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September 30, 2025 • 39 mins

Nick Shook and Jourdan Rodrigue team up to provide recap and analysis of the Week 4 Monday Night Football doubleheader that featured a must-have win for the Miami Dolphins over the New York Jets, and in Denver, a blowout victory for the Broncos over the Cincinnati Bengals. The duo talks the Tyreek Hill injury, Darren Waller's return to the NFL, glimpses of hope for the Jets, as well as where the Bengals stand after two losses in Joe Burrow's absence. That and much, much more on the latest recap from NFL Daily!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Talk about low. It takes a snap play action, rolling
to his right thors across his body for the end
zone touchdown. Darren Waller again, his first game back from retirement,
and he's got a double action of the end zone.
Dolphins extend the lead of sixteen to three.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Ah Yes, Darren Waller emphatically announced his return to the
NFL with two touchdown catches. The Dolphins rediscovered their offensive
mojo and dominated the Jets and some snazzy black uniforms
on Monday Night at hard Rock Stadium twenty seven to
twenty one over New York in a game that wasn't
that close. I'm Nick Shook, filling in for Greg Rosenthal,

(00:39):
who's still gallivanting around Europe, and I'm joined by none
other than the superstar herself, Jordan Rodrieg. Jordan, there was
one key injuring in this game that might temper the
excitement for the Dolphins fans, But what a time for
a performance like this.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Yeah, So much of this offense specifically looked like the
Miami Dolphins plus plus you know, the Miami Dolphins that
we're used to seeing, and then a little extra that
we've been wanting to see from the Miami Dolphins and
Darren Waller from getting involved immediately on the opening script
to catching the first touchdown pass, then to follow it
up again, and then to be on the hands team

(01:17):
at the end recovering the on side kick when the
Jets brought it with an eight. This is and this
was an interesting game. Obviously it stings a lot now afterward,
Miami is relieved to be out of the Easter egg
the egg column over the donut the donut column. Yeah,
I was looking for the word. It's been. We've we've been.

(01:38):
We've been watching a lot of football the last couple
of days. Nick, They're they're relieved for that. But obviously
Tyreek Hill with what Mike McDaniel says now is a
dislocated knee. Sounds like he's reaching out to teammates from
the hospital as we record this. But really scary moment
for Tyreek Hill as he was carted off the field
during tonight's game.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
Yeah, it was one of those some tackles in a
sport that's filled with them. Unfortunately, that's just the nature
of the game sometimes. And his leg, you know, as
he lands on the ground, you can see his leg
bent at an awkward angle, and you feared that it
was going to be something significant, and it has been
confirmed that it is. So it's a blow for the
Dolphins for sure, but we shouldn't let that sully this
night for them too much, because for the first time

(02:19):
all season, it felt like, like you said, the Dolphins
were back to who they were. Mike McDaniel was in
a flow offensively. He's drawn up all kinds of pre
snap motion, some orbit motion, they're getting some jet motion happening,
and it's opening everything up for a Dolphins offense that
had felt a little clogged up in the first couple
of weeks, started to show some signs against Buffalo, but
really took full advantage in this game against New York.

(02:41):
But before we like really get into their offensive successes,
this early on looked like a game that was going
to be back and forth, because the Jets went down
the field and we're about to get in the end
zone when the Dolphins defense came through punching out a
fumble out of Brayl Braylan Allen's grasped and recovering it
just short of the goal line. And let me tell you,
if there's a play that turned the tide for the

(03:04):
Dolphins in this game against the Jets. It was that
one because they followed it up with a long march
down the field, a fifteen play ninety six yard drive
that ends in Darren Waller's first touchdown of the game.
And you know what, this is a little I don't know,
out of the norm for this show, but we'll just
get to it right now. Let's get it done right now,

(03:24):
because Darren Waller, he delivered on Monday Night. That's right,
It's time for Who Delivered, presented by Uber Eats. And
nobody delivered more on Monday Night than Darren Wallace.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
In the shotgun, takes a snap, looks to his right back,
middle back of the end zone.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
It is foot four and tut touchdown going up high
and guess who it's the big body Darren Waller with
his first score as a Dolphin.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
Well, hey, look like a younger man there, you know.
And this is this has been a long run for
Darren Waller. I think obviously they would have liked to
have him earlier in this season. Certainly Mike McDaniel and
Frank Smith, the OC who has such a close bond
with Darren Waller's The entire reason why Darren Waller is
in Miami right now because of the work not just

(04:16):
uh schematically and as a coach, but personally helping Darren
Waller through one of the hardest periods of his life
in you know, and when he connected with Frank Smith
back in Las Vegas. This is a bond that they've
been waiting to show on the field for a while.
But Darren Waller was out of football for so long
relative to you know, how you need to stay in
shape for the game and get mentally and physically back

