Steelers’ T.J. Watt Undergoes Surgery On Partially Collapsed Lung

DECEMBER 13: Dry needling is a common treatment for NFL players to relieve muscle pain, per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. Watt felt “extreme pain” after his dry needling session on Wednesday and was quickly sent to the hospital for treatment and further evaluation.

DECEMBER 12: Steelers outside linebacker T.J. Watt was admitted to the hospital with a lung injury on Wednesday. Watt has since undergone successful surgery to stabilize and repair a partially collapsed lung, his brother J.J. Watt announced. He’ll be released from the hospital on Friday.

While Watt is expected to make a full recovery, head coach Mike Tomlin announced that he will not play on Monday against the Dolphins (via Brooke Pryor of ESPN). The seven-time Pro Bowler is expected to return this season, according to Ian Rapoport of NFL.com.

Watt’s collapsed lung came as a result of a dry needling procedure he underwent at the team facility. The NFLPA has been in contact with Watt and his representation since then, per Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk. It’s unclear if Watt or the union will take any action against the Steelers. Then-Chargers quarterback Tyrod Taylor suffered a punctured lung while receiving a pain-killing injection in September 2020. Two years later, he sued the Chargers’ doctor for medical malpractice.

Taylor received medical clearance to return to action a month after he punctured his lung. It seems Watt will come back quicker than that, though even a one-game absence is unwelcome news at this stage of the season. With four weeks remaining, the 7-6 Steelers are trying to hold off the Ravens (6-7) and Bengals (4-9) for the AFC North title. It’ll be more difficult to do so without Watt, who will miss his 12th career game in Week 15. The Steelers have gone 1-10 without him, Armando Salguero of OutKick notes.

The 31-year-old Watt has continued serving as one of Pittsburgh’s most effective players this season. He has racked up 53 tackles, 10 TFL, a team-high seven sacks, and three forced fumbles in 13 games. The Steelers have two other strong edge rushers in Alex Highsmith and Nick Herbig, who have totaled 6.5 sacks apiece. They and fourth-round rookie Jack Sawyer, who has notched one sack while playing under 20% of defensive snaps, will have to pick up the slack while Watt’s out.

Poll: Who Will Win NFC West?

It only took 10 wins to earn the NFC West title a year ago. Two of the division’s four teams have already reached that total 14 weeks into 2025. The 10-3 Rams are in first place and on track to win the division for the second straight season, but the Seahawks share the same record. Meanwhile, the 49ers (9-4) are right on their tails. At 3-10, the Cardinals are the only non-contender in the division, leaving the other three clubs to battle for the title over the next four weeks.

The Rams rank second in the NFL in point differential, trailing only the Seahawks in that category. However, the Rams got the better of the Seahawks in their first matchup of the season in Week 11. Playing at home, the Rams took advantage of four Sam Darnold interceptions to eke out a 21-19 win. Those two will meet again in Seattle in Week 16. The Seahawks also lost their previous meeting with the 49ers, who took a 17-13 decision on the road in Week 1. Seattle will seek revenge in San Francisco in Week 18, potentially with the division at stake. Having already split their season series, the Rams and 49ers are done with each other unless a rubber match occurs during the playoffs.

Despite Darnold’s disastrous showing against the Rams last month, the 28-year-old has been terrific for the second season in a row. Between his one-off with the Vikings and his first 13 games as a Seahawk, Darnold has gone 24-6 as a starter since 2024. He’s in the MVP running this year, but Stafford is the favorite in his age-37 season.

Both Stafford and Darnold have benefited from immensely talented receivers. The Rams have a stellar one-two punch in Puka Nacua and Davante Adams. Nacua leads the NFL in catches (93), and Adams is atop the league in receiving touchdowns (14). Meanwhile, the Seahawks’ Jaxon Smith-Njigba is easily pacing the league in yards (1,428). He has a shot to break Calvin Johnson‘s single-season record of 1,964.

