NFL Week 2 preseason scores, schedule, updates: Jimmy Garoppolo, Deshaun Watson sharp early

Thursday night gave us the return of Tom Brady, but Friday night was all about young quarterbacks. Saturday featured a whopping seven games in total, the meatiest portion of the schedule to date this week. Below we have updates on Jimmy Garoppolo, Deshaun Watson, Blake Bortles, Chris Warren and Zack Martin’s injury, plus more you’ll want to check out.

Scores, schedule

Thursday
Washington 15, N.Y. Jets 13 (box score)
New England 37, Philadelphia 20 (box score)
Green Bay 51, Pittsburgh 34 (box score)

Friday
Kansas City 28, Atlanta 14 (box score)
N.Y. Giants 30, Detroit 17 (box score)
Buffalo 19, Cleveland 17 (box score)
Carolina 27, Miami 20 (box score)
Arizona 20, New Orleans 15 (Box score)

Saturday
Jacksonville 14, Minnesota 10 (box score)
L.A. Rams 19, Oakland 15 (box score)
Cincinnati 21, Dallas 13 (GameTracker)
Tampa Bay at Tennessee (GameTracker)
San Francisco at Houston (GameTracker)
Chicago at Denver (GameTracker)
Seattle at L.A. Chargers (GameTracker)

Monday
Baltimore at Indianapolis, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN (GameTracker)

Youth is served at QB

Anyone tuning into the 49ers-Texans matchup on Saturday was doing so in order to try and get a good look at two exciting young quarterbacks in Jimmy Garoppolo and Deshaun Watson. The people who took a peek weren’t disappointed, because both Garoppolo and Watson looked sharp in fairly limited action for their respective teams. 

Jimmy G had a throw on the first drive to Marquise Goodwin — who clearly is developing into his top target and more than just a speed threat — that showcased just how special a passer he really is.

Garoppolo would finish the night going 10 for 12 for 136 yards, one touchdown and an interception, but the pick wasn’t necessarily his fault. 

All in all he looked quite comfortable and ready to pick up where he left off.

The same could be said for Watson, who played limited time before being replaced by Brandon Weeden. While he was out there, though, Watson reminded everyone why he was so enthralling during a short stretch of his rookie year. He routinely made impressive throws, finding the open man and finishing 5 for 8 for 73 yards and a touchdown, which was a one-yard throw on fourth-and-goal to Bruce Ellington.

Three notes from Watson’s action: one, the ACL injury he’s returning from didn’t appear to bother him much at all in terms of comfort and movement. Two, he played well without DeAndre Hopkins out there, which is a good sign. And three, the Texans, on third-and-goal and fourth-and-goal, decided to run plays out of the shotgun, even though the ball was roughly six inches away from the goal line. 

We can classify that as confidence in Watson’s ability, but we could also classify it as a lack of confidence in the Houston offensive line. That could be a red flag for Watson and the Texans this year — if that unit can’t protect or run block, the offense could run into some issues when it faces up against tougher defensive lines. 

Cowboys lose a key starter to a knee injury

The preseason can be brutal, and the Cowboys got a scare on Saturday night, when All-Pro guard Zack Martin was forced to leave with a knee injury during the first half. 

Martin, a first-round pick from the 2014 NFL Draft, received a lucrative contract extension from the Cowboys in June. He’s a critical component to the Dallas offensive line and running game, but he was forced to limp off the field, spend a lengthy amount of time in the medical tent and eventually leave the preseason game against the Bengals for good.

The play happened as Martin was pulling to the right on a toss sweep — Dre Kirkpatrick of the Bengals went low on him and appeared to make contact with his helmet to Martin’s leg/knee area. 

The result was Martin sitting on the field, talking to trainers and then eventually ending up in the medical tent.

Martin was ruled out for the game, with no additional information handed out.

There might be some better news, maybe? According to Bryan Broaddus of DallasCowboys.com (via Jon Machota), it was a heavily taped right ankle for Martin as he was going to the locker room. 

Either way it’s bad news, but still too early to panic about Martin’s status until we hear more from the Cowboys.

Chris Warren, late-round Fantasy sleeper?

No one is talking about Chris Warren. Or, at least, no one was talking about Chris Warren until Saturday afternoon anyway. Now there’s plenty of buzz about the Raiders‘ fifth-string running back, thanks to his performance against the Los Angeles Rams in the Raiders’ Week 2 preseason game.