(04:38):
and ready to go. And they've been waiting for this
and he showed up in a big way for them. Nick,
this was uh, and I know we're going to get
into it more, but this was to your earlier point, like,
this was a game I thought the Jets had finally
like re arrived right after this first game that they
played of the season, where they looked so strong despite

(04:59):
the loss, and they looked their run game was incredible
and Justin Fields looked awesome and all these things. This
started this way too. Eleven of their twelve opening script
plays were heavy personnel run game, multiple tight ends, extra
offensive lineman, combination of Brease Hall and Braylan Allen and
the full back gets in there as well, and they
are just looking dominant six point nine yards per carry,

(05:23):
and they don't often put too much stock in like
one play early in a game deciding the entire outcome
of the game. But this is still a Jets team
that is super new with itself and figuring itself out.
They were super undisciplined the entire game, penalties everywhere they
clearly are not They clearly don't quite have the collective

(05:44):
identity yet to withstand some of this adversity. And so
this fumble by Braylan Allen, who then left the game
with a knee injury, and that's something definitely to keep
an eye on as well. This just spiderweb for them.
They were totally lost after that. They could not go
in stay in their A plus plan. Miami went back
down and scored, took a lead, obviously, and to that

(06:05):
point it was a ten point lead, and that meant
that they had to pass more. And the one thing
that this offensive line still doesn't quite have together yet
with justin fields is pass protection. And Anthony Weaver for
all of the yardage that that was carved up against
his defense and for all of the push that the
opposing offensive line was getting against him in the run game,

(06:27):
he did dial up some really nice pressure designs and
they hassled that offensive line and they caused them to
jump and there were shift penalties. So that one fumble
when everything was going so well in that A plus
plan ended up mattering so much more than I think
normally something that early would.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Yeah. Absolutely, and I think that the Dolphins capitalization of
that turnover, of that takeaway was just as important as
that fumble because this is a division rivalry game. It's
a three to nothing game, it was almost a seven
to three game in the Jets favor. Instead, they capitalized
the advantage, respond and score, And it was really important
to me in that sequence because on the play prior
Mike bec Daniel schemes up something fantastic and Tua goes

(07:08):
away from where he probably should have gone and tries
to hit Wattle on the outside on a throw that
was never going to be there. It was covered. They
run a nice little trail concept over the middle where
he's got two options sitting in the middle of the field,
and you think, oh no, they just missed their opportunity.
But then he goes to Waller, who makes that contested
catch over Sauce Gardner, which really hammers home the point
you just made, which is that they took control of

(07:29):
this game. They set the tone, and that's why Darren
Waller is our choice for who Delivered presented by Uber Eats. Yes,
that was who Delivered presented by Uber Eats. When football
makes you hungry, get game day deals on Uber Eats,
the official on demand delivery to partner of the NFL.
Order now, and I think it's almost midnight here in
the Eastern time Zon a little bit earlier out there
for you, Jordan, you can order all the time.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
I see the moon, as Joe and Troy we're talking
about in the later game that we'll talk about. I
see the moon out my window.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
Yes, yes, I think we all do right now, although
the temperatures may vary depending on where you are. Let's
go back to the Jets here real quick, because you're
absolutely right. I think that they kind of crumbled because look,
they've they've been pretty punchy in some of these games.
The Steelers game Week one, they were punchy against the Buccaneers.
Last week the damn near came back and won that
game with their fight, and that's one thing they've had
in every game, fight and they kind of fought in

(08:20):
this game, but they couldn't get out of their own way.
I mean, there was a number of issues with this team,
whether it was operational where they had thirteen penalties accepted
for one hundred and one yards, it was fumbles, it
was trying to dial up a third long read option
because you may not trust Justin Fields to hold onto
the ball or find somebody open in that situation, given
that he'd made a blunder before, it's even fair catching

(08:41):
the ball at their own too. And I think that
plays these key players. Obviously, they say what seven plays
may determine a football game. Turnovers. Usually if you look
in the turnover category, you can determine who won that
game most often, not all the time. But there was
another play made by that Anthony Weaver defense which has
been under fire, that made a huge difference in this game.
When they got after Justin Fields us soon in broad fields, the.

Speaker 4 (09:06):
Heavy bounce out scooped up.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
Then Miami's pass Lors gets home and creates a second takeaway.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
Look at that situation there, Jordan, they're a near midfield
they're still down to nothing, but they're in the fight.
They're trying to battle as they have for most of
this season. But the Dolphins slammed the door with plays
like that. And I think for as much as the
as Miami figured things out offensively, it was really the
all three phases of the game, and especially the defense
bouncing back from some tough outings that really drove home

(09:39):
this victory emitted an emphatic one for them.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
Well, I will say I have zero trust in the
Dolphins run defense. They looked so soft upfront against the run,
and that is that's again why it was so key
for them to get a lead early. These Dolphins teams
that used to kick the doors down on people did
exactly that. They depended on exactly that to get a
lead early and stay in their A plus plan offense

