The five day weekend began a sports orgy on Wednesday.  Thanksgiving brought 
the full complement of NFL Football, with six games time to allow parade to 
bedtime sports.  Thanksgiving dinner also fit in there someplace, right?  As in 
Thanksgiving dinner, so in NFL football it would seem, as in each game, as at 
each dinner, the visitors won.  The players had to put in quite a bit of work, 
though, unlike visitors who stop by for Ma's for turkey and pumpkin pie. 









The Detroit Lions continued their very longstanding tradition of Thanksgiving 
football, as they hosted their NFC North rivals, the Chicago Bears.  The now 
6-6 Bears certainly were a bit cowed at facing the 3-8-1 Lions at home, on 
Thanksgiving.  The Lions, no matter how lackluster their year, fight hard on 
Thanksgiving, and more often than not, finish with a victory.  Yesterday they 
didn't, as the Bears finished the game ahead, and won 24-20.  The Lions were 
ahead 17-10 at the half, but with two Chicago touchdowns, unanswered except for 
a fourth quarter field goal, the Bears left with another win.  This tightens up 
the NFC Central race a bit, and gives Chicago some hope of making the playoffs. 




 

 




 

Meanwhile, the NFL's erstwhile whipping boys, the Buffalo Bills, visited the 
mouth of the beast, The Dallas Cowboys.  Over the years the Bills fan base has 
been fluid, both in Buffalo and neighboring Canada, while the Cowboys fan base 
is rock solid.  The Buffalo Bills said during this short work week that they 
weren’t interested in making a statement in front of what was probably the 
biggest national TV audience they’ve played in front of in decades.  All they 
cared about, as wide receiver Cole Beasley said, was getting win number nine, a 
number which has been considered unreachable in recent decades.




Thursday afternoon, the Bills did indeed get their ninth victory of the season, 
and in doing so, they made a statement, a statement they have been waiting to 
make for so many years:  a Thanksgiving win, a 26-15 victory over the Dallas 
Cowboys at AT&T Stadium.  “We’re not worried about that,” Beasley said after he 
put forth his best game since leaving the Cowboys to join the Bills this 
season, six catches for 110 yards and a touchdown. “They (the world) don’t need 
to know. We can lurk from the depths as much as we want. People can sleep on us 
all they want, and we prefer it that way.”  Welcome to the light, Buffalo. 

 

Meanwhile, the 10-2 New Orleans Saints travelled east to Georgia, where they 
took on the 3-9 Atlanta Falcons at the Mercedes Benz Stadium.  The Saints were 
leading by the unusual score of 17-9 at the half, and finished the game ahead, 
finishing the game ahead of the hosts Falcons by the likewise unusual score of 
26-18.  In doing so, they clinched the NFC South title and were the first team 
to clinch a playoff spot.  The Falcons' quarterback Matt Ryan was sacked 9 
times during the game, the second highest number of sacks in one game in 
Falcons' history. 

 

Thanksgiving mean traditions.  On  the day of national harmony, the nation’s 
oldest public high school football rivalry continued, with the 132nd game 
between the Wellesley and Needham High Schools.  The game ended with a 
bench-clearing brawl on Thanksgiving.  Massachusetts'  finest Wellesley and 
Needham High School players went after each other with just two minutes left in 
the game.  The home team, Wellesley, was up 27 to nothing. Officials called the 
game once punches were thrown.  Needham’s head coach said he had no comment on 
the fight.  It is unclear what kind of punishments could be handed down.






 






The New England Patriots are down with the flu.  The Patriots, who fly to 
Houston Saturday to play on Sunday, had eight players out to the flu at 
practice on Wednesday.  Not only that, they continue to have kicker problems.  
Nick Folk, who has been performing well as the Patriots' substitute kicker, was 
struck with appendicitis on Wednesday night, and to celebrate Thanksgiving, had 
his appendix removed.  He is thus out for the weekend, at least, and hopes 
continue they might find someone to kick this weekend. 








 



 

 




 

On a brighter note, today kicks off a weekend of NCAA College football!  This 
is the last weekend of the regular season, and if we have time, this space will 
give a full rundown of tomorrow's games.  Tomorrow. 




The Iowa Hawkeyes travel to Nebraska, where they will take on the Cornhuskers 
in the competition for the Heroes Trophy.  The Hawkeyes are on a roll, having 
won their last several games, and they also have won this annual competition 
with their rivals from across the Missouri River the last four years.  Iowa’s 
run of success against Nebraska has been predicated on its ground game. 
Recently, it hasn’t been working so well.  




The 19th-ranked Hawkeyes have rolled up more than 260 yards rushing in each of 
the last three meetings with.  Iowa (8-3, 5-3 in the Big Ten) comes to Lincoln 
on Friday having averaged just 2.6 yards per carry over its last seven games 
and just one individual 100-yard rusher in 11 games. The Hawks ran for 79 on 32 
carries against Illinois last week.  Nebraska (5-6, 3-5) has allowed 223 
rushing yards per game against Big Ten opponents. Ohio State, Minnesota and 
Wisconsin all ran for more than 300 against the Cornhuskers.

 

The Hawks should see a motivated opponent on what is forecast to be a rainy 
afternoon with temperatures in the upper 30s (3C). The Huskers need a win to 
become bowl eligible for the first time since 2016.  Nebraska Stadium, filled 
as it is for games such as this, becomes the largest city in Nebraska, for the 
day.    “We know what’s at stake,” Huskers linebacker Collin Miller said. 
“Senior day, bowl game eligibility, rival game. So we just want to go out there 
and play how we play and end up with a victory.”

“All I know is it took us every play in the game to win the game,” Iowa Coach 
Kirk Ferentz said. “It was really tough, hard-fought, and my guess is that 
that’s what it’s going to be. So that’s where our focus is. I expect them to be 
fully ready. It’s their senior day, too, and they’ll have 89,000 people there 
screaming, so I think we know what we’re walking into.”




This afternoon's game between 17 Memphis Tigers and 18 Cincinnati Bearcats 
should also be full of hard fought action.  Both teams currently have 10-1 
records, but the Tigers will have the home advantage. Three other ranked teams 
also play today.  



As Always, Eric
http://speedorex.blogspot.com/
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/omnisporthttps://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/Triathletepix/info

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