It is a results league and we’re trying to stay away from that. Not that that’s not important. It’s very important to us, but we feel the quickest way to get there is our process. But I understand that’s in the back of their heads. We’ll utilize that. If there is some frustration by the players, that’s OK as long as we utilize that to help us get better.”

Poor Gus Bradley — he’s all over the place. In January, Bradley gave up running Seattle’s potentially superb defense so he could take the wheel of Jacksonville’s sinking ship. In September, his Jaguars crapped out the most incompetent four-game start in NFL history. This Sunday, they’re 12-point underdogs against a struggling QB whose fans booed him for the entire second half of his last start. In Week 6, they’ll travel to Denver and immediately become the biggest single-game underdogs in NFL history. Oh, and Blaine Gabbert is prominently involved. So it’s quite possible that Gus Bradley is losing his mind.

We don’t care about results, but they’re important, but we have to stick to a plan, but it’s frustrating, but frustration can ultimately be a good thing.

Have the Jaguars hit rock bottom yet? So far they’ve been the perfect storm of “present-day futility,” “future hopelessness” and “long-term irrelevance.” When the 0-16 Lions bottomed out in 2008, at least their fans took solace in the Calvin Johnson era, Matt Millen’s impending demise and a recognizable fan identity. Sure, that identity may have centered on decades of unhappiness and despair, with a few pleasurable Barry Sanders seasons mixed in, but still — that’s an identity! How would you describe a Jaguars fan? What do they have to show for these past two decades other than the “We Hosted The Most Depressing Super Bowl Ever” championship belt?

The greatest Jaguar ever? A left tackle — and not just a left tackle, but a left tackle whose career was cut short by injury (Tony Boselli). The most famous Jaguar ever? Fragile Freddie Taylor, who murdered more than 34.8 million fantasy seasons from 1999 through 2009. The most exciting Jaguar ever? Either Taylor, Maurice Jones-Drew or Jimmy Smith … unless you count Gabbert, who is exciting for all the wrong reasons. You know who came in sixth on Jacksonville.com’s list of the greatest Jaguars? Keenan McCardell. KEENAN MCCARDELL??? Keenan McCardell.

Jaguars fans have never seen a jersey retirement ceremony or a Super Bowl appearance. Their only good coach (Tom Coughlin) got canned in 2002, took over the Giants and won two Super Bowls. Their greatest moment happened in January 1997, when Mark Brunell and the Jags shocked John Elway’s Broncos at Mile High as double-digit underdogs … and promptly got thumped in the AFC Championship Game the following week. And they’ve spent the past few years getting tossed into every conceivable Los Angeles/London relocation rumor. As far as I can tell, the Jaguars have only six things going in their favor other than draft picks, cap space and abject sadness.

No. 1: Parity. Thanks to the salary cap and imbalanced scheduling, it’s impossible to bottom out in the NFL for longer than a few years. Well, unless you’re Cleveland or Buffalo. (Thinking.) You’re right, scrap this point.

No. 1 (revised): They have two above-average kickers: Josh Scobee (described recently on ESPN.com as “pretty much the only weapon the Jaguars have right now”) and the appropriately named Bryan Anger. In the 2012 draft, the Jags took Anger in the third round, just five spots ahead of Russell Wilson. Can you remember another team drafting the exact emotion that its fans would be feeling for the next 15 years? Literally, they took anger.

No. 2: $20 million worth of new video boards are coming! Woo-hoo! Get a clearer look at this upcoming third-and-18 incompletion, everybody!

No. 3: At least they don’t have Lane Kiffin.

No. 4: For anyone who doesn’t think there’s hope for Gabbert someday: Last night, Brandon Weeden came off the bench on national TV and led a team to sole possession of first place in something other than the BQBL. WEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

No. 5: One more week of fake Jones-Drew trades before the deadline. Cue up the ESPN.com NFL Trade Machine that doesn’t exist!

No. 6: Fairly new owner Shad Khan is worth nearly $4 billion and subscribes to the “it’s a marathon, not a sprint” philosophy (which all lousy franchises should embrace). In Jacksonville’s case, maybe it’s one of those Forrest Gump–type marathons that might never end, but still. I have faith that Khan might turn things around, even if it might be because I’m overwhelmingly partial to dads with long hair and goofy mustaches.

