s nice to see so many people cheering for him during this historic season. The running back deserves it.

Barkley made some great friends with the Giants, but he’ll leave a legacy with the Eagles.





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