Three Week 14 NFL Plays to Watch Again, Including Justin Fields Playing for His Future With the Bears

The Chicago quarterback’s football IQ was on display against the Lions. Plus, what makes the 49ers such a threat, and how the Browns’ defense shut down the Jaguars.

The 49ers are a juggernaut; Justin Fields is playing for his career with the Bears; and the Browns might win a playoff game based solely on their defense.

This week, we’re looking at all three of those topics. First, it’s Fields trying to show he belongs as Chicago’s long-term starter, instead of being a trade chip come the offseason. Then, it’s Cleveland continuing to shut down one passing attack after the next, this time taking down Trevor Lawrence and the Jaguars.

Finally, it’s San Francisco, Christian McCaffrey and its relentless offensive scheme taking down the Seahawks.

Let’s get to business, beginning in the Windy City.

Justin Fields shows his smarts

The talk around Chicago is what’s going to happen after this season. Will Fields have shown enough for the Bears to potentially pass on Caleb Williams or Drake Maye in the draft, or will Chicago have to take one of them, if given the opportunity?

On Sunday, Fields helped to make a case for himself in a 28–13 win over the Lions at Soldier Field. And the quarterback’s best play came on fourth-and-13 from Detroit’s 38-yard line, leading 19–13 with 1:36 remaining in the third quarter.

Almost assuredly, Chicago was looking to get the Lions to jump, putting it in better position for a field goal. And that’s exactly what the Bears got, as you can see below.

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A split second later, Aidan Hutchinson (No. 97) gets antsy …

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Fields understood the situation. The Bears snapped the ball, with the quarterback knowing he had a free play. Instead of going for a safe throw against man coverage, Fields immediately looked to the left boundary, where DJ Moore (No. 2) was covered by Jerry Jacobs (No. 23).

Jacobs is supposed to have help from Ifeatu Melifonwu (No. 6), but the safety got caught squatting on the crosser. 

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The key to Moore’s route was an outside release before clearing Jacobs to the inside (as can be seen above). Once that happened, Fields knew the only chance for Detroit to cover Moore was with Melifonwu squeezing down. Once he commits to the inside, it’s over.

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The throw from Fields is perfect for a 38-yard touchdown. And while the ball was impressive, it was set up by a good hard count, an understanding of the defense and its principles, and an accurate pass.

The Jaguars turn the ball over

After sustaining a high ankle sprain last Monday night against the Bengals, Lawrence willed himself on the field six days later to face the Browns. Cleveland, with its league-leading pass defense, posed a significant problem for Jacksonville.

In a 31–27 loss, Jacksonville’s problems were clear; it had four turnovers, including three interceptions from Lawrence.

Trailing 21–14 with 14:16 remaining in regulation, the Jaguars faced third-and-1 on their own 15-yard line. Cleveland showed an all-out blitz in Cover 0, not an uncommon occurrence under coordinator Jim Schwartz

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At this point, Lawrence knows he has man-to-man everywhere. He also knows seven rushers are coming, meaning he must throw quickly. The route combinations called for the Jaguars to have quick outs from the inside receivers, while the boundary wideouts were running go routes. 

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Lawrence had time to work only one side of the field, deciding to look right. It was a smart decision, considering he had Calvin Ridley (No. 0) in a singled-up look against Greg Newsome Jr. (No. 0) without safety help. If Ridley had won, it’s possibly an 85-yard touchdown.

However, Ridley can’t stack Newsome or get on his inside shoulder. Instead, he leaks toward the boundary, effectively creating a double team.

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Instead of a big play (or at the very least, a 50-50 ball), Lawrence has no window. He threw the ball toward the field side of Newsome, creating a routine interception. The turnover led to a 28–14 lead for Cleveland, setting the Browns up for what became the winning touchdown.

The throw, in theory, wasn’t a bad decision—the breakdown happened in the execution. Ridley should have tried to win inside, knowing the field is wide open with only four men in coverage. Had Lawrence seen that, perhaps he would have put air under the ball toward the midfield logo, knowing Ridley could go get it.

The 49ers’ perfect blocking

Against the Seahawks, the 49ers were struggling. Trailing 10–7 in the second quarter, San Francisco’s first drive went for a touchdown but was followed with two punts and an interception.

To retake the lead, the Niners relied on their stars, with all 83 yards of a five-play drive coming from Deebo Samuel, Brandon Aiyuk and McCaffrey. Then on first-and-10 from San Francisco’s 27-yard line, the Niners went to McCaffrey on an outside toss.

Before the snap, San Francisco was showing 12 personnel with two tight ends and a balanced, condensed look. McCaffrey was in the backfield behind Brock Purdy, aligned in the pistol formation. Seattle was in zone defense, with eight in the box.

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On the snap, George Kittle (No. 85) pulled across the formation. McCaffrey followed closely behind the league’s best blocking tight end, while the line sealed off pursuit from the back side.

Reserve tight end Charlie Woerner (No. 89) got an excellent reach block on Seattle’s Darrell Taylor (No. 52), while future Hall of Fame left tackle Trent Williams (No. 71) shoved Jordyn Brooks (No. 56) behind the play. Finally, check out center Jake Brendel (No. 64), who reached and then pancaked defensive tackle Jarran Reed (No. 90).

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The final two blocks came from Kittle erasing corner Riq Woolen (No. 27), while Aiyuk buried safety Julian Love (No. 20). McCaffrey got 20 yards before being pushed out of bounds, helping continue a drive that put San Francisco ahead for good.

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While McCaffrey deserves praise for his rush, this play is a perfect illustration of why the Niners are so tough to deal with. Both Kittle and Aiyuk threw fantastic blocks, while the offensive line created a massive lane, setting up San Francisco for success.


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Matt Verderame
MATT VERDERAME

Matt Verderame is a staff writer for Sports Illustrated covering the NFL. Before joining SI in March 2023, he wrote for wrote for FanSided and Awful Announcing. He hosts The Matt Verderame Show on Patreon and is a member of the Pro Football Writers Association. A proud father of two girls and lover of all Italian food, Verderame is an eternal defender of Rudy, the greatest football movie of all time.