Winners and Losers of NFL Week 15
Getty Images/Ringer illustration It was an epic weekend of football that included wild comebacks, officiating blunders and the Patriots committing perhaps the dumbest play weâve ever seen. Here are the winners and losers of Week 15. Every week of the 2022 NFL season, we will celebrate the electric plays, investigate the colossal blunders, and explain the inexplicable moments of the most recent slate. Welcome to Winners and Losers. Which one are you? Winner: An All-Time-Great Football Week Iâm sorry, we just couldnât get to all the winners and losers in a single column this week. We wrote an entire separate post about the biggest comeback in NFL history on Saturday, which allowed me to devote my attention to one of the wildest Sundays in recent memory, a maelstrom of comebacks and thrillers highlighted by the single worst game-losing play Iâve ever seen in all my years watching this magnificent, idiotic sport. Twelve of the 15 games this week were decided by just one possession; five were won with scores on the final play of the game, including three overtime walk-offs. There were three 17-point comebacks, the most in a single week in NFL history. There was snow, there was chaos, and there was this: Has to be seen to be believed: pic.twitter.com/DKNWzwu2pRâ Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 19, 2022 Thatâs Patriots wide receiver Jakobi Meyers throwing a last-second lateral pass directly to Raiders defensive end Chandler Jones, who promptly stiff-armed Pats quarterback Mac Jones and romped 48 yards to the end zone to beat his former team. Frenzied multi-lateral plays sometimes end in defensive touchdowns ⊠but normally, those scores just add points to the winning teamâs total, with few implications outside of gambling. This play actually turned a tied game into a Pats loss. Itâs the second time in NFL history that a last-second multi-lateral play has resulted in a walk-off game-winning touchdown ⊠and the other was also against the Patriots, when the Dolphins went 69 yards for an offensive TD in 2018. Bill Belichick might be the coaching GOAT, but once guys start pitching the ball to other guys, Belichickâs useless. So much stuff happened Sunday that I just have to list it: Tom Brady blew a 17-point lead in about 13 minutes of game time; the Chiefs somehow went to overtime with the Texans; the Jaguars came back from 17 down against the Cowboys and won on a pick-six in overtime; the Giants beat Washington in a hugely important playoff positioning battle thanks to this jarring stop at the 1-yard line: Heinicke down to the 1! : #NYGvsWAS on NBC : Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/BooZSZJZF4 pic.twitter.com/2g2ahS5mwRâ NFL (@NFL) December 19, 2022 And you know what? Letâs watch the Patriots thing again: It doesnât get old. Has to be seen to be believed: pic.twitter.com/DKNWzwu2pRâ Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 19, 2022 Loser: The Dumbest Thing I Have Ever Seen on a Football Field I just want to break down the final ridiculous play in the Patriots-Raiders game in full: First, the context: The Patriots, notably, were tied with the Raiders. They did not need to score a touchdown to win. They had outscored the Raiders 21-7 in the second half, and up to that point, the only touchdown they had allowed after halftime may or may not have actually been a touchdown. While it would have been nice to win in regulation, there was no need to do anything ridiculous. (They did something ridiculous.) Even if Pats WR Jakobi Meyers felt the need to throw this ball, he had better options. Fellow receiver Tyquan Thornton was right next to him; tight end Hunter Henry was a few yards away. Instead, he tried to throw to Mac Jones, who was 20 yards behind him and 30 yards across the field. Meyers, to his credit, has taken full responsibility for the failure. He says the Patriotsâ coaches told the team to play for overtime. âI thought I saw Mac Jones open,â Meyers said. Jakobi Meyers said the plan was to run the ball and go into overtime. Said he was âtrying to be a hero.â âI thought I saw Mac Jones open.â pic.twitter.com/tUEudAAjEaâ Mark Daniels (@MarkDanielsPJ) December 19, 2022 I thought. I saw. MAC JONES. Open. Thatâs really the dumbest part of this dumb thing: Meyers was trying to throw a pass to Mac Jones, one of the least athletic quarterbacks in the entire NFL, a three-star recruit coming out of high school whose shirtless pictures from college have been mocked. (Lest we needed a reminder of Jonesâs lack of athleticism, a designed run for Jones a few minutes earlier had been an abject disaster.) Jones was trailing behind the entire play, with all the Raiders between him and the end zone. Meyers was apparently banking on this slow-ass QB single-handedly defeating the entire 11-man defense, with no blocking help or other teammates nearby to dump off another lateral to. Did Jakobi Meyers think that Mac Jones was some sort of hybrid of Derrick Henry and Justin Jefferson? An

It was an epic weekend of football that included wild comebacks, officiating blunders and the Patriots committing perhaps the dumbest play weâve ever seen. Here are the winners and losers of Week 15.