While their offenses have gotten most of the headlines, the Rams and Seahawks have also prevented scoring at an elite clip. The Seahawks have given up 17.4 points per game to the Rams’ 17.5. Only the Texans (16.0) have done a better job keeping points off the board than those two clubs. Rams defensive coordinator Chris Shula and Seahawks DC Aden Durde could soon draw head coaching interest as a result of their work this year.

The Rams’ Sean McVay and the Seahawks’ Mike Macdonald will likely earn Coach of the Year consideration. The same should be true for the 49ers’ Kyle Shanahan, who has kept his team in the hunt despite an absurd number of notable injuries.

The 49ers survived an extended period without starting signal-caller Brock Purdy and tight end George Kittle, who have returned from the shelf in recent weeks. They’ve also had to get by for most of the year without their two best defensive players, linebacker Fred Warner and end Nick Bosa. Warner suffered a fractured and dislocated ankle in Week 6. Bosa tore his ACL in Week 3. Without Bosa coming off the edge, the 49ers rank last in the league in sacks. Nevertheless, coordinator Robert Saleh has still cobbled together the game’s eighth-ranked scoring defense. Despite a failed run with the Jets, Saleh’s performance this season could earn him a second shot as a head coach in 2026.

The NFC West is setting up as a three-way fight to close out the season, but ESPN’s Football Power Index pegs the Rams as overwhelming favorites. They have a 56.3% chance to win the division. The Seahawks (27.5) and 49ers (16.3) are lagging well behind. How do you think it will play out? Vote in PFR’s latest poll and weigh in with your thoughts in the comments section.

Who will win the NFC West

  • Rams 45% (1,004)
  • Seahawks 36% (801)
  • 49ers 20% (446)

Total votes: 2,251

Commanders, Laremy Tunsil Likely To Discuss Extension In Offseason

Riding the momentum of an appearance in the NFC championship game, the Commanders swung a trade with the Texans last March for left tackle Laremy Tunsil. Acquiring the five-time Pro Bowler and a 2025 fourth-round pick cost the Commanders four draft choices: a 2025 third, a 2025 sixth, a 2026 second, and a 2026 fourth.

The Tunsil pickup was supposed to increase the Commanders’ chances of contending again this year. This will instead go down as a lost season for Washington, which is 3-10 and out of playoff contention.

The Commanders haven’t been able to overcome a slew of injuries, including to quarterback Jayden Daniels. After winning Offensive Rookie of the Year honors in 2024, multiple ailments have limited Daniels to seven games this season. Backup Marcus Mariota will fill in for Daniels again in Week 15.

Although this has been a nightmare campaign for the Commanders, Tunsil has delivered in his first season with the franchise. Currently on track for the third 17-start season of his career, the 31-year-old ranks as Pro Football Focus’ eighth-best offensive tackle. He has earned the site’s third-highest pass blocking grade among qualifying OTs. While Tunsil took a league-worst 17 accepted penalties last season, that number has plummeted to five this year, Tashan Reed of the Washington Post notes.

Tunsil is slated to return to Washington next season to close out the three-year, $75MM extension he signed with Houston in 2023. He and Commanders general manager Adam Peters will “almost certainly” discuss a new deal in the offseason, Reed reports. Despite a disappointing season, Tunsil likes the culture Peters and head coach Dan Quinn have built, per Reed.

“I want to play for DQ as long as I can,” Tunsil told Reed. “He’s become one of my favorite coaches that I had in the league.”

At $25MM per year, Tunsil became the league’s highest-paid left tackle on an annual basis when he inked his current contract. He’s now fifth in that category. The Chargers’ Rashawn Slater leads the way at $28.5MM. The Buccaneers’ Tristan Wirfs ($28.1MM), the 49ers’ Trent Williams ($27.56MM), and the Vikings’ Christian Darrisaw ($26MM) round out the group ahead of Tunsil. With the exception of Williams, who landed his current deal at the age of 36, all of those players inked their extensions while in their mid-20s.