(10:02):
and defense, because one thing they are going to do
is be able to rush the passer with that front
and there was a lot of really you know, solid
design when the pressure was there. The coverage was also
for the most part there as well for them. And
I really feel like this was so interesting by Miami
because it gave them also a little bit of that

(10:23):
juice and confidence on offense, and Tua I think really
carried the group in that regard. Tua, to me, for
major parts of this game looked like himself again, like
a couple of years ago, to a tongue of Ailoa
that we've seen. And it wasn't just some of the
timing throws that he made. And I also thought that
they had a really good planet and I'll get to

(10:44):
that in a minute, but it wasn't just the timing
throws and seeing the field really well and anticipatory throws
and those things. It was the ball handling that he had.
He had an incredibly sick play where he flips the
handoff behind his back on like a little I guess
I would call it a reverse. It wasn't really, but
it was sort of a run fake reverse, but he
flips it behind his back, looking, you know, like he's

(11:07):
like throwing an alley oop to somebody. And that was
a cool play. And then the timing on some of
the run fakes. He faked at one point a handoff
to the left and the entire play flow went that way,
and then instead he tucked the ball and he went
to his right instead. Some of the movement that they
were getting with Toa and his confidence in that and
deploying some of these plays. What was really important when

(11:29):
the Jets, they saw early the Jets were going to
do what the Jets do, which is play a lot
of man coverage, a lot of things that they were
doing you kind of expected they were going to do,
which is run the condensed sets. The cut splits were
going to be close together, which means that they could
set natural pick plays for each other for the receivers,
but also all of these motions designed to spring a
receiver clean off the line of scrimmage. They were running

(11:50):
a lot of that with tyreek Hill early. Those types
of things that is what we saw have seen the
Dolphins do when they were at their peak offensively, and
all of those things put together, combined with the Jets
own being put back on their heels into their B
and C plans because of that early turnover, all of
these things combined to set up, i think, to for

(12:11):
this extreme night of confidence and playmaking ability. And yes,
obviously them losing Tyreek Hill hurts them, but on the
other side, they're running the ball, they're sticking with the
run and again because they are able to because they
have a lead. They're not panicking, you know, they get
what Achan has, like ninety nine yards, he still doesn't
go over one hundred, but he's not even been close

(12:32):
this entire season to one hundred yards, and he did
go over one hundred scrimmage yards one hundred and one
scrimmage yards. So this was something where they stuck with
it and they closed the game out this way, and
I just thought we saw so much of that like
spark back in this offense, despite the fact that this
is still a you know, a one and three team
with some serious problems.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
Yeah, absolutely, and there are serious problems. But in a
game like this, you are if you think that you're
going to be the team that you believe you can be,
you have to deliver a performance like this, and they did.
They did, and I think that even at one in three,
they are going to be feeling so much better going
into the next week. The NFL, in football, but especially
the NFL, is such a week by week sport. It
really does matter from one week to the next how

(13:15):
you're feeling coming out of a game. Are you angry
because you lost a close one? Are you ecstatic because
you finally felt like yourself again, Tua had a good
way of describing it after the game.

Speaker 4 (13:24):
You know, my thoughts are out to the guys that
got hurt tonight. My thoughts and prayers are also at Reek,
you know. But it's a great feeling that we feel tonight. Obviously,
when when you win, you know, that's in a way
one of the best the odorance for what you could
be going through. So I would say, you know, we're

(13:46):
enjoying it right now, but we just got to find
a way to continue to stack those wins in the
win column and continue to keep that going throughout the season.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
I think you line himself up for a brand deal there.
I don't know about you. I think that the swift
campaign's over with old spots. They might be given to
a call.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
I know, right, I love that, and man, he might
need it because he ran so much boot leg action
tonight and so much like deep developing, long developing play
action to move his launch point, which is again another
thing that worked so well against this man coverage and
this front that the Jets have. This is something on
the Jets side, Nick, They're gonna have to like really
self scout because this will kill them every single week

(14:26):
that a team does these things against them, they don't
even have to do it at the level that the
Dolphins executed it tonight. If they have a run game
and they can get the playfakes going, and they can
get some of those bootlegs going, and they can just
shift and move the point the launch point for the
quarterbacks to the point where he lets go of the
football and change direction of the way the play is flowing,
the way the Dolphins did so well tonight. The Jets

(14:47):
were not disciplined in not biting on those fakes over
and over again. They were not disciplined. You mentioned the
penalties their defense. This is not the way erin Glenn
wants to play. You could see it all over his
space on the sideline. I think, to his credit, he
was with his guys the whole way through, but you know,
this is not the way that he wants to play.
And then when the Jets made incredible plays down the

