November 25, 2024

MMQB Awards the Best NFL Week 17 Performances: Mike Evans Dominates Panthers

Mike Evans #MikeEvans

After a frustrating season, the Buccaneers receiver puts up 207 yards and three TDs. Plus, the Lions stay in playoff contention behind Jared Goff and Jamaal Williams.

Week 17 on the NFL schedule is almost in the books (we still have Monday Night Football) and the best performances deserve to be recognized by our MMQB staff. Even if you’re feeling down because your team didn’t win, maybe one of your favorite players or coaches gets awarded a game ball by our staff.

Here are this weekend’s standouts:

Mitch Goldich: Mike Evans, WR, Buccaneers. It’s been a strangely difficult season for Evans, who developed such a great rapport with Tom Brady during their first two seasons together. This year, they were more likely to be seen sharing terse words with each other after a play than celebrating in the end zone. But with a chance to clinch the NFC South, Evans might have made up for an entire season’s worth of frustration, spending a pleasant afternoon just streaking toward the end zone with the ball in his hands. He scored on touchdowns of 63, 57 and 30 yards, finishing the day with 10 catches for 207 yards and those three TDs. He also extended his NFL-record streak to nine consecutive seasons over 1,000 receiving yards to begin a career, as the Bucs came back from two scores down in the fourth quarter to beat the Panthers 30–24 and guarantee a home playoff game.

Evans caught 10 passes for 207 yards and three TDs to help the Buccaneers clinch the NFC South. Nathan Ray Seebeck/USA TODAY Sports © Provided by Sports Illustrated Evans caught 10 passes for 207 yards and three TDs to help the Buccaneers clinch the NFC South. Nathan Ray Seebeck/USA TODAY Sports

Conor Orr: Austin Ekeler, RB, Chargers. This is just going to be a straight-up Ekeler appreciation post. The guy is an absolute artist on the goal line but also popped a massive 72-yard touchdown run against the Rams Sunday. Regardless of what happens to the Chargers during this postseason, Ekeler deserves so much credit for keeping a wayward offense alive during the season. We’ve already crowned Justin Herbert without recognizing the fact that he has the most consistent red-zone weapon and check-down option in the NFL.

John Pluym: Jared Goff, QB and Jamaal Williams, RB, Lions. I’ve been riding the Lions train all season and I’m not getting off any time soon. Despite last week’s loss to the Panthers, Detroit can still make the playoffs after Sunday’s 41–10 win over the Bears. Goff had an outstanding game against Chicago, completing 21-of-29 passes for 255 yards and three touchdown passes. And Williams continues to be the best running back in the league when Detroit gets into the red zone. Williams scored his 15th touchdown and rushed for 144 yards to push his season rushing total to 994 yards. The Lions have won seven of their last nine games and travel to Green Bay next Sunday in what could determine the final wild-card spot in the NFC playoffs.

Gary Gramling: Jake Camarda, punter, Buccaneers. It took the Panthers’ defensive backfield forgetting that Evans is an eligible receiver to get the Bucs back in front, but it was the punter who saved Tampa’s lead with an athletic cleanup of an errant snap. On a fourth down from midfield, with Tampa protecting a six-point lead with 46 seconds left, the Bucs were poised to pin the Panthers deep-ish in their own territory with no timeouts left. That’s when Camarda—like a good catcher—blocked a short-hopped snap with his chest, corralled it, rolled left to avoid pressure and, before going out of bounds, got off a right-footed punt that was downed inside the 5-yard line. The Bucs were flagged for an illegal man downfield, but the play essentially gave Tampa a do-over—not to mention burned a valuable 10 seconds off the clock—after which Camarda pinned the Panthers at the 8.

Claire Kuwana: Andrew Thomas, OT, Giants. Daniel Jones deserves a lot of credit for Sunday’s win that sends the Giants to the playoffs for the first time since 2016, but a big reason the quarterback was able to account for four touchdowns (two passing, two rushing) was the performance by Thomas on the offensive line. According to PFF, the 23-year-old was charged with zero pressures allowed on 29 pass-blocking snaps, his fifth time this season with a perfect pass block efficiency. 

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