The First Read: One thing each NFL team has to be thankful for entering Week 12

In this special Thanksgiving edition of The First Read, Jeffri Chadiha identifies one thing each team should be thankful for entering Week 12 of the 2023 NFL season. Check back after Monday Night Football for analysis on the Chiefs and Eagles.

They will have options. Itā€™s surprising that the Cardinals arenā€™t the worst team in football because they seemed more than willing to embrace that role before the season began. Then a strange thing happened: They competed. They beat the Dallas Cowboys in Week 3. Quarterback Kyler Murray returned to the field after sustaining a torn ACL last December, and they won again in his Week 10 season debut. Itā€™s hard to know how Arizona is going to handle Murray and his massive contract moving forward, but know this much: This team is trending toward a top-three pick in next yearā€™s draft. The Cards will be able to do something with that.

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They have young talent in the building. One of the most perplexing questions in the league involves the Falconsā€™ inability to mine more production out of their gifted skill players. Tight end Kyle Pitts was a Pro Bowler as a rookie and heā€™s not even a major threat in the offense. Wide receiver Drake London caught 72 passes in his 2022 rookie season and his impact hasnā€™t been the same this year, either. Then thereā€™s rookie running back Bijan Robinson, Atlantaā€™s first-round pick this season. He looks special when he touches the ball, but he shares time with Tyler Allgeier. Weā€™re still waiting for head coach Arthur Smith to figure out how to get the most out of this bunch. What isnā€™t in question is whether these Falcons have immense potential.

Depth. The Ravens have dealt with their share of injuries this season. Running back J.K. Dobbins went down with a torn Achilles in Week 1, and yet Baltimore still has the best rushing attack in the NFL. The absence of safety Marcus Williams for several games earlier this year opened the door for ļ»æļ»æļ»æGeno Stoneļ»æļ»æļ»æ to become the league’s co-leader in interceptions with six. Now, tight end ļ»æļ»æļ»æMark Andrewsļ»æļ»æļ»æ is expected to miss the remainder of the season with a fractured fibula and torn ankle ligaments. Itā€™s a huge blow to this roster. History also says Baltimore will find a way to survive it.

Their familiarity with adversity. Itā€™s been pretty crazy in Buffalo lately, with quarterback Josh Allen turning the ball over again, wide receiver Stefon Diggs having to comment on tweets about the team made by his younger brother and head coach Sean McDermott suddenly firing offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey (even though the Bills had a top-10 offense). This also isnā€™t that crazy if youā€™ve followed the Bills in recent years. In 2021, they lost three of four games and were sitting at 7-6 before finishing the regular season on a four-game winning streak. Last year, they dealt with countless injuries (including the loss of edge rusher Von Miller and safety Micah Hyde, as well as the harrowing near-death experience with safety Damar Hamlin) and still managed a seven-game win streak. Weā€™re not saying the Bills donā€™t look rough right now. Itā€™s just that theyā€™re more than capable of righting the ship again.

Itā€™s only Year 1. C.J. Stroud ruined things for Bryce Young in Carolina. Rookie quarterbacks are supposed to struggle, and Stroud has done little of that in Houston. On the other hand, Young — the player selected No. 1 overall, right before Stroud in this yearā€™s draft — has been trying to figure things out for a 1-9 Panthers team. Carolinaā€™s coaching staff has done quite a bit in its attempts to ease that burden, from changing play-callers (head coach Frank Reich is back to doing that again after initially giving that responsibility to offensive coordinator Thomas Brown a few weeks ago) to giving Young a wristband with plays on it to wear in games. Does it feel like a mess from the outside? Sure. Have we seen young quarterbacks go through this and eventually prosper? You bet.

The 2024 draft. As painful as this season has been in Chicago, the Bears understand life could change in a hurry come April. Thereā€™s a strong chance that theyā€™ll be holding two of the top five picks in next yearā€™s draft. They have Carolinaā€™s selection — thanks to the trade that landed them DJ Moore — which is currently on track to be first overall. Chicago also will have its own pick, and this team has the look of a squad that could bottom out over the next two months. 

