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peter king football picks
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п»їPeter King makes picks for 2020 NFL awards.
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Peter King shares his picks for the winners, and runners up, of the top NFL awards in 2020:
MVP: Patrick Mahomes, quarterback, Kansas City (2. Dak Prescott, 3. Tom Brady, 4. Lamar Jackson). MVPs go to big winners or guys with stats far better than others. Mahomes could do both. You see Brady on the list, and for him to have a chance, I’d guess the Bucs would need to win around 11 games, and Brady would need to be a top-three quarterback. Could be a fascinating race. Darkhorse: Matthew Stafford.
Coach: Mike McCarthy, Dallas (2. Brian Flores, 3. John Harbaugh, 4. Kliff Kingsbury). Jerry Jones hired McCarthy for his contending pedigree, and if Dallas wins the NFC’s top seed, McCarthy proved Jones right. I also think McCarthy’s quarterback-nerdiness will be a great add for Dak Prescott, who will have his best NFL season.
Offensive player: DeAndre Hopkins, wide receiver, Arizona (2. Patrick Mahomes, 3. Dak Prescott, 4. Clyde Edwards-Helaire). Edges Michael Thomas in receptions and yards, and becomes the heir to Larry Fitzgerald as the big weapon for Kyler Murray over the next five years. Voters often like to give the offensive player to a different guy than the MVP (Todd Gurley in 2017, Michael Thomas in 2019), and this continues the recent trend.
Cardinals wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins. (Getty Images)
Defensive player: Aaron Donald, defensive tackle, Rams (2. T.J. Watt, 3. Khalil Mack, 4. Aldon Smith). J.J. Watt won three DPOYs by the time he was 26. If Donald wins, he’d have three by age 29. He’s been so dominant, obviously, and I see nothing standing in the way of him doing just what Watt did: win three DPOYs in a span of four seasons.
Offensive rookie: Clyde Edwards-Helaire, running back, Kansas City (2. Henry Ruggs, 3. CeeDee Lamb, 4. Michael Pittman). The 32nd pick in April will have every chance to fill the role Kareem Hunt did as a rookie: 325 rushes/receptions, 1,782 yards, 11 touchdowns, an NFL rushing title. With 20 chances per game (my projection, not necessarily Andy Reid’s) in Kansas City’s spread scheme, it’s a gold mine of production waiting to happen.
Defensive rookie: Josh Uche, linebacker, New England (2. Chase Young, 3. Jeff Okudah, 4. Willie Gay). The 60th pick in the draft is intriguing because he’s a little undersized (6-3, 230) and he played only 53 percent of the defensive snaps at Michigan last year. He may not play more than that in Foxboro, but his production around the edge could mimic Kyle Van Noy’s last year in the best season of Van Noy’s life. The Michigan tape of Uche (pronounced “OO-chay”) suggests the versatility and production Bill Belichick demands from his linebackers.
Comeback player: Aldon Smith, pass-rusher, Dallas (2. Alex Smith, 3. Ben Roethlisberger, 4. A.J. Green). If Alex Smith plays one snap this year, I might change my mind. His comeback is one for the ages. Aldon Smith hasn’t played in the NFL since November 2015. He abused himself out of football, and he’s going to have a chance to be the disruptive pass-rusher he once was this fall on a good team. Reports out of Cowboys camp are raves.
Executive: Jason Licht, GM, Tampa Bay (2. Eric DeCosta, 3. Chris Grier, 4. Mike Mayock). Signed Tom Brady. Traded for Ron Gronkowski. Pilfered Leonard Fournette. Good enough for me. There’s this added COVID note: Licht survived a Zoom draft night when, in the middle of trade talks with the Raiders, he paused while one of his children shrieked from outside his faux draft room, “MOMMY. ”