Word of caution: Warren has plenty of competition with the Raiders and is hardly a lock to make the roster. Warren was undrafted, and the Raiders already have Marshawn Lynch, Doug Martin, Jalen Richard and DeAndre Washington on the depth chart. 

But if the preseason is about trying to secure a spot on a roster, Warren did an excellent job giving Raiders coaches a good impression of what he can offer.

The former Texas running back, who was undrafted this year, cracked the century mark, piling up piling up 107 yards on just 17 carries to bring the Raiders within one point of the Rams after falling behind 16-0. Warren also caught his only target for seven yards. And he plunged in for a second-half touchdown:

Again, don’t go out there dropping a starting running back for this guy. But we know Jon Gruden is going to be committed to running the heck out of the ball, and Marshawn and Martin are not exactly a youthful duo at the top of the depth chart. With a good offensive line and some touches, Warren could end up being a very deep sleeper worth nabbing in your draft. 

Should the Jaguars trade for Teddy Bridgewater?

That’s been one of the biggest questions people are asking through the early portion of the Jaguars’ offensive drives against the Vikings on Saturday. Granted, Minnesota’s a stout defense. And granted, it’s the preseason. But Blake Bortles hasn’t looked great in the early going. Bortles threw one pick deep in his own territory. There should have been an earlier pick as well, but Bortles got lucky and a Vikings defender dropped it. 

Worth noting: Bortles bounced back from that near-pick nicely, helping the Jaguars rip off a 12-play, 85-yard drive that nearly ended with Bortles throwing a screen pass for a touchdown, then nearly ended with Bortles rushing in for a touchdown and finally ended in Leonard Fournette plunging in from the 1-yard line for a score. The issue for Bortles is the lack of consistency. 

Maybe it’s a total kneejerk reaction to claim Jacksonville, who is coming off an AFC Championship Game appearance and nearly made the Super Bowl, should just blow up their plans. Bortles had a nice stretch during the 2017 season and made a few nice throws against Minnesota. 

But Teddy Bridgewater looks like a starting NFL quarterback, and when you see Bortles make back-breaking mistakes, it’s a reminder the Jags have a great defense and potentially a small window with which to take advantage of their setup. They stood pat this offseason after doubling down on Bortles’ contract. There are a lot of people in that building heavily invested in the quarterback. 

Objectively it would be worth considering a move to trade for Bortles and at least give the offense a second option if Bortles appears as if he’ll hold the team back significantly. 

Roughing the passer is off the rails

The new Aaron Rodgers Rule, whereby defenders who “stuff” quarterbacks into the ground on a sack, or use all their body weight while falling onto the quarterback and get flagged for it, is going to cause serious issues. It popped up against the Vikings during the afternoon preseason game on Saturday and people were not happy about the call in question. 

Full details on what happened here.

The Raiders are sitting everyone in protest (sort of)

Jon Gruden is not a fan of the NFL forcing the Raiders to play the Rams in a preseason game just a few weeks before the Raiders play the Rams in a regular season game. The two teams will match up in Week 1 on Monday night in Oakland, yet they met in Los Angeles on Saturday for a preseason game. 

Gruden responded by basically benching everyone.

He’s got a point here in terms of the Rams being able to see what the Raiders want to do with their starters, but surely he wasn’t going to run the same gameplan against the Rams as he planned to run against them in a few weeks. He knows the Rams can still see his next preseason game (via the magic of television) next week, right? He would also get the advantage of seeing some of the Rams players in action, although Sean McVay also rested most of his starters.

Whatever, the point being is that there’s not a whole lot of action happening in the Raiders-Rams game. 

If you would like two potentially interesting fantasy football takeaways from the first half, Rams rookie John Kelly looked pretty sharp while running as the third-string running back. He’s an interesting handcuff for Todd Gurley owners or just a deep sleeper for any team really. 

And Jalen Richard was 2 for 2 for 31 yards early for the Raiders in terms of targets and receptions, flashing some athleticism in the open field. The Raiders might have too many bodies to give Richard a bunch of carries or even touches, but he warrants monitoring if only because of his explosion.

The Rams defense is going to be good, by the way. That’s a tough call considering they weren’t throwing all their starters out there and they were going against Connor Cook and EJ Manuel, but you can see how this unit will work out quite well when everyone is on the field and Wade Phillips is playing with the joystick. 

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