The teamā€™s personnel moves. Yeah, it sucks that quarterback Joe Burrow is out for the season with a torn ligament in his right wrist. That doesnā€™t mean this is the last time weā€™ll be talking about the Bengals as Super Bowl contenders. This team has been killing it in the offseason for most of the last four years. Their drafts have produced superstars like Burrow and wide receiver Jaā€™Marr Chase, as well as other young talents with promising futures (like defensive backs Daxton Hill, DJ Turner II and Cam Taylor-Britt). Theyā€™ve also hit big in free agency on pieces such as edge rusher Trey Hendrickson and defensive lineman D.J. Reader. The Bengals have one of the leagueā€™s youngest rosters, by the way. Theyā€™ll be fine.

The hiring of Jim Schwartz. If the Browns have any chance of overcoming the season-ending shoulder injury of quarterback Deshaun Watson, then it will come on the shoulders of a defense that has turned dominant under the tutelage of Schwartz this season. Yes, we get it. Stud edge rusher Myles Garrett was already in the building when Schwartz arrived, along with sticky cornerbacks like Greg Newsome II and Denzel Ward. Now hereā€™s a question: How did that unit perform in previous years? Schwartz unleashed everything that defense could be, and Garrett is the top candidate for Defensive Player of the Year as a result. 

Dak Prescott. The Cowboys quarterback picked the ideal time to produce the best ball of his career. Heā€™s turned himself into an MVP candidate over the past month by providing big plays with his arm, timely scrambling and the confidence that he can carry this team when necessary. The big question coming into this season was whether Prescott could avoid the turnovers that killed this team a season ago. He now has 14 touchdown passes and only two interceptions over his last five games (he has 19 and six on the season in those categories). Just as importantly, Prescott has leaned on CeeDee Lamb and taken the wide receiver’s game to another level. Prescott receives a lot of hate when things arenā€™t going right in Dallas. He deserves plenty of love these days.

The resurrection of Russell Wilson. It was hard to believe Wilson would go from being a future Hall of Famer to a complete disaster in one season without any chance of rebounding. But look at him now. He’s thrown more touchdown passes in 10 games (19) than he did in his entire first year in Denver (16). Not unrelated, the Broncos already have matched last year’s win total. Even when Denver was stumbling around at the start of this season, its lack of success had more to do with a defense that couldnā€™t stop anybody. Wilson was playing much better during that early stretch. Heā€™s improved even more as the season has gone on.

Brad Holmes and Dan Campbell. The Lions are barreling towards their first division title in three decades and their first playoff appearance since 2016. That is happening because their general manager and head coach created a vision three years ago when they arrived in the Motor City. Holmes and Campbell wanted a physical, blue-collar team filled with gritty players who wanted to win and didnā€™t care about the teamā€™s lackluster history. Fast forward to this season and thatā€™s exactly what the Lions are putting on the field every week.

Jordan Love showed some progress. Itā€™s been a wild ride with Love this season. He started the year with encouraging play, then regressed into a quarterback who made some poor decisions and committed too many turnovers. Then came Sunday, when Green Bayā€™s 23-20 win over the Chargers wound up being his best game of the season. Love produced strong numbers (27 of 40 for 322 yards and two touchdowns). More importantly, he led the Packers on a game-winning drive late in the fourth quarter that culminated in a 24-yard touchdown pass to Romeo Doubs. Thereā€™s been a lot of speculation about Loveā€™s future in Green Bay after this season. This was evidence that he can improve quickly.

C.J. Stroud. This is as big of a no-brainer as youā€™ll find in this list. Who knows where the Texans would be if Carolina had selected Stroud first overall in the 2023 NFL Draft instead of Bryce Young? Thatā€™s not to shade Youngā€™s future, but Stroud already is in the midst of the best rookie season weā€™ve ever witnessed from an NFL quarterback. He doesnā€™t have a reliable running game — although Devin Singletary has come on of late. Heā€™s throwing to receivers most people wouldnā€™t recognize. And thereā€™s no real star power on the team. Donā€™t buy into the notion that a rookie on a team that isnā€™t winning its division canā€™t be an MVP candidate. Stroud is the epitome of what valuable means.

Shane Steichen. The Coltsā€™ head coach has proven to be fairly resourceful in his first season on the job. His best offensive player, running back Jonathan Taylor, was caught up in a public squabble with ownership over a new contract, one Taylor eventually received. His rookie quarterback, Anthony Richardson, impressed at the start of the year before a shoulder injury ended his season. The Indianapolis defense also has struggled, as it ranked 25th in the league in points allowed heading into Week 11. Throughout all that, the Colts are still sitting at 5-5 as they rest up during their bye. Steichen couldā€™ve lost this team long ago. It says plenty that theyā€™re still competing for a playoff spot.