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Peter King picked the Dolphins to win the AFC East over the Patriots and Bills.
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It’s a new era in the AFC East. Tom Brady finally left the division. The Bills look poised for a sustained run of competency. The Dolphins appear to have a bright future. And the Jets … well, they’re still the Jets.
For the first time in two decades, the Patriots aren’t the overwhelming favorites to win the division. But it’s really a two-team race in 2020. If it’s not the Patriots coming of out the east, it will surely be the Bills, right?
Well, there’s at least one prominent analyst who sees a third team entering the fray this season. Peter King made his predictions for the 2020 season Monday, and he went with a dark horse pick to win the AFC East.
1. Baltimore 2. Kansas City 3. Tennessee 4. Miami 5. Indianapolis 6. Buffalo 7. Las Vegas.
I don’t know if NFL fans are ready for a Patriots-less postseason, but that’s exactly what King is predicting with the Raiders grabbing the final playoff berth.
The best part is, King doesn’t even explain why he picked the Dolphins to win the AFC East, as if it’s a thing we’d all just accept. This is really all he gave us on Miami:
The Tua Tagovailoa watch is on in Miami. But if the Dolphins win 10 games as I think they can, the more important additions will come on defense, in corner Byron Jones and versatile linebacker Kyle Van Noy.
Even weirder: King follows that up by picking Mike McCarthy, and not Brian Flores, to win the Coach of the Year award. Look, if Miami does somehow make the playoffs, Flores is winning that damn award.
While I did pick the Dolphins as a potential playoff sleeper during the offseason, I can’t actually envision it happening. The offensive line is a mess and there isn’t much of a pass rush, so the team is not built to win in the trenches. It’s not really built to win a finesse game either with a young and unproven receiving corps. As fun as Ryan Fitzpatrick is to watch, he’s not a quarterback capable of elevating that team. Outside of the secondary, there isn’t a whole lot to get excited about … yet.
A 7-9 record is feasible for this Miami team, but the playoffs? I don’t know if the most optimistic Dolphins fans would even co-sign that pick.


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When it was over, and when Kansas City backup quarterback Chad Henne floated back to the locker room after the biggest five-yard completion of his life—and quite likely the biggest five-yard completion in franchise history—Patrick Mahomes was waiting. Congrats all around after Kansas City survived over Cleveland 22-17 to advance to its third straight AFC [more]
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On Heinz Field Sunday night, after Cleveland won its first playoff game in 26 years, wide receiver Jarvis Landry was being shepherded to a post-game radio interview by the Browns’ media man, Peter John-Baptiste. Landry stopped. “Wait!” he said. Landry said, “I gotta talk to coach. Now. I need to see him.” After one of [more]
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FMIA Week 15: How Buffalo Built Its Way Back To The Top Of The AFC East.
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FMIA Week 14: The Beauty of Jalen Hurts; the Ugly Truth in Pittsburgh.
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FMIA Week 13: After Stunning The Seahawks, Giants Have NFL Thinking They Might Be A Problem In January.
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Peter king football picks.
As the Ravens prepare to begin the 2020 season, their second full season with Lamar Jackson at quarterback, one question looms over the franchise: Can they break through and succeed in the playoffs?
Two straight seasons, two straight playoff losses. For one of the best teams in the NFL, repeating such a result for a third time would be disastrous.
So can they get over the hump and win in the postseason? Based on his picks for the 2020 season, Peter King thinks so.
In his Football Morning in America column, King outlined all 14 playoff teams this season and their respective seeds. The Ravens came in as the No. 1 seed in the AFC and got revenge on the Titans in the conference title game, beating them 27-22 to move on to Super Bowl 55.
Their opponent? Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who Jackson and company would lose to, according to King, by a score of 30-26.
The Ravens have had their fair share of meetings with Brady and his former Patriots comrades, including four postseason meetings. The two teams split the four playoff games and the Patriots posted an 8-4 record against Baltimore with Brady under center.
But would the Bucs realistically beat the Ravens head-to-head? The team looks a lot different than it did a year ago, but it's mostly been rebuilt with former superstars past their prime.
I guess King is putting some serious stock in Brady's championship experience, seemingly giving him and the Bucs more of an advantage in high-pressure situations than a normal regular season contest. It makes sense, but if the Ravens were to finally exorcise their postseason demons this year, it'd be hard to imagine them losing in the Super Bowl.




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