(15:09):
field and all you know, we're starting to try to
get something together, justin Fields and Garrett Wilson together, you know,
kind of all by their lonesome trying to make things happen.
You know, it's still was too little, too late, because
they were so undisciplined, with self inflicted errors throughout.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Yeah, and you know, we get into the fourth quarter.
You know, I said that this game finished is twenty
seven to twenty one, but it wasn't really that close.
It wasn't They score a touchdown inside two minutes with
a touchdown pass from Justin Fields to Garrett Wilson. That
was truly an incredible catch, And it was actually one
of two incredible catches in this game, because the first
one was wiped out by an offensive pass interference. Parently
that that I don't think really happened, but if you're

(15:44):
watching on YouTube, you could see it. Now. Garrett Wilson
essentially mosses the nearest defender on a ball that probably
could have been placed better, but it was placed well
enough for Wilson to go up and get it. And
it just kind of shows how special level player he
is and why he's right to be frustrated with the
current state of this offense. And at one point in
this game, he's shouting at the sideline throwing the ball
like they're in a desperate situation. Let me go make

(16:05):
a play. He's able to make a play there. It
doesn't amount to much in the end, but it is
a preview of what they can be. It's just that
right now, the operational issues, the small things are limiting
them from what they can be.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
Yeah, self inflicted, self inflicted, self inflicted all night. That
was the Jets, and you saw, like I mentioned, Aaron
Glenn sticking close to his players. I do think that
this will come together. I think that again, this was
not a team that doesn't have an idea of what
it wants to be. It's got a lot of little
steps in the middle. You saw it with their opening script.

(16:39):
This is exactly who they want to be. You saw
it on that pass and I thought it was a
well placed ball considering where Garrett Wilson, you know, only
put it where you know Garrett Wilson is going to
go up and get it right over the back of
the head of the safety. And I think that this was,
you know, the two point conversion. You saw how clean
their operation was on some of these things when they
were able to the ball. Justin Fields had a massive

(17:02):
pickup himself on the ground, missed a couple throws, but
when he had to make a play in a cruiser
situation in a deficit, when he actually got the chance
when they weren't being backed up by penalties, or his
offensive line wasn't struggling a pass pro you could see
the identity in the vision and especially in the run game.
With this group, it's all the little steps in between,
and it's this defense that is somehow has less of

(17:25):
an identity than this offense, which you know, and you
know Aaron Glenn and Steve Wilks are not going to
stand for that. They it's just a little fundamental things
that have to apply for this team, and it's gonna
be a long journey in that regard. But if they
stayed disciplined, and I liked what I saw from Aaron Glenn.
When Garrett Wilson was getting upset, he went over and
he wrapped his arm around the back of his head,

(17:45):
you know, dad to Son's style, and was kind of
like talking to him and in his ear. And Garrett
Wilson was fired up, and he should be right, he's
every right to be. But Aaron Glenn did not. He
just sort of attached to him. He didn't let him
go off into his own head. He just he stayed
there and he talked to him. He connected with him.
Braylan Allen when he fumbled, Aaron Glenn went over and
talked to him after that, reassured him they were going

(18:06):
to come right back to him. Unfortunately got injured on
the kickoff right after. And so this this is a
team that if they can stay together, if they can
stay connected, I do think there are bright days ahead
of them.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
Yeah, there are, and I think that's part of the
process of turning around a team. Our writer at NFL
dot com, Kevin patrick As, made this comment tonight, you know,
over our messaging where he was like, they're essentially mirroring
what the Dan Campbell Lions were when they first started.
It's just that nobody cared that the Lion sucked. And
the Jets operate in New York and they're going to
be under major scrutiny. That's the only difference.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
Sets away with words coming at you, ye coming at
you, you exactly.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
And I think he's absolutely right because they are going
to be under the microscope because they play in New York.
But at the same time, like these things don't happen overnight.
The first thing you fix is the details, is the
operational issues, is the penalties, and once you get that
sort out, I think, in my you know, just evaluation
of this team where they stand right now. They need
to figure out who exactly they want to be with
Justin Fields at quarterback, because you know, they have the

(19:04):
new OC they got the new staff and everything else.
And we've talked about Tanner Ingstrand and how this offense
is gonna look and how they looked in Week one
against the Jets and how they haven't really looked like
that entirely since then. But there's still glimpses of it.
But when it comes down to you can run the ball, well,
you can kind of play big man ball with that
offensive line. You don't know your pass protection with him
yet you have not figured that out. That was painfully
clear tonight. But who do you want Justin Fields to