Whoops, wrong guy.

There he is! Wait, Shad — could you pose with a fake Jaguar statue for me?

I love Shad Khan. Over the long haul, the 122nd most wealthy man in America might save Jacksonville’s wretched mess, whether it happens in Florida or elsewhere. (In general, you should never bet against really really really really really really rich guys unless they’re named James Dolan.) There’s a chance the Jags have bottomed out already, that we’ll be remembering this specific week as their darkest hour. And if that’s the case, here are 20 depressing realities about the 2013 Jacksonville Jaguars on October 4, 2013.

1. They’ve been outscored 129 to 31 and fallen behind by at least 16 points in all four defeats. There hasn’t been a glimmer of hope other than a safety that gave them a 2-0 lead against Kansas City in Week 1 … followed by the Chiefs scoring the next 28 points. So … yeah.

2. Jacksonville’s offense has averaged a league-low 7.25 points, a league-low 224 yards (almost 50 fewer than the second-worst offense) and a league-high 726,547 times when fans said the words, “I mean, seriously … Tebow can’t be any worse than this, right?”

3. Our friends at Football Outsiders say the 2013 Jags have the worst DVOA ever through four weeks: a staggering minus-83.8 percent. I can’t even properly explain how bad that is — imagine a pro golfer shooting a 112 at the Masters and you’re lukewarm.

4. The phrase “historically bad” has become the single most overused phrase in sports. Our reliance on this phrase in 2013 has been historically bad. But you know what? The numbers say Blaine Gabbert has been HISTORICALLY BAD this season, even if it hasn’t entirely been his fault. He’s thrown 67 passes for just 300 yards, completing 49.3 percent of them (for 4.48 YPA), with zero touchdowns and five picks. He has been sacked 10 times. He has generated three points for Jacksonville and 14 points for Jacksonville’s opponents (thanks to two pick-sixes). His QB rating (30.7) doesn’t even add up to half of the Trudeau Line (63.9). He’s 90 points behind Peyton Manning’s QBR with an impossible 1.4 QBR — a metric that goes from 0 to 100. In other words, Blaine Gabbert could be dead and he’d be only 1.4 points worse.

Gabbert has played so poorly that the Madden video game sarcastically included a “Blaine Gabbert Legacy Award” for this year’s game. The joke was that you have to work hard and earn tons of points to qualify for different Legacy awards — Elway, Sanders, Marino, etc. — but for Gabbert’s Legacy Award, you need to earn only two points. Now that’s just mean. I don’t think Madden should be piling on Blaine’s Season From Hell like this.

(Wait, they did this three months ago? My bad.)

5. After watching all three of Gabbert’s interceptions bounce off the hands of Jacksonville receivers in Indy last Sunday, a sympathetic Bradley told reporters afterward, “I’m staying strong with Blaine because he competed and he’s doing what we asked him to do … I saw him do some things. He took off and ran, although we have to teach him how to slide better. If you watch the film in that matter, you’d say, ‘OK, we’ve got to find ways to help him.'”

What happened 48 hours later? The Jags traded Eugene Monroe to Baltimore for two future picks. Here’s some help, Blaine! We just traded your starting left tackle! This was another NBA-like tankeroo move — the Jaguars gunning for Play Dead for Ted pole position while destroying Gabbert’s already-decimated confidence so they won’t feel bad about picking Teddy Bridgewater. I don’t know whether to applaud them or file a police report.

6. The only person taking more abuse than Gabbert: Jacksonville’s mascot, Jaxson De Ville, who settled a paintball bet with Indy’s mascot after last Sunday’s 37-3 thrashing by taking 40 paintballs from 10 yards away. Even Don Jon isn’t into mascot-abuse porn, but you might be. Here’s the link. What a trouper. I have De Ville third on Jacksonville’s MVP ballot right now. That’s not even a joke.