Even though Tunsil’s on the wrong side of 30, his performance suggests he deserves to remain among the league’s top annual earners at his position. The Commanders may be impressed enough to lock him up to a new multiyear arrangement in the coming months.

Michigan Interested In Browns’ Tommy Rees

Browns offensive coordinator Tommy Rees has been under consideration for multiple college head coaching positions over the past year. He was a finalist at North Carolina before the hiring of Bill Belichick last December. Rees interviewed with Penn State earlier this month, but the Nittany Lions chose Matt Campbell instead.

Shortly after finishing as a runner-up to Campbell, Rees is already a candidate for another high-profile college opening. Michigan has interest in the 33-year-old, Mary Kay Cabot of cleveland.com reports. The Wolverines are scrambling to find a replacement for Sherrone Moore, who was stunningly fired on Wednesday over an inappropriate relationship with a staff member.

Michigan has not yet set up an interview with Rees. However, it’s “likely” he’d be willing to discuss the position, according to Cabot.

A former Notre Dame quarterback, Rees began his coaching career as a graduate assistant with Northwestern in 2015. He later worked as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the Fighting Irish from 2020-22. He served in the same roles at Alabama in 2023, the final season of head coach Nick Saban‘s legendary career. Rees oversaw a breakout campaign from then-sophomore quarterback Jalen Milroe, who’s now a backup with the Seahawks.

After his lone season under Saban, Rees joined the Browns as their tight ends coach and pass game specialist. Head coach Kevin Stefanski promoted Rees to offensive coordinator after firing Ken Dorsey last January.

The Browns rank an uninspiring 29th in scoring and 30th in total offense, but Stefanski has called the plays for most of the season. He gave the keys to Rees ahead of Week 10. Cleveland’s offense has continued to underwhelm, though fifth-round rookie QB Shedeur Sanders has provided an upgrade over third-round rookie Dillon Gabriel since taking over in Week 12. Sanders is coming off a 364-yard, four-touchdown performance in a 31-29 loss to the Titans last Sunday. The Browns put up 412 total yards after amassing under 300 in each of Rees’ first four games calling plays.

Colts Open DeForest Buckner’s Practice Window

DECEMBER 11: Buckner revealed on Thursday (via Chappell) that he has been dealing with a herniated disc in his neck pressing against a nerve. If the issue is not resolved, surgery will be a possibility in the future. For now, the Colts will hope to have him available for the final four games of the season.

DECEMBER 10: The Colts have gone without defensive tackle DeForest Buckner, one of their most important players, for four straight games. Buckner is now working toward a return from IR. The Colts opened his 21-day practice window on Wednesday, Mike Chappell of FOX 59 relays.

Buckner, who last played in a loss to the Steelers in Week 9, has been on the shelf with a neck injury for a month. The Colts were 7-2 when Buckner went down, but they have lost three of four without him. Once the top seed in the AFC, 8-5 Indianapolis has dropped to eighth during what has been an injury-plagued several weeks.

Quarterback Daniel Jones is out for the season after tearing his Achilles in a loss to the Jaguars last Sunday. Starting cornerback Charvarius Ward went on IR with his third concussion of the season on Wednesday, and fellow top CB Sauce Gardner seems likely to miss his second game in a row with a calf injury this Sunday. Gardner will not practice Wednesday, according to Chappell.

While the Colts’ defense won’t have Ward for the rest of the regular season, it could welcome back Buckner sometime in the next 21 days. The three-time Pro Bowler, 31, was enjoying another standout campaign before he went on IR. Buckner has notched 42 tackles, nine TFL, and four sacks in nine games. Despite a lengthy absence, he’s still tied for second among Colts in sacks, trailing only Laiatu Latu‘s 5.5. Pro Football Focus ranks Buckner as the league’s 12th-best interior D-lineman of 2025.