Every week of the 2022 NFL season, we will celebrate the electric plays, investigate the colossal blunders, and explain the inexplicable moments of the most recent slate. Welcome to Winners and Losers. Which one are you?
Winner: An All-Time-Great Football Week
Iâm sorry, we just couldnât get to all the winners and losers in a single column this week. We wrote an entire separate post about the biggest comeback in NFL history on Saturday, which allowed me to devote my attention to one of the wildest Sundays in recent memory, a maelstrom of comebacks and thrillers highlighted by the single worst game-losing play Iâve ever seen in all my years watching this magnificent, idiotic sport.
Twelve of the 15 games this week were decided by just one possession; five were won with scores on the final play of the game, including three overtime walk-offs. There were three 17-point comebacks, the most in a single week in NFL history. There was snow, there was chaos, and there was this:
Has to be seen to be believed: pic.twitter.com/DKNWzwu2pR
â Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 19, 2022
Thatâs Patriots wide receiver Jakobi Meyers throwing a last-second lateral pass directly to Raiders defensive end Chandler Jones, who promptly stiff-armed Pats quarterback Mac Jones and romped 48 yards to the end zone to beat his former team. Frenzied multi-lateral plays sometimes end in defensive touchdowns ⊠but normally, those scores just add points to the winning teamâs total, with few implications outside of gambling. This play actually turned a tied game into a Pats loss. Itâs the second time in NFL history that a last-second multi-lateral play has resulted in a walk-off game-winning touchdown ⊠and the other was also against the Patriots, when the Dolphins went 69 yards for an offensive TD in 2018. Bill Belichick might be the coaching GOAT, but once guys start pitching the ball to other guys, Belichickâs useless.
So much stuff happened Sunday that I just have to list it: Tom Brady blew a 17-point lead in about 13 minutes of game time; the Chiefs somehow went to overtime with the Texans; the Jaguars came back from 17 down against the Cowboys and won on a pick-six in overtime; the Giants beat Washington in a hugely important playoff positioning battle thanks to this jarring stop at the 1-yard line:
Heinicke down to the 1!
â NFL (@NFL) December 19, 2022
: #NYGvsWAS on NBC
: Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/BooZSZJZF4 pic.twitter.com/2g2ahS5mwR
And you know what? Letâs watch the Patriots thing again: It doesnât get old.
Has to be seen to be believed: pic.twitter.com/DKNWzwu2pR
â Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 19, 2022
Loser: The Dumbest Thing I Have Ever Seen on a Football Field
I just want to break down the final ridiculous play in the Patriots-Raiders game in full:
First, the context:
- The Patriots, notably, were tied with the Raiders. They did not need to score a touchdown to win. They had outscored the Raiders 21-7 in the second half, and up to that point, the only touchdown they had allowed after halftime may or may not have actually been a touchdown. While it would have been nice to win in regulation, there was no need to do anything ridiculous. (They did something ridiculous.)
- Even if Pats WR Jakobi Meyers felt the need to throw this ball, he had better options. Fellow receiver Tyquan Thornton was right next to him; tight end Hunter Henry was a few yards away. Instead, he tried to throw to Mac Jones, who was 20 yards behind him and 30 yards across the field.
- Meyers, to his credit, has taken full responsibility for the failure. He says the Patriotsâ coaches told the team to play for overtime. âI thought I saw Mac Jones open,â Meyers said.
Jakobi Meyers said the plan was to run the ball and go into overtime. Said he was âtrying to be a hero.â
â Mark Daniels (@MarkDanielsPJ) December 19, 2022
âI thought I saw Mac Jones open.â pic.twitter.com/tUEudAAjEa
- I thought.
- I saw.
- MAC JONES.
- Open.
