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NFL Thanksgiving 2021 Takeaways: Derek Carr Proves His Worth and More

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    Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

    Are you awake? Did you make it through nearly a dozen hours of NFL football on Thanksgiving Thursday?

    If so, congratulations.

    If you’ve been in and out of slumbers and/or struggling to escape your uncle’s political rants and need a breakdown of the key takeaways from the day in football, we’ve got you. 

    From a typical dud in the Motor City to a thriller in Texas and a critical nightcap in The Big Easy, here are our takes from the NFL action that kicked off Week 12 of the 2021 campaign. 

    * Stay tuned for reaction to the night late game

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    Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

    With off-field issues potentially playing a role, both Derek Carr and the Las Vegas Raiders had come back to earth in the three-game losing streak that preceded their Thanksgiving matchup with the Dallas Cowboys, but Carr put together an exceptional performance as the Raiders likely saved their season with a 36-33 overtime victory on the road. 

    Carr ranked second among qualified passers with a 111.5 passer rating on deep attempts entering Week 12 before averaging 9.6 yards per attempt in a turnover-free performance against a defense that ranked fourth in the NFL in DVOA (defense-adjusted value over average) at Football Outsiders through 11 weeks. 

    Carr also had a 109.0 passer rating in the fourth quarter of one-score games prior to Thursday, and he made several big-time throws down the stretch as Las Vegas hung on to defeat a talented and desperate opponent away from home on short rest. 

    It was the type of performance that can highlight an MVP’s reel at the NFL Honors ceremony in the new year. Nobody’s running away from that pack in the chase for that award this year, and Carr jumped back into the conversation on Thursday. 

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    Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images

    Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott also remains a part of that MVP chase, but he couldn’t fully recover from a slow start with a depleted supporting cast Thursday and couldn’t do quite enough to overcome a poor performance from the Dallas defense as the Cowboys lost for the third time in a four-game span. 

    It’s absolutely fair now to panic if you’re the Cowboys or a fan of America’s Team. 

    It wasn’t that they fell to a decent Raiders team, but the circumstances? At home against a team mired in a three-game losing streak on short rest? No bueno, especially combined with how poorly they played against the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 11 (Prescott committed three turnovers and the offense generated zero touchdowns) and in Week 9 against the Denver Broncos (they scored just two garbage-time touchdowns and possessed the ball for fewer than 19 minutes). 

    They can take some solace in the fact they still hold a two-game lead atop the weak NFC East, and the fact three of their four losses have come outside of the conference (the AFC West is their Achilles’ heel, it seems), but that doesn’t change the reality that they’ve shown clear vulnerabilities on both sides of the ball and haven’t been consistent on offense or defense. 

    It’s hard to imagine they’ll contend for a first-round bye at this point, and they’d better keep an eye on the surging Philadelphia Eagles in their rear-view mirror. 

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    Nic Antaya/Getty Images

    I get it. Americans will watch football on Thanksgiving regardless of the quality of the product before their eyes. For many, it’s the only football they’ll watch all year, and some might not have a strong grasp on what constitutes good football versus bad football. 

    But there was no mistaking this. The Chicago Bears and Detroit Lions put the nation to sleep before the tryptophan could enter our systems, and Detroit deserves the lion’s share of the blame for an ugly home loss at the hands of a three-win team that was without starting quarterback Justin Fields (ribs). 

    Besides, the Lions have lost the benefit of the doubt. They’re now 4-14 in their last 18 Thanksgiving games and are mired in a five-game Turkey Day losing streak. 

    It’s true that it would be weird watching a game based anywhere but Detroit early on Thanksgiving, but I’m sure we’ll adapt. The reality is this is a key time slot for the NFL, because while the audience isn’t hard to attract, Thanksgiving games represent a prime opportunity to turn non-fans into fans.

    Lions games aren’t likely doing the trick. 

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    Icon Sportswire/Getty Images

    And yes, the Bears did come away with a win Thursday in Detroit. But that only happened after a winless team tripped all over itself late in an extremely close game. It’s pretty obvious that 4-7 Chicago isn’t going to contend this season, which means it’s about time to cut bait and bring an end to the Matt Nagy era. 

    Mark Konkol and Jeff Arnold of the Patch.com reported early this week that the Bears planned to fire Nagy after this game. General manager Ryan Pace has since called that report “inaccurate” on the Bears’ pregame radio show, but winds can shift quickly in this league. 

    Why wait for the end of the season? Nagy is staring down a third consecutive non-winning campaign, and his offense is on track to rank in the bottom 12 in football for the fourth year in a row (his entire tenure with the team). There’s no way Chicago should give him more time beyond this season, and again, 2021 was just about toast regardless of Thursday’s result (and it was far from a pretty performance anyway).

    Of course, it’s also possible Pace is on the way out, in which case his words regarding reports of Nagy’s fate would have to be taken with a grain of salt. 

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