In the wake of Jones’ injury, it’s unclear who will quarterback the Colts for the rest of the season. Newly signed Philip Rivers, brought out of retirement at age 44, sixth-round rookie Riley Leonard, and journeyman Brett Rypien are their options. Considering the Colts’ questions at QB and a daunting slate of remaining opponents in the Seahawks, 49ers, Jaguars, and Texans, their chances of rallying for a playoff spot appear slim. Getting Buckner back would improve their odds.

Cardinals RB Trey Benson Will Not Return This Season

The Cardinals opened running back Trey Benson‘s 21-day practice window on Nov. 19. Three weeks later, Benson isn’t ready to return from injured reserve. He’ll miss the rest of the season, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN.

Benson hasn’t played since suffering a knee injury in a Week 4 loss to the Seahawks. The 2024 third-round pick from Florida State will wrap up his second season in the NFL with 160 rushing yards on 29 carries (5.5 YPC). He added 13 catches for another 64 yards.

The Cardinals lost Benson a week after James Conner went down with a season-ending foot injury. With Benson, Conner, and mobile quarterback Kyler Murray largely unavailable because of injuries, Arizona ranks 26th in the NFL in rushing. The Cardinals are one of seven teams averaging fewer than 100 yards per game on the ground. That’s among the many reasons they’re 3-10 and on track to pick near the top of the 2026 draft.

Zonovan Knight leads the team with 271 rushing yards, but he has averaged a meager 3.3 per attempt. Emari Demercado has posted a whopping 7.8 YPC on just 31 totes, though an ankle injury has held him out of three straight games.

While it’s unclear if Demercado will return against the Texans in Week 15, the Cardinals will go without left tackle Paris Johnson, per Howard Balzer of CardsWire. Johnson, one of the league’s top tackles, is dealing with a sprained MCL. His absence will make it even more difficult for Arizona to pull an upset over Houston and its No. 1-ranked defense.

Commanders QB Jayden Daniels To Miss Week 15; Marcus Mariota Will Start

Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels aggravated a left elbow injury in a loss to the Vikings last Sunday and will miss Week 15, head coach Dan Quinn announced (via Nicki Jhabvala of The Athletic). Backup Marcus Mariota will start on Sunday against the Giants.

Daniels dislocated his elbow in a loss to the Seahawks on Nov. 2. The injury kept the 2024 Offensive Rookie of the Year out for three games. While Daniels returned in Week 14, he didn’t make it through the entire afternoon. The Commanders removed Daniels in the third quarter after Vikings cornerback Isaiah Rodgers knocked him down blocking on an interception return.

Although Daniels landed on his elbow last week, he avoided any structural damage. Nevertheless, Commanders doctors advised sitting him against the Giants. At 3-10, it may make sense for the Commanders to shut Daniels down for the season, but that isn’t the plan right now.

“As far as what decisions are ahead, we havent gone down that road,” Quinn said (via JP Finlay of NBC4 Sports). “He’s working really hard to get back with the guys.”

After going second in the draft last year, Daniels started in every Commanders game during a resurgent season for the franchise. Daniels starred during a 12-5 regular season and helped the Commanders advance to the NFC championship game, which they lost to the Eagles.

Expectations were that Daniels and the Commanders would build on last season’s success in 2025. However, several key injuries have played a role in torpedoing their chances. Daniels has already missed six games as a result of knee, hamstring, and elbow ailments.

Losers of eight in a row, the Commanders will turn back to Mariota for at least another week. Mariota, also a former second overall pick, re-signed with Washington last offseason on a one-year, $8MM deal. The 32-year-old has completed 62.9% of throws with nine touchdowns, seven interceptions, 7.2 yards per attempt, and an 84.8 passer rating in nine games (six starts). As a competent backup, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the Commanders re-sign Mariota again in the next few months, especially considering Daniels’ injury woes this year.