7. How bad are the 2013 Jaguars? This Sunday, they’re getting 12 points against a 1-3 Rams team that has fallen behind by 20-plus points in all three losses and scored 18 points total the past two weeks. That’s right, SAM BRADFORD is laying 12 in a National Football League game in a scenario other than “the other team was wiped out by a staph infection.”

8. You’d think USAToday.com’s recent non-ironic headline “Could Alabama beat the Jacksonville Jaguars?” would be the most sobering Jaguars-related headline of 2013. Nope. I’m still going with “The Jaguars Draft ‘War Room’ Is As Utterly Depressing As You Would Think.” I implore you to click that link.

9. Even when the Jaguars do right by their fans, they get in trouble. Two weeks ago, they tried a “free beer” promotion that drew the ire of MADD. At least that convinced them to cancel “Throw Your Own Feces Night.”

10. This can’t be forgotten — it’s been a REALLY abrupt swoon. The Jaguars weren’t expected to make the playoffs, but they weren’t expected to be reprehensibly appalling, either. Only seven weeks ago, Sports Illustrated posted a flattering Bradley piece revolving around themes like “The Bradley Effect” and “In Gus We Trust” and including this:

It’s difficult to overestimate the degree of enthusiasm the Jaguars players have for Bradley and the atmospheric change (he’s) brought to a deflated locker room in his few short months on the job. In my years of covering the NFL, I can remember witnessing only one other similar honeymoon between a first-time head coach and the perennial loser he inherited: Tony Dungy’s inaugural offseason in Tampa Bay in 1996.

He should have gone with Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries instead.

Meanwhile, ESPN The Magazine‘s 2013 NFL Preview issue featured an extended piece about Jacksonville’s embrace of advanced metrics. My favorite part was the story about Tony Khan (Shad’s son and an executive VP for the team) putting three handwritten sheets of paper on Bradley’s desk last spring.

Here’s how writer David Fleming described the moment: “The page titled ‘Blaine QB Rating Stats’ revealed that when adjusted for drops, throwaways and spikes, Gabbert’s passer rating in 2012 was a respectable 82.8. The next page, ‘Blaine Time in the Pocket,’ detailed the Jags’ woeful pass protection: The line gave Gabbert an average of just 2.56 seconds to throw the ball. When he had more than 2.6 seconds to throw, his QB rating jumped to 84.5. The final page, ‘Blaine Under Pressure,’ showed that when facing a six-man rush, Gabbert ranked first among QBs in completion percentage. Bradley was convinced that Gabbert deserved another shot.”

So to recap: When you give Blaine Gabbert a ton of time, he’s respectable … you know, as opposed to other QBs who are getting a ton of time. This advanced-metrics revolution is really taking off! Do you think Bradley wishes he set those three pages on fire?

11. Speaking of Gus, he will either be remembered for going 0-16 in 2013 or for starring in the smash-hit sensation “DO YOUR JOB!” video, which was every bit as good as Kimmel’s fake twerking video in which a girl caught on fire, only Bradley’s wasn’t fake. Do your job. Do your job! (Gus, I’m talking to you.) DO YOUR JOB!!!!!!!!!!!!

12. I can’t imagine any NFL franchise has faced a bleaker situation for online jersey purchases. Up until the special sale ended yesterday, you could buy authentic home jerseys of Jacksonville’s “best” three offensive players (Gabbert, Jones-Drew and Justin Blackmon) for less than $110 combined. They were 40 percent off from already being 40 percent off. Knock yourselves out, Jags fans. Treat yourself. But if you’re scared of committing jersey money to someone who might not be a Jaguar next season, and you want to audible and purchase a quality Jags throwback jersey that will never fall out of style … well, somehow there’s only one choice: a David Garrard replica for $49.99.

Seriously, that’s the only choice. The Jaguars don’t even have throwback jerseys. Shouldn’t we be able to purchase a throwback Freddie Taylor jersey with an accompanying cast and crutches? Why can’t I do this? Instead of splurging on old-school Garrard, I’d recommend an ironic “BLACKMON KNOWS” Nike T-shirt that’s on sale for 25 percent off. Blackmon Knows … four-game suspensions!