Thatâs really the dumbest part of this dumb thing: Meyers was trying to throw a pass to Mac Jones, one of the least athletic quarterbacks in the entire NFL, a three-star recruit coming out of high school whose shirtless pictures from college have been mocked. (Lest we needed a reminder of Jonesâs lack of athleticism, a designed run for Jones a few minutes earlier had been an abject disaster.) Jones was trailing behind the entire play, with all the Raiders between him and the end zone. Meyers was apparently banking on this slow-ass QB single-handedly defeating the entire 11-man defense, with no blocking help or other teammates nearby to dump off another lateral to. Did Jakobi Meyers think that Mac Jones was some sort of hybrid of Derrick Henry and Justin Jefferson? And would a hypothetical Justrick Henfferson actually be able to make this play?
Itâs also worth pointing out that Meyersâs throw was horrible. Meyers was a high school quarterback, which probably gave him the undeserved confidence to think he could complete this pass while on the move and throwing across his body while getting hit. It didnât end up within five yards of Mac. Even if Chandler Jones wasnât there to intercept the pass, Mac Jones probably wouldnât have caught it. It turned out being a clean pick-six, but it couldâve also been a scoop-and-score fumble return.
And now the fun part ⊠talking about Mac Jonesâs tackle attempt:
â JP Acosta (@acosta32_jp) December 19, 2022
- I think ⊠I think ⊠I think heâs trying to draw a charge? Heâs getting his feet set outside of the restricted area, heâs dropping to the ground at the first whiff of contact, heâs looking to the ref for a signal, heâs looking to Coach K on the sidelines for approval. Heâs not trying to make a tackle, thatâs for damn sure.
- Mac Jones doesnât attempt to use any of his body weight to stop the larger Jones, who is starting to rumble upfield. There is a nominal attempt from Mac to arm tackle on the ballcarrierâs legs, but he never gets a grip. It doesnât even seem like Chandler Jones tries hard to put Mac on the groundâhe simply puts a hand on Macâs head and gently flattens him, like someone trying to push away a nipping 10-pound dog without hurting them too badly.
It was a horrible decision, a worse throw, and a pathetic effort. At every single juncture, the Patriots made the wrong choice, turning an inconsequential play into an all-time catastrophe. There was no world in which Meyersâs pass worked out, but Iâm so grateful for the specific, baffling ways in which it failed.
Winner: The Eaglesâ Sardine Sneak
Sometimes football is complicated, and sometimes itâs just a bunch of dudes shoving one another. The 13-1 Eagles are good at bothâthey run a sophisticated, intricate offense led by a spectacularly versatile quarterback. That offense is also extremely good at the shoving.
Jalen Hurts didnât throw any touchdowns Sunday against Chicago, breaking an eight-game streak of throwing TDs. Instead, he merely threw for 315 yards and ran for three touchdowns in a 25-20 win; it was just the third game in which a player had 300 passing yards and three rushing touchdowns in NFL history. (The other two players to pull it off: Dak Prescott and Congressman Jack Kemp.) But Hurts didnât really ârunâ for all three of those scores. He had one touchdown that actually involved runningâa 22-yard score on which the Bears hit the wrong gap on a safety blitz, leaving the entire field in between Hurts and the end zone completely devoid of human beings.
Hurts takes it up the middle for his 11th rushing TD of the year!
â NFL (@NFL) December 18, 2022
: #PHIvsCHI on FOX
: Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/mzMHAEtgdH pic.twitter.com/B6sJlkhgM4
But the other two TDs were one-yard scores out of a QB sneakâexclusive formation. He didnât run into the end zoneâhe was pushed.
.@JalenHurts scores his 12th rushing TD of the season! (second-most in a season by a QB)
â NFL (@NFL) December 18, 2022
: #PHIvsCHI on FOX
: Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/mzMHAEtgdH pic.twitter.com/J4ApvxHlsh
.@JalenHurts' THIRD rushing touchdown of the day!
â NFL (@NFL) December 18, 2022
13 on the season.
: #PHIvsCHI on FOX
: Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/mzMHAEtgdH pic.twitter.com/JgWYM6Asrg
The QB sneak may be the defining play of this dominant Eagles team. Hurts has 28 conversions on third- or fourth-and-1 this year; nobody else in the NFL has more than 17. Hurts might have the most powerful legs of any quarterback ever to play the gameâhe competed in powerlifting competitions in high school, and his squatting videos in college went viral. The Eagles also have a tremendous offensive line anchored by center Jason Kelce, who was caught telling the Cowboys âyou know whatâs coming!â before a successful sneak a few weeks ago.
Eagles run a QB sneak for a first down.