Colts Place Charvarius Ward On IR, Announce Philip Rivers Signing

The Colts have placed cornerback Charvarius Ward on IR for the second time this season and announced the signing of quarterback Philip Rivers to their practice squad. The team also signed quarterback Brett Rypien and kicker Blake Grupe from its practice squad to its 53-man roster.

With four games remaining, Ward’s regular season is over as a result of his third concussion of 2025. He may have a chance to return if the Colts qualify for the playoffs, but the club is on the outside of the bracket heading into Week 15. Once 7-1, the Colts have fallen to 8-5.

Ward, a former Chief and 49er, joined the Colts on a three-year deal worth up to $60MM last March. The move has paid off when Ward has been healthy enough to play. The 29-year-old has totaled 25 tackles and seven passes defensed in seven games (all starts), and Pro Football Focus ranks him as the sixth-best cornerback of 2025.

Ward’s latest concussion means the Colts will have to go without their top two cornerbacks for at least some portion of their four-game closing stretch. The team took an enormous gamble at the Nov. 4 trade deadline in sending two first-round picks and wide receiver Adonai Mitchell to the Jets for star corner Sauce Gardner.

Quarterback Daniel Jones was healthy and enjoying a career season around the deadline, leading general manager Chris Ballard to take a home run swing for Gardner. Things have not gone according to plan since then. Jones is now done for the season after tearing his Achilles in a loss to the Jaguars last Sunday. The 44-year-old Rivers, who retired after 2020, may replace Jones down the stretch in a last-ditch effort to save the Colts’ season.

Before Jones went down for the year, Gardner strained his calf in his third game as a Colt, a Week 13 loss to the Texans. Gardner missed Week 14, and he’s likely to sit out again this Sunday in Seattle, according to Ian Rapoport of NFL.com. At the earliest, Gardner could return Week 16 against the 49ers.

With Ward out of commission and the Colts waiting for Gardner to come back, they’re down to Kenny Moore, Jaylon Jones, Mekhi Blackmon, Johnathan Edwards, and Cameron Mitchell at corner. It’s a harsh development ahead of a meeting with the 10-3 Seahawks, who boast the NFL’s ninth-ranked passing attack. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, easily the league leader in receiving yards, won’t have to contend with Ward or Gardner.

Turning back to the offensive side, Rypien could at least serve as a backup option this week. Sixth-round rookie Riley Leonard is dealing with a PCL sprain that could force him to miss the game. Assuming the Colts elevate Rivers from their practice squad, Leonard’s absence would leave him and Rypien as the team’s choices under center. The 29-year-old Rypien, who joined the Colts’ taxi squad in mid-October, has combined for 17 appearances and six starts with the Broncos, Rams, and Bengals.

Grupe, a Dec. 2 practice squad pickup, has taken over at kicker since the Colts cut Michael Badgley after Week 13. Despite sloppy conditions in Jacksonville, Grupe hit both of his field goal attempts and converted his lone extra point last Sunday. Grupe, who began 2025 with the Saints, has gone 20 of 28 on field goals and 16 for 16 on PATs in 12 games this year.

Browns OC Tommy Rees Interviewed For Penn State’s HC Job

Penn State ended its drawn-out head coaching search when it lured Matt Campbell from Iowa State last Friday. It turns out Browns offensive coordinator Tommy Rees was also a candidate to take over for the ousted James Franklin. Rees conducted a virtual interview with Penn State last week, according to Mike Garafolo and Ian Rapoport of NFL Network.

This isn’t the first time a college program has shown interest in hiring Rees as its head coach. He was a finalist for the North Carolina job before the high-profile Bill Belichick selection a year ago.

Rees, who quarterbacked at Notre Dame from 2010-13, began his coaching career as a graduate assistant with Northwestern in 2015. He rose through the ranks to serve as Notre Dame’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach under Brian Kelly and Marcus Freeman from 2020-22. Rees held those same positions on Alabama’s Nick Saban-led coaching staff in 2023.

