What We Saw: Week 2

The QBList staff watched every week two game in case you missed them. Here's what we saw.

Houston Texans vs. Jacksonville Jaguars

 

This was the epitome of a defensive slugfest. Both quarterbacks were under pressure for a majority of the game and clean pockets were a scarcity. The Texans were able to hold onto a one-point lead when Jacksonville decided to forego the game-tying extra point and opted to go for the win via a two-point conversion. 

 

Houston Texans

 

Quarterback

 

  • Deshaun Watson: 16/29, 159 Yards | 4 Rushes, 5 Yards 1 TD

 

Deshaun Watson had a tough night moving the ball. He was eventually forced to take things into his own hands when he ran in the only touchdown of the night for the Texans. The Jaguars played tight coverage the entire game and only allowed short completions. Watson took what was available and was effective in moving the team but had a minimal amount of chunk plays throughout the day. He hit several players in tight coverage and had a handful of beautiful throws to DeAndre Hopkins to beat blanket coverages. During one of the rare occasions when Watson had time to set and throw in the pocket, he connected with Kenny Stills for a nice gain. Watson was under constant pressure and had one sure-fire interception dropped by a Jaguars cornerback. He scored on a strong individual effort when he kept the ball on a read-option play. Watson made a gorgeous jump cut and lowered his shoulders to power his way into the endzone.

 

Running Backs

 

  • Carlos Hyde: 20 Rushes, 90 Yards
  • Duke Johnson: 6 Rushes, 31 Yards, 1 Target, 0 Receptions

 

Carlos Hyde led the way on the ground and was the most effective offensive player overall on the day for the Texans. He collected some tough running yards while making good reads and constantly ran through contact. Hyde kept several drives alive with strong runs that led to points on the board for the Texans.

 

Wide Receivers/Tight Ends

 

  • DeAndre Hopkins: 8 Targets, 5 Receptions, 40 Yards
  • Will Fuller: 7 Targets, 4 Receptions, 40 Yards
  • Kenny Stills: 3 Targets, 2 Receptions, 38 Yards
  • Jordan Atkins: 3 Targets, 2 Receptions, 25 Yards

 

The Texans receivers were held in check against a tough Jaguars pass defense. Hopkins and Will Fuller led the way with 40 receiving yards. Offensive yards were hard to come by as they were both bracketed by defenders all game long. The Texans receivers were forced to run short routes for minimal yards throughout the entire game. The Jaguars defense played incredibly tough and we’re quick to make tackles after the Texans’ receivers made the catch.

 

Jacksonville Jaguars

 

Quarterback

 

  • Gardner Minshew: 23/33, 213 1 TD | 6 rushes, 56 Yards

 

The Jaguars might have found a diamond in the ruff with Gardner Minshew. He was effective with his throws and showed off his legs on his six rushes. Minshew just missed on a few big connections when he overthrew his receivers during the first three quarters. In the fourth, he showed off poise and ability while leading the Jags down the field for what could have been a game-tying score had Jacksonville opted to kick the extra point. Instead, Doug Marrone called in a play for the go-ahead two-point conversion which subsequently failed. Minshew had several impressive throws during the game. Especially along the sidelines and into small windows amid tight coverage. Minshew’s final scoring drive was especially impressive. He picked up yards with tough runs, made difficult throws on the move, and extended plays within the pocket. It looks like the Jaguars should be just fine while Nick Foles is on the sidelines.

 

Running Backs

 

  • Leanard Fournette: 15 Rushes, 47 Yards | 4 Receptions, 40 Yards

 

Leanard Fournette had the spotlight of the Texans defense. Outside of Minshaw’s runs, the Jaguars running game was largely held in check for the night. Fournette was often hit at or shortly after he crossed the line of scrimmage. Instead, it was Minshaw who led the Jaguars running game throughout his six attempts.

 

Wide Receivers/Tight Ends

 

  • Chris Conley: 5 Targets, 4 Receptions, 73 Yards
  • DJ Chark: 9 Targets, 7 Receptions, 55 Yards 1 TD
  • James O’Shaughnessy: 4 Targets, 4 Receptions, 28 Yards
  • Geoff Swaim: 4 Targets, 3 Receptions, 14 Yards
  • Dede Westbrook: 5 targets, 1 Reception, 3 Yards

 

DJ Chark led the Jaguars in receptions and had their only touchdown through the air for Jacksonville. Minshaw extended several plays by moving the pocket and gave his receivers extra time to get open. In the fourth quarter, several Jaguars receivers were able to free themselves from their defenders and make catches while running comeback routes. On Jacksonville’s lone passing touchdown, Minshaw drew the Texans coverage up when he ran from the pocket and located Chark towards the back of the endzone for the score. An impressive read for the rookie quarterback.

 

  • Ben Davidowitz

7 responses to “What We Saw: Week 2”

  1. Jess says:

    I know it’s only week 2 and it’s only their first game with Antonio Brown in, but do you see Josh Gordon’s value tanking enough to make him a drop? Seems like a crazy thought since Brady has always spread the carries but even though they played the dolphins this week, it seems like it’s going to be the Edelman/AB show. With side performances from Gordon.

    And with Chark, Deebo and Mostert available on the waivers, I’m wondering whether it’s a good idea to cut him loose early if it means I can grab one of them.

    • Jess says:

      Totally commented this in the wrong game analysis! Thought I was still on the dolphins v patriots thread. Sorry!

      I was on my way back to this thread to also ask if you think Moncrief is droppable now. The big question mark I see is with Big Ben being potentially out for a few weeks, but (again it’s only week 2 I know), it hasn’t looked very good for Moncrief.

      Sorry again!!

      • Michael Miklius says:

        Hey Jess! I would hold on to Gordon. You drafted him for his talent so stay the course! As for Moncrief feel free dropping him. I’ve seen nothing from him in the first two weeks and now he lost his QB (it appears right now that the injury is serious). Unless Moncrief has an epiphany this week, he looks to be out of the league soon.

  2. Bryan says:

    Mixon didn’t fumble on his first touch. Watch it again. Dalton never handed it to him. Dalton basically just dropped it.

  3. Adrian Diesel says:

    So I have Chris Carson. Rashaad Penny is on waivers right now. Should I drop Chris Thompson or Tarik Cohen for him, or keeping both of those backs is fine. I’m in a full PPR league.

    • Michael Miklius says:

      So I didn’t get a chance to see the Seahawks play this week, but apparently Chris Carson fumbled (and almost did a second time). Some coaches react quickly to this, so Penny should be owned for sure…just in case. I would probably drop Thompson in order to pick up Penny

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