13. Is there any hope for these last 12 games? Football Outsiders tells us that 44 percent of Jacksonville’s drives in 2013 have been three-and-outers. (Or as they’re called in some circles, “Gabberts.”) The Jaguars are averaging 0.58 points per drive (compared to Denver’s 3.43 points per drive) and 16.2 yards per drive (compared to Denver’s 41.98 yards per drive). The Jags offense has punted 61.5 percent of the time and turned the ball over 15.4 percent of the time — so 76.9 percent of the time, something ranging between “bad” and “horrific” happens within three plays. Again, it’s a good thing their punter wears this jersey.

14. The best case I’ve heard for Gabbert turning around Jacksonville’s offense: Jones-Drew recently volunteered his support by saying, “Sometimes things don’t work out the way you want them to. You have to fight through some things. In The Shawshank Redemption, what is said at the end of the movie? Sometimes you have to crawl through 500 feet worth of [stuff] to come out clean on the other side. You have to go through adversity to understand your true character. Blaine does have special talent. He can make every throw on the field.”

Hold on, lemme use my Morgan Freeman voice and see if this works.

Blaine Gabbert crawled through 500 yards of shit-smelling foulness the likes of which I can’t imagine. At that point, he threw a pass that deflected off the hands of Cecil Shorts and into the hands of a waiting—

(Nope.)

15. I can’t believe we’ve come this far without mentioning the Gabbert/Real American video. Maybe it’s the second-best case for Gabbert turning around Jacksonville’s offense: Are you really telling me that this so-obviously-destined-to-become-ironic-once-Gabbert-loses-his-job clip is just going to become ironic when Gabbert loses his job and that’s that? (Thinking.) Yeah, you’re right, that’s where we’re headed.

16. Then again, Gabbert did inspire this excellent idea for a rule change from a San Diego reader named Brian: “What if eight games into every season, the league’s worst team was forced to sign and start Tim Tebow for the rest of that season? Wouldn’t that be a great story line/incentive to win? Why not make things interesting? It’s not fair that they’re forcing us to watch the likes of Blaine Gabbert or Mike Glennon throw up all over themselves when Tebow would be infinitely more entertaining. GIVE THE PEOPLE WHAT THEY WANT!”

(To be fair, a few Jags fans had a “Bring Back Tebow” rally in mid-September, and more media members than fans showed up. Still, I love this idea. And the Jaguars fall to 0-8 … according to the controversial Tebow Booby Prize rule, they now HAVE to start Tim Tebow next week.)

17. That reminds me, the 2013 Jaguars actually have an “out” — they could make their season 10,000 times more interesting by signing Tebow (a hometown hero, no less), starting him for the next three months, selling a few million dollars’ worth of Tebow jerseys to thousands of fans sporting Tebowners no matter how it plays out, and hopefully — repeat: hopefully — ending up with the league’s worst record anyway. Then again, if their goal is to bottom out NBA-style for Bridgewater, that’s a dangerous plan. Tebow won nine of 17 games as an NFL starter (including an OT playoff game). Gabbert has won just five of his 26 starts.

So if you’re scoring at home: (a) Tebow is an above-.500 starting QB (it’s true), and (b) Gabbert has as many career NFL victories as Claire Danes has creepy, keeping-her-bra-on sex scenes in Homeland. For Play Dead for Ted purposes, the Jags are better off with Blaine.

18. The highest NFL gambling spread of all time happened on December 5, 1976, when the defending champion Steelers were favored by 24 over the winless Bucs. (Pittsburgh covered with a 42-0 blowout.) In Week 6, the Jags will probably be getting something in the range of 27 or 28 points at Denver. I can’t see that record-breaking number changing unless the Jaguars either beat St. Louis on Sunday or come damned close. And you know what else? I plan on laying the points with Denver as long as it’s under 35. Give me Evil Manning laying 34.5 right now and I’m taking it.