(19:25):
be because there were times where it felt like they
didn't necessarily trust him to throw the ball unless they
absolutely had to. But at the same time, you can
kind of understand why because Justin Field's made a hell
of a play on fourth down to try to keep
the Jets in it in the second half.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
It's fourth and one on the Dolphins forty three under
nine to forty to play in the third with the
Jets down fourteen. They need this one here.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Fields takes this, Naw fakes the handoffs.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Move to his right, back to his left. He's gonna
have to be special with his legs and he will
across the edge. No, he's got green grass in front.
Fields across the twenty, weaving back the other way. Fields
is gonna score spectacular run, a forty three yard touchdown
and Fields gets the Chets within a score.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
And yes, it was a fantastic play. Also, I just
realized I didn't credit who was on the call earlier.
There was no eagle in Mike Mayock Westwood one on
that call in the first call of the game as well.
Shout out to them doing a great job call in
this primetime game. But that's an example of what he
can do when you let him extend plays.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
Now.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
The big knock on him for a long time in
Chicago was that he held onto the ball too long.
But at least now he's running with a bit more
conviction and realizing, look, I'm a supreme athlete. I can
outrun this defense and make a guy or two miss
and get in the end zone. And it was a
great example of that.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
Well, I just think he overall run in pass. I
think he's seeing the field better when you see it
him flashes and I know people are going to I roll.
I'll probably get some messages about like, oh, he's missed
a bunch of throws or whatever. Yeah, but when you
look at when he's blocked up the way that he
should be, the way that any quarterback anywhere, if you're
not dealing with, you know, the bare minimum here, should

(20:56):
at least be able to you know, develop a little
bit under when he's blocked up and when the offense
is humming, when they've got a rhythm, when they've got timing.
He sees the field really well, and he sees it
incredibly well too as a runner, and he is really
patient in finding his creases, and he does not take
unnecessary contact as a runner, especially not in this game,

(21:18):
which I thought was really interesting. He was very smart
about the lanes he chose and the way that he
decided to extend plays when he could now some of
it lack of ball security and under pressure at some times,
and which led to that big play earlier that you
talked about. That's obviously an issue. But these are the
reasons why teams believe and the Jets certainly believe that

(21:39):
they still have something here, that there is something still
to be found, to still be developed, to still be
moved forward with Justin Fields at the helm, and I
think he is. He's figuring. I think he's got to
do a little of that figuring it out himself too,
of you know, really understanding. Hey, I now have to
make sure that my offensive linemen are not jumping off sides.

(22:02):
I have to set my motions correctly where I'm not
double tapping one of my feet and messing up the
tight end on one side, or tapping a foot before
another guy gets set to trigger another guy to come
over in motion. This is going to be a lot
of little details that all of these guys have to have,
but that the quarterback must take ownership of, and the
head coach and the offensive coordinator and the defensive coordinator

(22:24):
certainly all have a role to play in that. But
if Justin Fields is truly going to be the person
that they believe he can be and I believe he
can be in carrying this offense forward, all of those
tiny little things have to get cleaned up and he's
got to take ownership of that too.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
Yeah, definitely has to because you cannot survive in the
NFL as an offense, and especially a quarterback when you
face a pressure rate of forty eight percent forty eight
point six percent. Miami log tonight against the Jets not
looking good. It's going to take patients. It's going to
take persistence for the Jets to figure it out. But
I too believe much like you, Jordan, and I'll tell
you what, we could use a little bit of patience
from our listeners because guess what, it was a double

(22:58):
header on Monday night.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
We got another game and.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Talk about coming up next, We're gonna head out to
Denver to talk about what happened between the Broncos and
the Bengals.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Pen of Cincinnati bo Nicks the Denver quarterback against the
shotgun snap left tackle, block line, right field, bow line,
leaping cuts, touchdown.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
Sutton left and got it against his chests two yards
deep in the end zone.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
Broncos a touchdown before halftime and they get their lead
up twenty to three over Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
Kevin Harlan and Kurt Warner on the call for Westwood One.
It was a great catch on a great night for
the Denver Broncos. JK Dobbins rush for one hundred and one.
Bo Nicks threw for over three hundred and Sean Payton
he must have found that chef's hat that Russell Wilson
left behind when he skipped town and put it on,
because the man cooked up a feast for the folks.
In Denver. On Monday Night, the Broncos steamroll the Cincinnati

(23:57):
Bengals twenty eight to three in a game I'm not
certain the Bengals knew they needed to show up for
on Monday night in Denver, Jordan. What a showing for
the now two and two Denver Broncos.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
Yeah, and you know what, it started a little rough
for the Broncos too. We'll get into it, Nick, but
this was a game that was so lopsided and so
sloppy by the Bengals. Both teams racked up some penalties.
But the Bengals certainly are setting new milestones, certainly every
single week, it seems like. But this was a game
where by the middle of the third quarter, in case

(24:29):
you didn't tune in and you wanted to know how
it was going, Joe Buck and Troy Aikman were talking
about the moon waxing crescent. If you were curious how
Joe Buck is a Taurus and roasting the officials for
calling yet another penalty that they agreed was the right
call to make in the moment, but unnecessary because it
kept stopping the game. And that really tells you what
this was. As early as midway through the third quarter,

(24:53):
what started out a little sloppy on both sides turned
into a very very lopsided affair.