Travis Etienne. The Jaguars offense hasnā€™t exploded in the way many anticipated, but itā€™s not Etienneā€™s fault. Heā€™s been dynamic as both a runner and receiver, so much so that he should be thinking about a spot in this yearā€™s Pro Bowl. Etienne is getting anywhere from 20-30 touches each week and is on pace for 1,618 total yards from scrimmage. It now seems comical that Urban Meyer flirted with the idea of utilizing Etienne as a wide receiver when the Jaguars drafted him in the 2021 NFL Draft. This dude is going to be a monster the longer he plays.

The firing of Josh McDaniels. Itā€™s confounding to think McDaniels didnā€™t learn much about being a head coach from his first time on the job, when he flopped with the Denver Broncos. He brough the same poor communication skills and dictatorial approach to the Raiders and, somehow, it just didnā€™t lead to his players buying into his vision. Give owner Mark Davis credit for seeing where this was heading and hitting the eject button before this season was too far gone. Interim coach Antonio Pierce clearly has the faith of this team. He also has a great chance at leading them to the postseason with the way the AFC playoff picture looks right now.

The hiring of Kellen Moore. The Chargers are back to their frustrating ways this season, but Moore has been far from the problem. Head coach Brandon Staley hired him to improve the offense — more specifically to elevate the performance of star quarterback Justin Herbert — and thatā€™s been of the positives in Los Angeles thus far. Herbert has taken more shots downfield and heā€™s become more efficient in the process. The Chargers have plenty of issues on defense, as they proved once again in Sundayā€™s loss to Green Bay. Mooreā€™s work with Herbert is one of the few things keeping them alive.

The Seattle Seahawks. The Rams won both games against Seattle this season, and you can argue that those victories have been their biggest. The first was a season-opening blowout that introduced the world to Puka Nacua. The second came on Sunday, when the Rams secured a 17-16 victory when the Seahawks couldnā€™t connect on a last-second field goal. Los Angeles could easily be trending in the wrong direction. Instead, its now sitting at 4-6 with some newfound optimism about getting back into the wild-card playoff race.

Jalen Ramseyā€™s return to the field. Nobody knew what to expect when Ramsey underwent knee surgery at the end of July. Heā€™s been pretty amazing ever since that point. First, Ramsey recovered faster than anticipated, as early reports had him returning in early December. Then he started balling like crazy after getting back on the field. Ramsey had an interception in his first game back. He helped the Dolphins hold the Chiefs offense to just 14 offensive points in his second game. And in his third game — Sundayā€™s win over the Raiders — he hauled in two more interceptions, the second of which sealed the victory. Miami traded for Ramsey back in March in the hopes of landing an impact player. Mission accomplished.

Kevin Oā€™Connell. The easy answer here would be quarterback Josh Dobbs, whoā€™s been nothing short of sensational since showing up in a midseason trade and starting three games. The fact is Oā€™Connell has kept this team together through a litany of challenges. The Vikings started the season 1-4, thanks in part to a slew of turnovers. They lost Justin Jefferson in Week 5 to a hamstring injury he has yet to return from. They lost Kirk Cousins in Week 8 to a torn Achilles. Theyā€™ve battled injuries to other key starters and had to rely on a quarterback who was starting for the Arizona Cardinals just three weeks ago. Theyā€™ve gotten through all that and returned to playoff contention because Oā€™Connell is a strong candidate for Coach of the Year.

No football last week. The Patriots had a bye in Week 11, and that had to be a welcome relief for the franchise and its fans. New England, 2-8, sits at the bottom of the AFC. Theyā€™ve suffered some of the worst defeats in Bill Belichick’s career this fall and have shown little signs of improvement as the season has gone on. The roughest part about all of this: They still have seven games to go. Perhaps the week away and a matchup with the 3-8 Giants are exactly what they need.

The NFC South. The Saints have been one of the more confounding teams all year. Their offense has been up and down. At 5-5, theyā€™ve been in a pattern of winning a couple games and then losing a couple. If they played in a different division, theyā€™d be lucky to be in the wild-card conversation. Since they play in the NFC South, theyā€™re in a great spot to be a division champion. 

