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Week 8 Check-Up: Who’s Hurt, Who’s Healing, Who’s in Trouble

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
October 28, 2025
Week 8 Check-Up: Who’s Hurt, Who’s Healing, Who’s in Trouble

Sunday may have lacked the nail‑biters we’ve come to expect, but it didn’t lack storylines. Week 8 felt like one of those Sundays where, even without many close finishes, the league reminded us how fragile a season can be. Big plays came with big consequences, and a few injuries could end up reshaping the playoff picture down the stretch.

Cam Skattebo’s Sudden Stop — and the Giants’ Search for Juice

Before the ankle bent the wrong way, Cam Skattebo was giving the Giants exactly what they hoped for when they called his name in April: a jolt of life. The rookie out of Arizona State ran like every carry mattered and fought for the kind of tough yards that don’t make fantasy headlines but make coaches grin. He wasn’t just putting up numbers — he and Jaxson Dart were giving the Giants personality.

Then, late in the second quarter in Philly, everything slowed down. Skattebo went up for a short catch, landed awkwardly, and his right ankle twisted under the defender. You could almost feel the air leave the stadium. Trainers sprinted out, teammates took a knee, and everyone knew it was bad. Air cast. Cart. By the time night fell, he’d already had surgery. The next morning, Brian Daboll didn’t sugarcoat it — this is going to be a long road back:

"He might be out [of the hospital] today. But again, he's got a road ahead of him... For a guy that has come in and, say, sparked us with a lot of energy and toughness, but the personality that he has as well. But it's like all your other players that you're close with. These guys spend a lot of time together, meeting time, outside the building. And that's always a tough element to this game is when guys go down and get hurt. You hate to see it. Unfortunately, it's part of the business."

This Loss Stings More Than the Stats

New York isn’t exactly swimming in big‑play talent right now, and Skattebo had become a big part of their week‑to‑week plan. He wasn’t just another back on the roster; he was baked into how this offense operated. Early downs? That was his wheelhouse. Screens and quick passes? He handled those like extensions of the run game. he was just 5 yards shy of being the team's third-leading receiver. And when they got near the goal line, he was the steady option who made things easier for everyone else. In a system still trying to find its identity, Skattebo’s dependability was one of its cornerstones. Losing that isn’t just about replacing touches — it’s about replacing trust.

You could see how much it shook the team. Jaxson Dart — another rookie already juggling enough pressure — looked devastated. The offensive line circled the cart like a wall of big brothers, and even the Philly crowd gave a genuine round of applause as he was driven off. That's the type of player he was; it's impossible not to respect his grit — even if he's playing against your team.

What Changes Now

Tyrone Tracy Jr. almost certainly moves to the front of the line. He’s a better pass‑game piece than he gets credit for, and Daboll can lean into that: more angle routes, more designed touches in space, and a little more RPO quick stuff to keep Dart in manageable downs. Devin Singletary becomes the adult in the room for pass pro and between‑the‑tackles stability. You may also see heavier tight end involvement — those little flat leaks to Theo Johnson and Daniel Bellinger to keep chains moving.

The red‑zone math gets tougher, though. Skattebo had a nose for the goal line, and the Giants were using his balance to set up easy throws — show you power, slip the back out late, steal six. Without him, they’ll either ask Dart to be a bigger part of the run game inside the 10 (which comes with its own risk), or they’ll need some superior creativity in that area.

Carson Wentz: Done Fighting Through the Pain

Oct 23, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback Carson Wentz (11) drops back to pass against the Los Angeles Chargers during the second half at SoFi Stadium.
Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Carson Wentz was put through the ringer against Los Angeles. He dinged up his left shoulder back in Week 5 over in London, finished the game basically on adrenaline and a harness, and spent the bye week convincing everyone — including himself — that he could push through it. Sometimes, you can fake it for a while. But Thursday was just too much too handle, and his body called his bluff.

He got hit early, then hit often — five sacks and countless bumps that made you wonder how long he’d last. Every camera shot of him on the sideline was just a guy trying his hardest to push through the pain, willing it to hang on just a bit longer. There’s a fine line between being tough and being reckless, and Wentz and the staff tried to walk it until there was no more room left.

Late in the game, he finally gave way to Max Brosmer, and by Monday the Vikings made it official — injured reserve and season‑ending surgery. Tough ending for a guy who was giving them everything he had left.

What the Vikings Lose — and What They Get Back

Wentz battled, no doubt about it, but let’s not pretend the results matched the effort. He stood in there, took hits, and tried to make plays, but too many of those chances went sideways. The turnovers piled up, the rhythm never really clicked, and by the end, it felt like he was forcing things just to prove he could still do it. Give him credit for toughness — he earned that — but production-wise, it was rough.

Frankly, it’s surprising the Vikings let it drag on this long. With J.J. McCarthy healthy enough to suit up as the emergency quarterback, you’d think they would’ve made the switch sooner. This wasn’t about loyalty or leadership; it was about survival, and the offense just couldn’t keep its head above water with Wentz under center.

Now the future’s up, and all signs point to J.J. McCarthy returning as QB1 for Week 9. The kid’s had a front-row seat to what works and what doesn’t — watching Wentz fight through pain, force throws, and sometimes make things harder than they had to be. You’d like to think he’s picked up on both sides of that lesson. Still, nobody really knows what they’ve got until he’s out there taking live bullets again. The Vikings don’t need him to play hero; they just need him to be efficient, smart, and steady. If he can bring a little calm to an offense that’s been playing on edge for weeks, Minnesota might finally have a second half that doesn't feel like such an uphill climb.