â Brenden Deeg (@BrendenDeeg_) October 20, 2022
âYou know whatâs comingâ pic.twitter.com/UoGkAt7iy5
But this formation takes things to a new level. Hurts takes a snap from under center with three teammates lined up mere inches behind him, packed in like sardines in a can or clowns in a car. Theyâre too close for an effective handoff or a dropback pass: They can only push. The Eagles arenât the first team to run sneaks out of such a crowded formationâI noticed Kansas State doing it a few years ago, and âhave everybody push forwardâ is basically the simplest football concept, so itâs probably been used beforeâmaybe even, like, 115 years ago. The Eagles didnât start being this obvious about their sneaks until the last few weeks: On QB-sneak touchdowns against the Cardinals and Commanders, there were three players behind Hurts, but they were running misdirection to distract the defense. I guess the Eagles decided to stop screwing around and make those players useful.
Hurts now has 13 rushing touchdowns, the second-most in the NFL this season (behind Detroit RB Jamaal Williams) and the second-most in a season by any QB everâCam Newton had 14 in his rookie year.
But I think the Eagles can do even better. After all, they still had slightly-built WR DeVonta Smith on the field for these sneaks, split out wide doing absolutely nothing. Sub him out of the game and put a fourth player behind Hurts. And instead of running backs and wide receivers, they should just put a nose tackle, two backup offensive linemen, and a middle linebacker behind Hurts. And they should start running this play every single down, instead of actually playing offense. If the Eagles have 11 guys push forward, who can stop them?
Loser: Back-to-Back Prime-Time Ref Blunders
The Giants beat the Commanders 20-12 thanks to a thrilling goal-line stand: a crushing tackle on Taylor Heinicke at the 1-yard line by Kayvon Thibodeaux, relentless pressure on a third down to force a hurried throw by Heinicke, and then a pass breakup by Darnay Holmes to seal the win on fourth down. But two of those plays in that goal-line series featured questionable rulings by officials, and one was a clear miss. The Giantsâ fourth-down stop actually featured some blatant pass interference by Holmes, a botched call that NBC rules analyst Terry McAulay confirmed on air:
NBC rules analyst Terry McAulay says refs missed a DPI on Curtis Samuel:
â Josh Hill (@jdavhill) December 19, 2022
âThis is defensive pass interference ⊠itâs always a foul and should have been called.â pic.twitter.com/8teYF6UBxd
The Giants shouldâve been flagged there, and the Commanders shouldâve gotten four more shots at the end zone.
The other officiating issue is more complicated. On third-and-goal from the 1-yard line, Washington actually did reach the end zone, with RB Brian Robinson powering into the end zone for a potentially game-tying touchdownâonly for the score to be called back due to an apparent miscommunication between an official and a player. Washington WR Terry McLaurin was flagged for illegal formation on the play, the first penalty called on him all season, which pushed Washington back to the 6-yard line and made their chances of winning a lot harder. And to understand why he was flaggedâand why itâs unusualâyou need to know a little bit about footballâs rules:
On every play, the offense needs to have seven players on the line of scrimmage. The five players in the middle on the line are ineligible to catch passes, which is why teams have five offensive linemen. The two players on the outside are the âendsâ who are able to catch the ballâthey used to be called tight ends and split ends, but now we say tight ends and wide receivers. Itâs useful for the defense to be able to identify the two ends, which allows them to rule out certain pre-snap motions and trick plays. However, the offensive players donât always line up directly on the line of scrimmage, even if the rules say they must. Offensive tackles like to play a skosh back to cut off edge rushers more easily, giving the O-line a distinct curve; receivers like a bit of space when playing against press coverageâand besides, theyâre standing about 20 yards away from the ball and donât always line up exactly right.
So officials tend to give them a bit of leeway. When outside receivers get set for a play, they typically check with one of the officials to confirm that theyâre close enough to the line of scrimmage to avoid a penalty. Youâll see this dozens of times every game: A receiver will point over to the sideline, and most of the time the official will give them the A-OK. If theyâre way off the line, the official will let them know they need to step up. Typically, refs throw the flag only if a receiver forgets to check with them and lines up unusually far behind the line of scrimmage.
But McLaurin checked with the official on the line of scrimmage! Replays clearly showed him looking over to the side and then scooting forward. The official appears to indicate that McLaurin is good to goâsomething McLaurin said in his postgame interview he believed occurred. McLaurinâs alignment didnât provide a competitive advantage, and he clearly tried to be in compliance with the official, but the ref got his flag-throwing arm ready and pulled the trigger as soon as the ball was snapped.
