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Early in the season, you can cite plenty of reasons for bad football. Teams don’t take the preseason seriously and there is one fewer week now that the regular season is 17 weeks. You end up with a lot of sloppy games, turnovers and bad offense. Well, it’s now Week 7 and we’re still seeing a lot of sloppy games, turnovers and bad offense. Not to mention some of the awful flag fests of late.
But, the NFL is a titan in sports betting and any game is a good game because wagering exists and it makes every game a lot more interesting. We’re still seeing a lot of low scores, though, as defenses are keeping everything in front of them and teams are getting bottled up with their spread formations in the red zone. This past week, we thought we’d see more scoring, but that wasn’t the case in most games. Will it be the case in Week 7?
Here are some early lines to consider:
The Bengals offensive line continues to be a work in progress (to put it nicely), but Cincinnati faces a Falcons team in Week 7 that does not pressure the quarterback. Atlanta went into last week last in Pressure% at 12.7%, last in QB Knockdown% at 1.4% and had one of the lowest blitz rates in the NFL. The way to hurt the Bengals offense is to get after Joe Burrow. The reigning AFC champs shouldn’t have to worry about that.
We’ve seen some signs of life from the Bengals recently, including their comeback win over the Saints with 300 passing yards from Burrow, who connected with Ja’Marr Chase seven times for 132 yards and two touchdowns. That connection is remarkably important for Cincinnati and this was a big step in the right direction.
The Falcons are one of those teams running the football very effectively. They also had a great scripted drive to start the game against the 49ers and scored their third first-quarter touchdown of the season. Head coach Arthur Smith is making a lot of progress, and success in the first half would push Cincinnati to be a little more aggressive in the passing game.
The Bengals have defended the run well, but haven’t faced many teams that can run the ball effectively. The Falcons can and that should lead to points.
Pick: Over 45
The Browns, who continue to struggle on defense, are riding back-to-back overs into this one. The game against the Falcons had the yardage and the chances to go over as well. The Ravens defense has not been spectacular either, so we’ve got another scenario with two good rushing teams against two bad defenses. Running teams are the ones having more success with all the Cover-2, Cover-3 and zone being called and these two teams should have offensive success this week.
Cleveland’s offense was bottled up by New England, but Bill Belichick sold out against the run and outfoxed Kevin Stefanski again, much like he did in last year’s blowout loss for the Browns. Since Stefanski took over the Browns in 2020, the regular season meetings have had 44, 89, 26 and 46 points, so the games have been up and down, but last year’s first game had six turnovers and the second game didn’t have Lamar Jackson. The 44-point game in 2020 was Stefanski’s first with the team as head coach and there was no preseason. The Ravens have averaged almost 31 points per game against the Browns since the coaching change.
Baltimore had 211 rushing yards against the Giants and actually had seven yards per play, yet found a way to lose. In Cleveland’s loss to the Patriots, the score and the defensive scheme forced Jacoby Brissett into 45 pass attempts out of 67 total plays. That isn’t the blueprint for success and I would assume that Cleveland runs a lot more against a Baltimore defense that went into the Giants game giving up six yards per play and five yards per carry.
Pick: Over 45.5
After trying to pick on two low-totaled unders, let’s look at a side that appears attractive. The Texans and Raiders are coming off of bye weeks, but my inclination is that Josh McDaniels and the Raiders will get a lot more out of theirs. Pep Hamilton’s uninspired play-calling has led to only 17.2 points per game and just five yards per play for the Houston offense.
The Texans haven’t turned the ball over a lot, but are one of the league’s worst third-down offenses and create very few explosive plays. In their win over the Jaguars, they were outgained by almost 180 yards. The Raiders have had a lot of problems defensively, but this Houston offense is very limited and looks unlikely to take advantage.
Meanwhile, the Raiders are fourth in points per drive. Their 1-4 record does not illustrate how well this offense has moved the football with 5.8 yards per play. Their defense has been the primary issue, but they’ve outgained each of their last three opponents (while going 1-2) and just haven’t been able to keep up in the touchdown department. Las Vegas is nine-for-19 in the red zone, while opponents are 14-for-17. The Texans shouldn’t have that much red-zone success and the Raiders have been able to work on a lot of different things with the early bye. This is a “circle the wagons†game for the Raiders’ postseason hopes and I’d expect them to come through.
Pick: Raiders -7
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Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.