Tweaking the Plan

The Chargers game basically confirmed what the tape had been screaming for weeks — the Vikings just can’t survive running long-developing plays when both tackles are limping. The pocket collapses before the concept even breathes. Expect to see more help from the tight ends on the edges, more duo and inside-zone runs to keep linebackers honest, and a heavier dose of screens to punish over-aggressive rushers. It’s less flashy, sure, but it’s what they need right now.

Kevin O’Connell’s a sharp play-caller, and this is where he earns his keep. He’s at his best when sequencing plays, giving defenses the same pre-snap picture three different ways before pulling the rug out from under them. With a young quarterback, that layering becomes even more important — get him easy completions early, let him build confidence, and then take your shots once the safeties start cheating up.

Ed Oliver: Cracks in Buffalo’s Defensive Front

Oct 26, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Buffalo Bills defensive tackle Ed Oliver (91) reacts after a sack in the first quarter at Bank of America Stadium.
Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Buffalo’s defense takes on a whole different vibe when Ed Oliver is rolling. He’s the heartbeat of their interior — that quick-twitch disruptor who blows up blocking schemes before they even develop. When he’s right, the Bills’ front plays with swagger. Linebackers attack downhill, the edges feast on one‑on‑ones, and defensive coordinator Bobby Babich can spread pressure out across the line. 

That’s why it stung so much when he grabbed his arm and left the field with what became a confirmed torn biceps. The broadcast didn’t do justice to how big that loss is goign to be going forward. Buffalo’s interior depth was already paper‑thin, and Oliver was holding it all together. The defense can still stand, but it’s one bad move away from collapsing.

Inventory Check: Who’s Left at DT?

As good as Oliver is, it's as much about having a capable body in that spot as it is his run-stopping presence. Larry Ogunjobi can still win reps, and Deone Walker has some upside, but beyond that? It’s thin. Like, “someone-off-the-street-could-get-snaps” thin. Every run fit could swing a drive. That’s not where you want to be heading into November, especially in a division with a team as red-hot as the Patriots.

DaQuan Jones’ health is the wild card here. If he’s good to go, things don’t feel nearly as dire. He can eat up double teams, free up Ogunjobi to hunt on passing downs, and let the linebackers fly around instead of playing janitor behind a collapsing line.

Timing Is Everything When You’re Chasing a Super Bowl

A torn biceps and late‑October surgery pretty much spells the end of a player’s season, even when teams hold out hope by using that vague “out indefinitely” tag. It’s a long road back, and the Bills know it.

The timing couldn’t be worse either — the trade deadline is staring them right in the face, forcing some tough questions about who they are right now. Do they grab a cheap veteran to stop the bleeding, or trust the young guys and scheme their way through it? There’s no easy call here. Josh Allen and the offense can win a few shootouts, sure, but you don’t want to live that way in January.

Pat Surtain II’s Shoulder Scare

Oct 26, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Broncos cornerback Pat Surtain II (2) leaves the field after an injury in the first quarter against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High.
Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Denver handled Dallas comfortably, but the mood changed fast when Pat Surtain II headed to the locker room before halftime with a shoulder issue. He’d already taken a scary shot to the leg earlier and managed to return, but the shoulder looked different — like the kind of thing you can’t just walk off. Now that the expectation is weeks, not days, and the Broncos have to find a way to help out a struggling secondary.

Defensive Player of the Year for a Reason

Surtain isn’t just another elite corner — he’s the guy who makes the rest of the defense breathe easier. When he’s on the field, Vance Joseph can call the game like he’s got house money. You can roll out press-man on the opponent’s WR1, spin the safety to the other side, and bring pressure when you feel like it — not because you have to. Even when quarterbacks look the other way, Surtain’s shadow still dictates where the ball goes. He takes an entire half of the playbook away from opposing coordinators just by showing up.

Now, with him expected to miss a few weeks, that confidence takes a hit. Everything tightens. CB2 and CB3 are about to get a crash course in attention they haven’t seen before, and it changes the whole vibe of how Denver plays defense. Suddenly, you’re leaning less on swagger and more on survival — trading the bully calls for softer zones and safety help over the top. You can still win that way, but it’s not the same kind of fight.

How Vance Joseph Rewrites the Script Without His Star Corner

With Surtain sidelined for a few weeks, Denver’s entire secondary suddenly feels exposed. Expect to see plenty of split‑safety shells and bracket help on just about every WR1 they face. That’s not a luxury — it’s a necessity. The truth is, outside of Surtain, this defensive backfield has been shaky at best. They’ve had flashes, but nobody else has proven they can hold up for a full game without help over the top.

The pass rush can mask some of that, but not everything. Vance Joseph’s going to have to lean on four‑man pressure and creative fronts to create chaos while keeping seven back. That means more stunts and games inside, trying to hurry throws before those corners get exposed. But without Surtain out there locking down a side, the margin shrinks fast — every misstep turns into a potential explosive.

Personnel‑wise, it’s thin, plain and simple. Kris Abrams‑Draine can fill snaps, but asking him or anyone else to survive on an island for 60‑plus plays a week isn’t realistic. Denver’s secondary without Surtain goes from a strength to a question mark, and the coaching staff knows it.

Injuries Don’t Care About Your Momentum

Week 8 delivered a hard truth we’ve all seen before: you can do everything right — draft well, scheme well, win the field position battle — and still watch your plan change in one awkward landing. What separates contenders from “fun stories” is how they deal with that.

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