Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 3, 2021, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A17
T HE Associated Press will hand out its in-dividual NFL awards on the night before the Super Bowl in Tampa. Until then,
here are some off-the-beaten track honours to
consider.
BEST GAME: In Week 9, the first professional
matchup of Tua Tagovailoa and Kyler Murray
lived up to the hype. The two young quarterbacks
traded pinpoint passes, timely scrambles and
other big plays in a dazzling show of the league’s
future. Miami won 34-31. Tagovailoa led a 93-
yard drive to tie it before Jason Sanders made
a 50-yard field goal. Arizona’s Zane Gonzalez
missed a 49-yarder that would have tied it.
Runner-up: There’s lots of support for Balti-
more’s last-second shootout win at Cleveland
in Week 14. For drama, it’s a good choice. For
football, not so much. Was it the Big 12 we were
watching? Or simply touch football with no de-
fence? Exciting, yes. Classic, nope.
WORST GAME: Someday, the league will learn
to keep the Lions off national TV. In Week 16,
they got a Saturday matchup with Tampa Bay.
Lowly Detroit lost to Tampa Bay 47-7 — the game
wasn’t that close. If the Buccaneers showed no
mercy and left Tom Brady in after he threw four
touchdowns in the first half, they might have
broken the NFL record that Washington scored,
72 points against the Giants in 1966.
Runner-up: Pretty much anything involving the
Jaguars.
BEST CELEBRATION: Get a look at the Colts’
Nyheim Hines doing his best Simone Biles imita-
tion, not only in the end zone but on his way to it,
against Detroit.
Runner-up: Aaron Rodgers’ simple “I LOVE
GOLD” declaration after running for a touch-
down against Carolina.
WORST CELEBRATION: New York Jets fans’
reaction to their team breaking its winless string
by beating the Rams in Week 15 — removing any
chance to draft Clemson QB Trevor Lawrence.
Runner-up: All of those preening for the side-
line videoboard shows when a penalty erased the
big play.
BEST PLAY OF THE YEAR: Hail Murray,
naturally. When it comes to desperation heaves,
so much must go right. Some of it didn’t on this
one at the end of Arizona’s “miracle” victory over
Buffalo. Kyler Murray nearly got knocked down.
He had to scramble left. And DeAndre Hopkins
had to outjump three defenders — all in as good a
position to grab the ball as he was. He did, and the
highlight will be shown forever.
Runner-up: Not everything that happens in Ve-
gas stays there. Ryan Fitzpatrick’s 34-yard pass
to Mack Hollins while being dragged down by his
facemask set up a winning field goal in Week 16
with one second remaining, putting Miami on the
verge of playoff qualification.
WORST PLAY OF THE YEAR: Of course this
category includes the awful Jets. With New York
on the verge of its first victory on Dec. 6 against
Las Vegas, ahead 28-24 lead with 15 seconds left,
defensive co-ordinator Gregg Williams inexpli-
cably called an all-out blitz. Derek Carr read it,
lofted a pass for Henry Ruggs III, who zipped
passed rookie cornerback Lamar Jackson — who
had no safety help — for a 46-yard touchdown and
the win. Williams was fired the next day.
Runners-up: Dallas’ fake punt on fourth-and-10
at its 24 down four points early in the fourth
quarter against Washington. It flopped, Washing-
ton scored on the next play to trigger a 21-point
quarter on Thanksgiving.
And Giants QB Daniel Jones tripping over his
own feet at the end of an 80-yard run.
MOST IMPROVED PLAYER (OFFENCE):
Packers tight end Robert Tonyan.
It would be fair in September to say, “Who?”
Tonyan made his third season a breakout year.
Through 15 games, he has 50 receptions, 568
yards and 10 touchdowns. He’s been an added
piece Rodgers desperately needed. Tonyan previ-
ously had 14 catches.
Runners-up: Las Vegas WR Nelson Agholor,
Buffalo QB Josh Allen, Carolina WR Robby
Anderson, Arizona TE Dan Arnold, Indianapolis
RB Hines, Detroit TE T.J. Hockenson, Dallas TE
Dalton Schultz, Cleveland G Wyatt Teller, Wash-
ington TE Logan Thomas.
MOST IMPROVED PLAYER (DEFENCE):
Arizona LB Haason Reddick, finally placed in the
right position on the outside, has become a force
and has 12 1-2 sacks as well as playing the run
well. Good timing for the 2017 first-round draft
pick who becomes a free agent after the season.
Runners-up: Carolina DE Brian Burns, New
Orleans DE Trey Hendrickson, New England CB
J.C. Jackson, Atlanta LB Foye Oluokon, Ten-
nessee DT Jeffery Simmons, Rams CB Darious
Williams.
