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Baker’s Grit & Harbaugh’s Grip: MNF Double-Header Aftermath

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
September 16, 2025
Baker’s Grit & Harbaugh’s Grip: MNF Double-Header Aftermath

Monday night gave us the full sampler platter of prime-time football. In Houston, the game lived on the knife’s edge — blown blocks, special-teams haymakers, a quarterback playing Whac‑A‑Mole in the pocket, and, finally, a go‑ahead score with six ticks left. In Las Vegas, the thrill came in a different form: a steady, smothering defense that slowly squeezed the life out of the game.

Part I: Bucs 20, Texans 19 — Baker Finds One More Rabbit in the Hat

Trading Blows Before the Break

With the way this game started, it seemed like this was going to be a high-scoring, back-and-forth battle. The Texans struck first when C.J. Stroud found Nico Collins deep down the sideline for a touchdown, and the place erupted like it was going to be another one of those nights. Tampa answered, though, with Baker Mayfield hitting Ryan Miller in stride for a 20‑yard score to tie it up. From there, it was a tug of war. Stroud looked sharp in spurts, but the Bucs’ front made sure he never got too comfortable, and Houston had to settle for a field goal instead of stretching things out. By halftime, Emeka Egbuka’s crafty screen‑pass touchdown had Tampa ahead 14‑10, and it felt like the Bucs were starting to tilt things their way.

The third quarter was all about missed chances and frustration. Tampa’s Chase McLaughlin smacked a very makeable 38‑yard field goal off the upright, wasting a decent drive. Houston’s special teams made some noise with a blocked punt, but it never turned into six points. Stroud kept finding windows to Nico Collins, but the run game, outside of a couple of Nick Chubb’s burst carries, never really took off, and drives kept stalling. Tampa, for its part, leaned on Rachaad White and Bucky Irving to grind out yards, but every time they got rolling the Texans’ pass rush — led by Danielle Hunter and Will Anderson Jr. — would crash the pocket. The Texans scraped out a field goal after the blocked punt to bring it to 14‑13, and you could feel the tension building. Both sides had left points on the field, and the game was waiting for someone to finally break it open. 

The Moment the Whole Night Pivoted

Sep 15, 2025; Houston, Texas, USA; Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) attempts to evade a tackle from Houston Texans defensive end Danielle Hunter (55) during the fourth quarter at NRG Stadium.
Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Houston had just seized a 19–14 lead on Nick Chubb’s untouched, 25‑yard score with 2:10 left in the game, a complete and total breakdown by the Bucs defense. Then a penalty on the kickoff pinned the Bucs back, and Tampa found themselves in a 4th‑and‑10 from their own 32 with the game on the line. Baker Mayfield, who had been harassed all quarter, didn’t hit a hero throw — he ran for 15. It was pure street ball and situational awareness all at once: feel the wash, knife upfield, keep the ball safe, live to fight. If you’re a Texans fan, it’s the play you point to.

From there, Tampa’s offense looked in complete rhythm. Short game to the backs, quick outs to calm the pass rush, a shot to the flat for yards after catch. Now, they got away with it, but after Mike Evans got inside the 10 yards line, the Bucs decided not to call a timeout. There was about 26 seconds on the clock and running, and despite having two timeouts sitting in their pocket, the ran to the line — without a ton of urgency — and got off a quick out to stop the clock with nine seconds left.

Rachaad White finished it on the very next play, pushing it in from the 2 with six seconds left. But the idea that they were going to be able to run three more plays in those nine seconds seems lofty at best. They're walking away with the win, and that's all that matters; but in the moment, that certainly got my eyebrows raised.

Don’t Let the Finish Hide the Mess

Tampa won, but they left dinner on the table for a large part of the second half. Special teams flirted with disaster until it finally bit them: a 38‑yard doink from Chase McLaughlin, a blocked punt that set up points, and a 53‑yard punt returnby rookie Jaylin Noel that teed up Chubb’s go‑ahead score. That’s two explosives and a literal kick off the upright in a one‑point game. You cannot script closer margins for error.

Clock management nearly joined the party. Inside goal‑to‑go on the last drive, Tampa milked time like they knew they only needed one play. It worked — barely. If White gets stacked at the 1 and you still need two more snaps, you want seconds instead of stress. The Bucs will grade the film happy but a little pale.

Houston’s ‘What If’ Night, in Three Snapshots

  1. Goal‑to‑go failure: Early in the fourth, the Texans had first‑and‑goal at the 8 and then second‑and‑goal at the 1. They came away with nothing: a short completion stopped inches shy, a stuffed Chubb plunge, and two misses to the corner. That four‑play sequence is going to haunt these guys on Tuesday.