Speaker 2 (24:59):
Yeah, yeah, definitely. Basically, the Bengals mounted one effort and
that was in their first drive, and for the rest
of the night. They might as well pack those start
of the busses and pack things up, because that's about
as valuable unfortunately, as they were on the field. It's
funny that you mentioned their complaints about the penalties because
I'm sitting here like furiously writing off of Jets Dolphins
and just hearing Troy Aikman talk about how it's a
bad product, it's just unnecessary. I'm like, wait a minute,

(25:22):
how many penalties did they have in this game? Because
I know the Jets just went for thirteen. Oh, let's
see mental math sometimes hard on the show. Eighteen combined
accepted penalties between these two teams. The Bengals led with eleven.
So you want to talk sloppy, you can find it
right there in statistical form. But all that being said,
the Broncos, for perhaps the first time this season, got

(25:44):
a just a complete offensive showing from this group. I mean,
you can start with bo Nix and how he's a
bit of a tumultuous experience. He'll make a bad throw
or a bad decision here and there, and then he'll
hit a big one. He'll run around the yard and
be a gun slinger and everything else. But it wasn't
just that. It was the running game and how they
comp men and each other so perfectly. What did you see?

Speaker 3 (26:02):
What really stood out for you again a stat line
that tells you exactly where both of these teams are
right at this moment, which is that JK. Dobbins became
the Sean Payton Broncos first one hundred yards running back.
So it's the first one in what like thirty eight games.
And then if you're looking at it from the other perspective,

(26:23):
the Bengals allowed a second consecutive one hundred yards rusher
on their way to allowing over five hundred yards of
offense overall. It just depends glass half empty glass, half full,
whichever side of the coin you happen to be on.
But JK. Dobbins broke that open late in the game,
and finally they have a little bit more of a
balanced attack.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
Fifteen yards away from one hundred.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
Yards is Dobbins? Oh oh, how many is that? Sweta
fta know, he's got his hands in the air. That
was sixteen. He's had one hundred yards. Troy Aikman, the
are that are early? He's at one oh one? Joe
bucking Troykman on the call.

Speaker 3 (27:04):
For yes, so excited for something happened, Nick.

Speaker 2 (27:09):
I mean at that point, I totally understand. What do
we have to look forward to other than the moon
and our astrological signs. No, we got somebody finally hitting
a milestone. Yeah, you're right, that's exactly the type of
night it was. But man, it's just so good. And
maybe I'm just speaking from a point of bias or
just I don't know. I have a big heart at
times when it comes to sporting events. But JK. Dobbins

(27:31):
has been through so much over the last few years,
and really, if you go back to his career at
Ohio State, he dealt with ankle injuries in big time
games that limited him even then, and they had tough
losses like to Clemson for example. And now after all
of these trials and tribulations, he ends up with Denver
after spending last year with their AFC West rival the Chargers,

(27:52):
and it seems like he's found the perfect home. Just
pacing this ground attack and looking explosive and like the
Dobbins we knew from before.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
Yeah, and that's exactly what they needed because bo Nicks
can pick up some yardage with his legs obviously, and
he scored their first touchdown on the move as well.
And this is where you know they just haven't. They
really want to get some of this play action game working.
They want to actually move people off the line of scrimmage,

(28:21):
doing all the things that Sean Payton has liked to
have with previous teams, having a multi threat rushing attack
where some of those players can also split out into
the passing game. That is exactly what he wants to have,
and it took them a little while to get here.
You heard the stat I said it Troy or Joe,
which everyone I always mix up their voices, said it,

(28:42):
and it, but and it's taken forever, and they even
you know, they mixed up their backs at certain points too. R. J.
Harvey got a couple of carries, a couple of looks
as well. In the passing game. They had a fullback
in there at one point as well. But this was
going to be JK. Dobbins's game, and you could almost
tell there was just this consorted like want to to
feed him. Having a lead helped obviously early on, but

(29:06):
you could just you could feel like this was going
to be scratching and clawing. However it was gonna happen.
This was gonna be the night that had happened. And
I think it's a good breakthrough for JK. Dobbinson. Now
they have to sustain and I think that's going to
be important as well, because they've got to settle Bonnicks
down and they've got to settle them into a rhythm
because he had a couple of pretty bad plays early

(29:27):
in the game. There was one they were down deep
inside Bengals territory, inside the twenty certainly, and he's leading
Evan Ingram into the flat, into the left side flat,
and he cuts a throw loose way too late, and
Evan Ingram's out of bounds by the time he even
makes the catch. They run the exact same play on
the other side. This time he cuts it loose just

(29:49):
right on time, and they get a short gain and
then you know, two plays later, three I think it
was two or three plays later, then he throws an interception.
He makes a bad decision. He might have had it
on the ground. Bonnicks have had it on the ground
himself if he picked it up with his legs, but
then he overthought it. You could see him overthinking it
in real time, and it's picked in the end zone
by Demetrius Knight. But the Bengals of course handed it