MOST DISAPPOINTING PLAYER (OF-
FENCE): We’re being harsh here, perhaps, but af-
ter a record-setting 2019 in which Saints receiver
Michael Thomas won top offensive player hon-
ours, he has been hurt, testy, even unco-operative
and seemingly disinterested at times. We get the
feeling Thomas, if healthy, could make this choice
look foolish in the post-season.
Runners-up: Houston WR Randall Cobb, Dallas
RB Ezekiel Elliott, Atlanta RB Todd Gurley, New
England QB Cam Newton, Philadelphia QB Car-
son Wentz (Eagles O-line, too).
MOST DISAPPOINTING PLAYER (DEFENCE):
Jadeveon Clowney signed with Tennessee on Sept.
7, reuniting with Titans coach Mike Vrabel after
having his best season with Vrabel as his defensive
co-ordinator in Houston in 2017. The contract gave
Clowney a chance to earn up to US$15 million,
far less than what he wanted in free agency. But
Clowney never came close to maxing out that
deal, played eight games before going on injured
reserve. He never had a single sack.
Runners-up: San Francisco DT Arik Armstead,
Las Vegas LB Vic Beasley Jr., Arizona CB Patrick
Peterson, Minnesota S Harrison Smith (and the
entire Minnesota secondary).
MOST SURPRISING TEAM: For a while, it ap-
peared Cleveland or Washington would take this
award, but we’ll praise the talents of the football
team down near South Beach.
What Brian Flores has done in two years with
the Dolphins (10-5), who will make the playoffs
with a win today, is monumental. Think where
this team was back in September, never mind
heading into the 2019 season with predictions of a
potential winless season.
Runners-up: Even though both could fall short
of the post-season, the Browns and the WFT get
the nod.
MOST DISAPPOINTING TEAM: So many
flops this year, some of which can be blamed on
COVID-19 issues, some on injuries. It’s impossible
to ignore the fiasco that has been the Texans.
From perennial AFC South power to a fired
coach/GM, its best player slamming the organi-
zation and teammates, and a high draft choice
— oh wait, that was dealt to Miami — it has to be
Houston.
Runners-up: Dallas, Philadelphia, San Fran-
cisco, Las Vegas, New England.
WEIRDEST INCIDENT: The Broncos were
forced to face the Saints without any of their
four quarterbacks. Drew Lock, Brett Rypien and
Blake Bortles were maskless around Jeff Driskel,
who tested positive for the coronavirus on
Thanksgiving. Practice squad receiver Kendall
Hinton completed one pass to a teammate and two
to the Saints — his wristband wound up in the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. He was the first non-QB to
start at the position since 1965.
Runners-up: Ravens CB Marcus Peters spitting
behind the back of Browns WR Jarvis Landry;
QB Dwayne Haskins, a first-round selection in
2019, cut by Washington just after Christmas.
BEST PLAY-BY-PLAY ANNOUNCER: What a
pleasure getting to see more of Mike Tirico, who
added a bunch of NBC prime-time games to his
myriad duties. Smooth, informational, funny and
opinionated when needed, Tirico simply is the
best no matter what sport he is announcing. The
more Tirico the better.
Runner-up: We laud him ever year and he is
great every year: Kevin Harlan, by far the best
play-by-play guy on radio (Westwood One’s Mon-
day night broadcasts) and the should-be anchor of
CBS’ Sunday lineup. His descriptions of plays are
like an artist painting a masterpiece.
Very honourable mentions to Ian Eagle (CBS),
Kenny Albert and Kevin Kugler (Fox).
BEST ANALYST: CBS has a monopoly on these,
particularly with the addition of Charles Davis,
who came over from Fox to bring insight, intel-
ligence and fun to his assignments with Eagle.
But the network also boasts some very listenable
and knowledgeable analysts, from Rich Gannon to
Trent Green to Tony Romo to Adam Archuleta to
our favourite, Hall of Famer James Lofton.
Runners-up: Louis Riddick and Brian Griese
(ESPN), Kurt Warner (Westwood One), Troy Aik-
man (Fox).
— The Associated Press
A 17SPORTS I NFLSUNDAY, JANUARY 3, 2021 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
Presenting some off-the-beaten-track NFL honours
Ain’t no trophies for these awards
ROSS D. FRANKLIN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray runs for a touchdown against the Miami Dolphins in Week 9. Miami’s down-to-the wire 34-31 victory was one for the ages, or at least for the season.
CARLOS OSORIO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Indy RB Nyheim Hines wins most impressive TD celebration while Titan Jadeveon Clowney (below) was the biggest dud.
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