  2. The empty blocked punt: Credit the rush unit for the block that set Houston up at the Tampa 35. But turning it into a 53‑yard field goal aafter gaining zero yards instead of a suffocating touchdown kept the window cracked open.

  3. The last stand that wasn’t: Two minutes of solid defense, one 4th‑and‑10 scramble, and then everything seemed to break at once. Tampa got everything they wanted from that point forward — including the Texans not getting an offensive snap after the final touchdown.

Part II: Chargers 20, Raiders 9 — The Squeeze, the Picks, the Statement

August 23, 2025; Santa Clara, California, USA; Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh (hc) during the third quarter against the San Francisco 49ers at Levi's Stadium.
Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

A Defensive Identity You Can Build a Season Around

Jim Harbaugh teams have tells: they want to own the line, win the middle eight minutes, and make you play left‑handed. First offensive snap for the Raiders? A tipped ball and a Daiyan Henley interception on a pattern designed to get Geno Smith comfortable. Welcome to the quicksand.

From there, the Chargers didn’t so much bully the Raiders as they tightened the air in the building. Passing lanes shrank. Windows once open on film were suddenly contested. The stat that matters: three interceptions of Smith. In the second quarter, veteran Tony Jefferson read Geno’s eyes on an out route, sliding under the throw and stealing a possession that helped the Chargers stretch their lead. The final dagger came in the fourth when Donte Jackson caught a deflection by Derwin James, who had an outstanding night on maybe the best pass-catching tight end in the league. That essentially killed the Raiders’ last real chance and put the exclamation point on a defensive masterclass.

The other stat that defines the night: zero Raiders touchdowns. The Chargers' defense kept Geno Smith in check all night, holding him to a 37 passer rating and just 56% completions. They also forced the Raiders into a rough 9-for-20 mark on third and fourth downs, never letting them find rhythm. It was the kind of performance you expect from a secondary that looks confident, connected, and downright stingy.

Herbert the Pilot, Johnston the Sledgehammer

Because the defense set the terms, Justin Herbert didn’t have to be a superhero — he just had to be precise. He was: 19‑of‑27, 242, 2 TD, with a handful of smart scrambles (31 rush yards, which led the team) that kept Maxx Crosby from turning the pocket into a haunted house. The throw of the night came late in the second quarter: a 60‑yard strike to Quentin Johnston, a shot to the pylon that traveled forever and reminded everyone why Johnston was drafted to add a vertical gear to this room.

The rest of the plan was control over flash. Greg Roman called a game that let Herbert be efficient more than explosive. Keenan Allen did Keenan Allen things on third down. The line had moments it’ll want back, but on a night where the defense was that good, efficient was all Herbert needed to be.

Geno’s Long, Long Night

Sep 15, 2025; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Jakobi Meyers (16) and Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Geno Smith (7) walk off the field after the game at Allegiant Stadium.
Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

This is the version of Geno Smith that Raiders fans hoped stayed in the past: forcing tight throws into bracketed windows, hesitating just long enough for the lane to disappear, and then trying to win it all back in one shot. The line didn’t do him a ton of favors, but the interceptions weren’t “tipped at the line” bad luck; they were decisions the Chargers baited and then punished. The end‑zone pick to Jackson with under six to play was the loudest example — it ended the “maybe, if…” part of the night.

You could feel the Raiders searching for an offensive identity. Brock Bowers fought through a knee issue and flashed on a few catch‑and‑runs but wasn’t the matchup tilt he can be. Ashton Jeanty ran hard when asked and even trucked a defender on a 13‑yarder that will live in the highlights, but the touches didn’t equal production. When your best sequence is a 19‑play field goal drive, it’s a sign your plan and your personnel need a better handshake.

Mack’s Elbow

The one thing that could sour this for L.A. is Khalil Mack’s elbow. He left in the first half, came back to the sideline with it wrapped and in a sling, and was ruled out. The Chargers finished the job without him — testament to the depth and to Minter’s structure — but the ceiling of this defense in December is tied to Mack’s availability. The good news: they didn't seem to miss him all that much, and the pass rush can be manufactured with simulated pressure if they have to. Still, you don’t replace his impact easily.

Big Picture Takeaway

Two games, two totally different stories. In Houston, it came down to Baker Mayfield having the ball last and refusing to blink. In Vegas, the Chargers’ defense slammed the door and never let the Raiders even think about sneaking through. Both end up in the same win column, but the takeaways couldn’t be more different: Tampa showed they can scrape out ugly wins, while L.A. showed they can choke the life out of you. Not bad for a random Monday night in September.

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