(30:10):
right back to them just three plays later. And then
this was the Bonix experience because then they get down
the field again and he hits Courtland Sutton for a
twenty yard touchdown on third and two. And it was
a great throw. It was a contested throw. It had
to be threaded correctly. He saw it well and it was.
It was right up the gut, and it was just
sort of a heartbreaker and a backbreaker if you're the

(30:31):
side of the Bengals, because then the explosives and some
catch and run and yards after catch plays by Courtland
Sutton as well, just really started to break the explosives
open for the Broncos, and it got Bo Nixed into
the rhythm that plus the run game that he needed
to be in.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
Yeah, and I think that it got Sean Payton into
the rhythm as a play caller. He's just somebody overseeing
the entire offense too, because like they're mixing in like
basically like jet sweeps around the end, and like that's
how Marvin Min scores on a sixteen yard touchdown run.
Like he had all of these different tool at his
disposal he could do. He had the full arsenal because
he also probably understood that the Bengals weren't going to
mount much resistance with the defense, which, by the way,

(31:08):
if we go all the way back to Week one,
I'm going to say this for as long as they
struggled defensively, the defense that they thought was great in
Week one was never a good defense and continues on
nights like tonight to show that they are not a
defense that is at that level that they want to
be at. And when your offense struggles like they have
been without Joe Burrow, it makes for a just a
terrible viewing experience breaks my heart for Bengals fans who

(31:29):
had high hopes coming in to the season, but that
too and I start feels like it was years ago
for how they've played over the last two weeks. I mean,
their offensive line we knew was a weakness already, but
with Jake Browning back there, this passing game is essentially
just shrunk down to seventy five percent of your attempts
are going to be goal balls down the sideline and
giving t Higgins or Jamar Chase a shot in a
fifty to fifty ball and hoping that they come down

(31:50):
with it. And the worst part about tonight was that
oftentimes when they did make spectacular grabs, they were called
back by penalties, and that just points to their operational
issues and the amount of you know, mistakes that they've made,
eleven penalties accepted for sixty five yards and plenty of them,
you know, short circuiting this offense, putting them behind the sticks,
and just making it so much harder for a backup
quarterback who's behind a leaky offensive line, who operate an

(32:14):
offense that doesn't have much of a running game to
speak of, and situationally, they can't lean on the run
when they're down multiple scores and they're just trying to
stop the title wave that's coming at them from an
opponent that's superior to them and against the defense like
the Broncos who have a ton of aggressive pin your
ears back rushers who were going to get after the quarterback,
Nick Benito, Jonathan Cooper. You can continue to go down
the list. It just makes for a disaster scenario and

(32:36):
that's exactly what we got tonight.

Speaker 3 (32:38):
Yeah, and they couldn't call anything else, but you mentioned
those like longer developing plays down the sideline where it
was like, I don't think Jake Browning that you really
do have that you have the audacity to try to
make that throw every single time. I think what you're
trying to do is draw a PI like I understand,
just get it out that you have for your receivers
two of the best, one of the best one and

(32:59):
two tandems up there in the top three in the NFL,
maybe the best in Jamar Chase and T Higgins, And
obviously you know he hit one down the field to
see Higgins early in the game. But I don't believe
you have that much dip on your chip. I think
that that was just try to get yards however they come.
You saw, I'm trying to hard count as well. That
didn't work because they had a self inflicted penalty as well.

(33:21):
That was kind of questionable either way. The sun I
lifted his head up. I wouldn't maybe have called that,
but it was everything was going wrong, and a lot
of it comes from everything feels so difficult, and it's
like there's not really any adjustments, and it's not just
being in a deficit. They're in shotgun the entire time.
Ninety percent of his dropbacks are in shotgun. And I
know they won games like that with him back in

(33:42):
twenty twenty three. I went back and I looked at
all the next gen splits of how much and it
was a vast majority in the gun at that time
as well. But they cannot run the ball, and they
cannot get anything going that would actually protect the quarterback,
this backup quarterback who you should not expect to be
Joe Burrow and be back in the gun. And in

(34:03):
some ways, you know, everybody credited and latted Zach Taylor
for changing this offense around the first time around with
Jake Browning, but what I saw from this offense tonight
is the same problem still exists, and they compound because
not only can you not run the ball. Chase Brown
again coming into this game averaging negative yards before contact
per rush, so he's not getting any blocking help. Ten

(34:25):
carries for forty yards, and they having some type of
an under center play action game or even a pistol.
Play action and run games might have helped, and it didn't.
You could have still kept the quarterback's eyes on the
defense the whole time in pistol, but you can't even
use that as a threat because your run game is
so bad, and that is part of the problem. This