Terry McLaurin looks at the ref asking if heâs good - ref points back at McLaurin as of to indicate heâs good. McLaurin then gives a thumbs up to ref to acknowledge it. This âpenaltyâ took a Brian Robinson TD off the board. Via @SNFonNBC pic.twitter.com/B86N6nsJsS
â Matthew Berry (@MatthewBerryTMR) December 19, 2022
It feels less excusable than the average officiating controversy. It wasnât that the official didnât see the play clearly, or didnât interpret a rule correctly. It wasnât a missed call so much as a breach of football etiquette, and it may have cost Washington the game.
Winner: The Jacksonville Jaguars
In Week 15 of the 2021 season, the Jaguars fired Urban Meyer, the head coach who (allegedly) kicked one of his players, (allegedly) did not know who Aaron Donald was, and (definitely) danced with a random woman that was not his wife in a bar in Columbus, Ohio, after skipping the team flight home after a loss. The team was 2-11, well on their way to earning the no. 1 pick in the draft; the guy theyâd drafted with the no. 1 pick earlier that year, Trevor Lawrence, was tied for the league lead in interceptions.
In Week 15 of this season, the Jags moved to within one game of the AFC South lead after one of the greatest wins in franchise history, a 40-34 overtime win against the playoff-bound Cowboys. At one point, Jacksonville trailed by 17. Jacksonville DB Rayshawn Jenkins sealed the win with a walk-off pick-six of Dak Prescott; it was the teamâs first game-winning overtime touchdown since 2005.
MADNESS IN JACKSONVILLE. WALKOFF PICK-6 FOR THE @JAGUARS. #DALvsJAX pic.twitter.com/ZQrhOLRuIW
â NFL (@NFL) December 18, 2022
Jenkins was around the ball all game, finishing with 18 tackles and two interceptions, making him the first safety with 18 tackles in an NFL game since 2012 and the first player in the Pro Football Reference database with 18 tackles and two picks in a game. After the game, Jenkins was asked the difference between last year and this one, and he boiled it down to one thing: coaching. He didnât specifically say anything about Urban Meyer, but (allegedly) Meyer was the coach of the team last year, when they sucked ass.
Rayshawn Jenkins credits his play today (18 tackles, 2 PD, 2 INT) and all season toâŠ.
â Mia O'Brien (@MiaOBrienTV) December 18, 2022
âCoaching. Iâm just going to be upfront. Weâre a way smarter team nowâ#Jaguars pic.twitter.com/HWEDTKWM5m
Lawrence, meanwhile, threw for four touchdowns, including a bunch of beautiful bombs. Last week, tight end Evan Engram led all non-quarterbacks in the NFL in fantasy scoring; this week, it was Jacksonville wide receiver Zay Jones, who caught three touchdowns from Lawrence. Since the start of November, Lawrence has had 14 touchdowns and one interception.
TREVOR LAWRENCE ZAY JONES
â PFF (@PFF) December 18, 2022
pic.twitter.com/kS0WsHQ4ZB
Between the Lions and Jags, the two teams with the worst records in the NFL last year are firmly in the playoff hunt with three weeks to go, led in large part by their young stars. What a difference a year makes.
Loser: Tom Brady, Again
In more than two decades of hating on Tom Brady, I have generally had to settle for faux failures and find small comforts in situations when Brady was otherwise awesome. Like making fun of him for losing the Super Bowl after leading the first team to go 18-0 in NFL history, or for dropping a pass in a Super Bowl where he threw for more than 500 yards. In 2022, though, we get legit reasons to make fun of Brady just about every week. On Sunday, his Buccaneers blew a 17-0 lead against the Bengalsâand Brady was the primary reason for the loss.
Brady committed four turnovers Sunday for the first time since 2011, all in the second half on four consecutive drives. He threw two interceptions for the second straight week: One was a lobbed duck after he got hit, while the other was a straight-up bad throw.
Momentum change #CINvsTB | CBS pic.twitter.com/TrUs5iB7v7
â Cincinnati Bengals (@Bengals) December 18, 2022
Brady also lost two fumbles, including one in which the ball slipped out of his hand on a routine handoff.