A few weeks after Saban retired, Rees joined Kevin Stefanski‘s staff as Cleveland’s pass game specialist and tight ends coach in February 2024. After finishing 28th in yards and last in scoring a season ago, the Browns fired offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey and promoted Rees to take his place.

The Browns continue to rank near the bottom of the league in points (29th) and yards (30th) this year, but Rees hasn’t called plays for the whole season. Stefanski handled those duties before passing the reins to the 33-year-old Rees in early November.

The Browns have averaged a paltry 17.2 points per game this season, though that number has improved to 19.4 under Rees. They’ve gotten better quarterback play since rookie fifth-rounder Shedeur Sanders took over for rookie third-rounder Dillon Gabriel in Week 12. Sanders threw for 364 yards, a season high for the Browns, in a loss to the Raiders last Sunday. The Browns also scored 29 points, their second-highest total of 2025.

The 3-10 Browns have four games left in what has been another disappointing season. Rees could be on the radar of NFL teams with head coaching vacancies after that. However, his preference is to remain with the Browns, per Mary Kay Cabot of cleveland.com. The Browns want to keep Rees, who’s “viewed as a rising offensive genius,” Cabot writes. Rees is also highly regarded outside the organization, though, and that could make him a name to watch during the upcoming hiring cycle.

Falcons’ Raheem Morris ‘As Good As Gone’?

The Falcons famously chose Raheem Morris over Bill Belichick in their January 2024 head coaching search. While it’s anyone’s guess how the Falcons would have fared under Belichick, the team has disappointed with Morris at the helm. The Falcons dropped to 4-9 last Sunday with a lopsided loss to the Seahawks. They’ve won just 12 of 30 games since the beginning of last season.

Including a three-year run with the Buccaneers and a previous stint as the Falcons’ interim choice, Morris is 33-56 as a head coach in the NFL. The 49-year-old’s .371 winning percentage ranks last among active head coaches, Josh Kendall of The Athletic notes. It now appears Morris’ time in Atlanta is running out, according to the Washington Post’s Jason La Canfora, who writes that he’s “as good as gone.”

While that may prove true when the Falcons’ season wraps up in four weeks, Morris insists he still has the backing of owner Arthur Blank.

“Support is not an issue. He is absolutely outstanding,” Morris said of Blank (via Kendall). “His ability to listen to us, be there for us, be in it with us is 100 percent awesome.”

For his part, Morris is continuing to stick with his coaching staff. He’s not planning to make any changes this late in the season, saying they’re “irrelevant” at this point. It’s something Morris plans to evaluate after the season, though it’s up in the air whether he’ll continue in his current post.

Whether it’s Morris or someone else in 2026, Atlanta’s head coach will face an uphill battle in turning around a franchise that just extended its playoff drought to eight years. For one, the Falcons have major questions at quarterback after second-year man Michael Penix Jr. suffered a season-ending ACL tear in Week 11.

Penix, the initial first-round pick of the Morris era, didn’t perform particularly well during his first 14 NFL games. He also has a long-running history of serious injuries dating back to college, and it’s unknown if he’ll be ready for the beginning of the 2026 campaign. The Falcons are unlikely to retain struggling backup Kirk Cousins and his bloated contract next year, which means they’ll have to pick up QB insurance during the offseason.

Adding to the Falcons’ problems, they aren’t in position to address any needs in the first round of next year’s draft. General manager Terry Fontenot traded the team’s top 2026 selection to the Rams last spring. That move enabled the Falcons to grab edge rusher James Pearce 26th overall. Pearce has racked up a team-leading six sacks as a rookie, but the first-rounder the Falcons surrendered for him is on pace to end up in the top 10. The Rams – not Morris or his potential successor – will reap the benefits of that pick.