(34:48):
one issue has compounded in so many different areas, including
tying the backup quarterback one of his hands behind his
back and it's just bad. Like to me, I don't
even think you can put him in the pistol. How
the run game improves, because in some cases that would
keep the play action threat available to you. In this case,
it wouldn't because teams don't think they can run to
the point where they knew that the Broncos knew every

(35:10):
play was probably going to be a throw and they
could stop the run with the guys that they had
up front, they were dropping guys in coverage. Part of
that is they respect the receivers, the one and two
that they have there, and they respect and I don't
think it's because they respected Browning's ability to get the
ball to them, but certainly it's because they respect the
receivers themselves to try to make plays happen. And even

(35:31):
near the end, you saw they were able to start
sending more and more guys on pressures because it just
was they could condense and condense and condense and shrink
down because the run game was not a factor at all.
Even in a deficit, you still should have tried to
or had at least something there so you weren't so
one dimensional the entire time.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
Yeah, you would think with a lopside score like this
that the pressure rate must have been sky high. For
the Broncos was thirty seven point nine percent. I mean,
that's good, but that's not sky high. But then again,
you must consider that the Bengals only ran forty three
offensive plays because they couldn't sustain any possessions they got out.
They were dominated in time of possession by nearly sixteen minutes.

(36:10):
Like there was just no life to this offense. And
it's funny because I think in common football discussions parlance,
whatever you might want to say, they always say, you
got to stop the run first. If you can't stop
the run, you can't do anything in this league defensively. Well,
for the Bengals already stop they can't stop. They can't
stop an opposing run, and they can't run the ball
at all, to the point where in a game like this,

(36:31):
Denver comes out and says, screw the run. We know
what they're going to try to be this with those
awesome receivers. They paid all that money to take that away,
and they're going to have, you know, no options. And
that's also a testament to their confidence in their defense.
But for the Bengals, I think it just starts in
the trenches. It starts in the trenches on both sides
of the ball. And we knew this was going to
be an issue, and unfortunately, once you take the magic elixir,
the Lynchpin, the magician with the wand Joe Burrow out

(36:55):
of the mix, it all kind of starts to fall apart.
So it's it's not to be all doom and gloom.
It's only week four, but I hate to say it
about the Bengals right now, they're just in a tough place.
And no, by the way, the schedule doesn't get any easier.
You go home and play Detroit, you go to on
the road to play the Packers, you come back home
against Pittsburgh, and then you play the Jets in week eight.
You got to get to that point in the schedule
with at least some signs of life and competitiveness or

(37:18):
else this is going to snowball. And if it feels
far away right now, that too, no start, it's going
to feel light years away by the time you get
to that point.

Speaker 3 (37:26):
Yeah, you could see the frustration is right at the
surface for so many people. You know, Jamar Chase and
Zak Taylor. There was a shot at one point cut
to them having a discussion on sort of on the sideline,
but a little bit away from the sideline. And you know,
when you start seeing the broadcast cutting to people close
ups of people's faces and sort of the blank stairs,

(37:51):
the thirty mile stairs, you know, it's just it's not good.
And the Bengals, they, to their credit, they did put
so much into the guys that Joe Burrow wanted, and
they worked it out with Trey Hendrickson and they figured
out all of these things that were such big headlines
and big issues for them. But when you live by

(38:14):
going all in around one player and then that player
gets hurt, this is what you also die by, and
that is what they're experiencing right now and in the future.
They're going to have to make these decisions about whether
living on that razor's edge is sustainable for this organization.
I don't think they're there yet. Injuries are what they are,
but this is going to be a question that as

(38:34):
these things continue to get worse. These are the questions
the franchise is going to ask of itself.

Speaker 2 (38:39):
They're also not going to face defense with a top
tier defensive back that can shut down one of those
guys like Patrick Surtan. According to next Gen Stats, he
allowed one reception for eight yards across thirteen coverage matchups
with Jamar Chase, including zero receptions on ten matchups in
man coverage. So you want somebody to put you on
an island and shut you down. The Broncos have that
guy and they deploy him against Chase. So it's not

(39:01):
always going to be this difficult. There is a reason
to be hopeful. It is a long season. This is
a tough one. This was a tough one for the Bengals.
You know it wasn't tough Jordan doing the show with you.
I don't even know if we left anything out. I
don't know if we're supposed to say anything else here,
but I feel like at this point, this is where
the show ends.

Speaker 3 (39:18):
Mom and dad left the house.

Speaker 2 (39:21):
Here we are, kids are in charge. There's no rules.
Take all the pizza rolls out of the freezer and
put them on a tray in the oven, cook them up.
We had a great time. Shout out to Greg. You'll
get Greg tomorrow. No news Monday, All the news Tuesday
with Jordan, I Nick Shook, that's Jordan rod Rieg. Well, well,
they we'll see you tomorrow.
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Host

Gregg Rosenthal

Gregg Rosenthal

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