The Daniel Jones contract. If the Giants can take anything away from what has been a horrendous season, itā€™s that itā€™s time to think about other options at quarterback. They gave Jones a four-year, $160 million extension in March, but the penalty of walking away from him isnā€™t substantial after the 2024 season. That means itā€™s time to take advantage of what is trending toward a top-five pick in next yearā€™s draft. There will be plenty of quality prospects to choose from, and Jones could be a bridge if the team wants to give that player a year to develop. It sucks that Jones tore his ACL and had to play behind a lousy offensive line. But it also would be a huge mistake for the Giants to not find a way to benefit from all that frustration. 

That defense. Itā€™s one thing to be optimistic about winning enough games to create the remote possibility of ļ»æAaron Rodgersļ»æ playing again after sustaining a torn Achilles in the season opener. Itā€™s another to be in a position to still make that happen. The Jets can thank that nasty defense for doing its part when it comes to keeping hope alive. That unit has been elite all season, and especially disruptive against some of the best quarterbacks in the league. Just imagine where this team would be if Rodgers had been healthy all year.

T.J. Watt. Weā€™ve been praising head coach Mike Tomlin all season for the job heā€™s done in Pittsburgh with an underwhelming offense. Itā€™s time now to heap some love on the one player Tomlin can count on every week to deliver the game-changing plays that give the Steelers a chance at winning: Watt. There arenā€™t many edge rushers who are as consistently disruptive. Watt already has 11.5 sacks, putting him on pace for 19.5. Heā€™s forced two fumbles, recovered three others, intercepted a pass and scored the game-winning touchdown on a fumble return in a Week 2 win over the Browns. Itā€™s hard to know if the Steelers can reach the playoffs without a productive offense (as we saw in Pittsburghā€™s 13-10 loss to Cleveland on Sunday). What we do know is Watt will do his part.

Improved health. The 49ers went from riding a five-game winning streak to suffering through a three-game losing streak, and there were plenty of questions that came with that stark change in fortune. The reality is that the reasons behind those issues were easier to explain than some wanted to believe. The most glaring factor was an offense that was plagued by injuries to star offensive players (wide receiver Deebo Samuel, left tackle Trent Williams and running back Christian McCaffrey). With those pieces gone, quarterback Brock Purdy pressed more, turnovers became a bigger issue and the defense didnā€™t help by producing some bad outings. Things look a lot better in the Bay Area these days, primarily because the team is more whole again after winning two straight.

Boye Mafeā€™s development. The Seahawks have been trying to bolster their defensive line over the last couple years, so Mafe is growing up at just the right time. Heā€™s easily the most improved player on this team, as heā€™s leading Seattle in sacks (seven), quarterback hits (11) and fumble recoveries (two). The Seahawks anticipated that Mafe would need some time to grow into a consistent player when he arrived as a second-round pick last year. Heā€™s already more than doubled his sack total from his rookie season and is looking more like a dangerous presence with each passing week.

Tristan Wirfs. The Buccaneers moved Wirfs from right tackle to left tackle this season. Heā€™s played like heā€™s belonged there his entire career. Heading into Sundayā€™s loss to San Francisco, Wirfs hadnā€™t allowed a sack all season. Heā€™s also proven once again why he should be a cornerstone for this team moving forward. A first-round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, Wirfs is in the midst of his fourth season, and he should be in line for a huge contract extension. The Bucs have struggled to find consistency as a team this season. Wirfs should make them feel better about their future.

Self-realization. The Titans are about to go through a rebuild, and theyā€™re leaning into it in the right way. Rookie Will Levis already has been named the starter for the rest of the season as the team prepares to move on from Ryan Tannehill. The team also sent safety Kevin Byard, a longtime defensive leader, to Philadelphia near the trade deadline. Thereā€™s certain to be more speculation about an eventual departure for star running back Derrick Henry as we move into the offseason. The Titans still have one of the leagueā€™s best head coaches in Mike Vrabel and some nice pieces on defenses — like defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons — but this is a team that needs to retool its core. The good thing is they can see it.

Sam Howell. Itā€™s been a long time since the Commanders could be this deep into a season and feeling good about the future of their quarterback position. Howell has gone from being an intriguing talent to legitimately being a player who could be on his way to a nice career. Heā€™s produced solid numbers despite playing behind suspect pass protection, throwing for 3,038 yards, 18 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. Just as importantly, heā€™s shown some moxie and a cavalier approach to the game that could serve this franchise well. The Commanders have put a lot of duds under center over the past few years. This guy has a great chance to avoid that fate. 

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