Replay of the fumble on the handoff from Brady to Fournette recovered by Reader#Bengals 20 #Buccaneers 17 3rd pic.twitter.com/lSPqF3stXX
â SáŽáŽÊáŽs 24/7îš (@Sports_24x7_) December 18, 2022
Three of the turnovers gave Cincinnati the ball in Tampa Bay territory, resulting in three quick scores. With Brady quickly turning the ball over on those Tampa Bay second-half possessions, the Buccaneers defenders ran out of gas and gave up 34 unanswered points.
The Bucs are now 6-8; itâs the first time a Brady team has ever lost eight games in a season. Theyâll need to go 3-0 down the stretch for him to avoid his first losing record ever as a starting QB. Brady is 31st among qualifying quarterbacks in yards per attempt, wedged between Baker Mayfield and Kenny Pickett. Itâs a great time to be a Brady haterâbut Iâve gotta admit, itâs a bit less fun when itâs this easy.
Winner: The Alley-Oopterception
Sundayâs games may have shown the foolishness of randomly hurling a ball in various directions on a football fieldâbut a lateral led to the interception of the year in the Chargers-Titans game. Titans rookie CB Roger McCreary tracked a deep ball by Justin Herbert, and leapt to catch itâbut realized he wasnât going to land inbounds. So he tossed it to his teammate, safety Joshua Kalu, who caught the ball and tapped his feet inboundsâa rare two-man interception:
All-time interception by Roger McCreary and Josh Kalu pic.twitter.com/4i6JAFCTCb
â James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) December 18, 2022
Itâs a stunning feat of concentration and awareness by both players. McCreary seemingly keeps his eyes on the ball the whole time, but heâs actually paying attention to all sorts of things. Heâs aware that Chargers receiver Mike Williams isnât going to be able to make a play on the ball, and that he can possibly make a pick rather than just break up a potential touchdown. Heâs aware of the approaching sideline, making sure to leap before either of his feet goes out of bounds so he can make the play. Heâs aware of Kaluâs presence, and knows that his alley-oop has a potential recipient. He also seems to know that his toss has to be backwardsâyou canât just throw footballs forwards, even if you are in the process of making a leaping interception out of bounds. And heâs seemingly aware that Williams isnât going to try to catch his pitch to Kalu, turning a potential pick into a touchdown. McCreary calculates all of that, and then Kalu makes a spectacular play as well. In a millisecond, his brain processed that McCreary is pitching him the ball, and that he needs to get both feet down inbounds to make the interception count.
After the game, McCreary said that he had thought about making this exact play, making him either a football innovator who imagines never-before-seen highlights or a massive liar. Either way, he and Kalu had the vision to improviseâand executeâthe interception of the year.
Loser: A Non-Walk-Off
With the Buccaneersâ loss to the Bengals and the Panthersâ loss to the Steelers, the dream of a sub-.500 NFC South champion crept even closer to reality on Sunday. Believe it or not, the Falcons could have moved into a tie for first place in the division with a win over the Saintsâyes, those Falcons, the ones that are extremely bad, even according to their own loyal fans.
Atlanta put their hopes on rookie QB Desmond Ridder, making his first NFL start after the decision was made to bench Marcus Mariota. Those hopes ended when Ridder ran out of bounds near midfield after an 18-yard scramble with the game clock expired, in essence voluntarily ending the game and giving the Saints a 21-18 win. While virtually every other game this week ended with a game-winning score, this one ended with a player literally running off the field with no time leftânot a walk-off win, but a run-off loss.
Desmond Ridder goes out of bounds on the last play of the game pic.twitter.com/x2QbXOMYhX
â alex (@highlghtheaven) December 18, 2022
This exact scenario happened with a backup quarterback in a Georgia Tech game earlier this yearâapparently, itâs a problem localized to teams from the Atlanta metropolitan area. The Falconsâ loss means the dream of an NFC South in which every single team finishes with a 6-11 record is alive and well.
The Falcons didnât just lose because of this play, but it was a fitting capper on a disappointing debut for Ridder. He went 13-for-26 for 97 yards, only slightly surpassing the passing output of Saints tight end Taysom Hill, who was 2-for-2 for 80 yards. But itâs a tough lookâQBs should know stuff like âHow much time is on the clock?â or âWill this action cause my team to lose literally 100 percent of the time?â It literally wouldâve been better for Ridder to lateral the ball backwards 20 yards across his body to a waiting defensive playerâthat attempt actually wouldâve given the Falcons a better chance at winning than running out of bounds.