19. A reader named Brooks in Waco e-mailed recently: “I’m at the local zoo the other day when I see this display: ‘Jaguars were originally placed on the federal endangered species list in 1969, but lost that protection north of the US-Mexico border due to what the US Fish and Wildlife service termed a typographic ‘oversight.’ Is this a perfect metaphor for absurd mismanagement? Or does this just tell us that no one cares about the Jaguars in any context?” Or is it possible that the entire two-decade Jaguars run has been a typographic oversight? Regardless, these are the e-mails you get about a football team that might be headed for 0-16.

20. In my Week 3 column, one of my readers brought up the concept of Clock Games — whenever a crappy football team loses by a score that, if you flipped it, could be the time on a clock. After we posted that e-mail, a Washington reader named Alex Sligar created a website called NFLClockGames.com. You can find your Clock Game standings there for 2013 and for all time, too. I know, the Internet is an amazing place. The Jags have three Clock Games in four weeks — 2:28, 9:19 and 3:37 — which puts them on pace to break the Clock Game record of 10.

As Alex explains, “Your 1990 Pats tied three other teams with nine Clock Games, falling one short of the ’91 Indianapolis Colts. The ’91 Colts had an amazing 10 Clock Games and were also shut out twice! Our biggest Clock Game margin ever: The 1979 Jets had a 3:56 against your Pats. We’ve had 15 Clock Games in the Super Bowl — the biggest one was the 10:55 49ers-Broncos game. What’s the reward for having the most Clock Games? You’re usually on the clock first come late-April. So say it with me now, ‘With the first pick in the 2014 draft, the Jacksonville Jaguars select … ‘”

And really, that’s the best thing you could say about this Jacksonville Jaguars season. Like Andy Dufresne and Blaine Gabbert, they’re crawling through 500 yards of shit-smelling foulness, trying to get to the other side. Andy had Zihuatanejo. Blaine has the CFL. And the Jaguars have Teddy Bridgewater and the 112th wealthiest man in the world, as well as the knowledge that it’s a results league and they’re trying to stay away from that. Next stop: 0-16. Do your job, Gus.

Let’s hit the Week 5 picks …

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(Home teams in caps)

BROWNS (-4) over Bills

The Skunk! Eight quick notes on last night …

1. The Cleveland Browns are in sole possession of first place! Here, look! THE CLEVELAND BROWNS ARE IN SOLE POSSESSION OF FIRST PLACE!

2. When the NFL Network showed that “Cleveland is 3-2 for the first time since 2001” graphic last night, I vowed not to complain about anything that happens with the Patriots for at least 10 days. And I plan on sticking to that. For at least 30 more paragraphs.

3. You know it’s been a rough 14 years for Browns fans when they’re saying the words, “Oh no, Hoyer is down … “

4. I’m still waiting to find out that Josh Freeman watched last night’s game with eight voodoo dolls and a mason jar of chicken blood.

5. Go figure: A battle between Brandon Weeden and Jeff Tuel turned out to be our most exciting Thursday Night Football game in five years.

6. I’m starting to wonder if Grantland’s Andrew Sharp has telepathic powers — he specifically requested that we send him to Cleveland this week for an Indians/Browns doubleheader. Our Bad QB League columnist randomly wants to be in Cleveland for what becomes “Weeden vs. Tuel I: The Eerie on Lake Erie”? That’s fishy.

7. I will bet you $500 that Rich Eisen never says the words “Let’s bring in our star of the game, Brandon Weeden” after a Thursday Night Football game ever again.

8. Lombardi!!!!!!!!!

Of course, the good times in Cleveland lasted for only 12 hours. This morning, we found out that Brian Hoyer tore his ACL. That means we’re either headed for the Josh Freeman era or Brandon Weeden II. I don’t have a vote, but I vote for signing Freeman. Either way, this e-mail from Kevin in St. Louis summed up the past 24 hours: “I just got this sad response from a Cleveland fan, a Bible teacher and the kindest person I know: ‘The currency of Cleveland sports is adversity. And sending great players and coaches to other markets. Hope is not recognized. My heart is stone on this subject.'” Well then.

Saints (-1.5) over BEARS

DOLPHINS (-3) over Ravens

I love both of these picks. Last Monday, I even parlayed the Saints and Dolphins with “Kobe will fly to Germany for a mysterious surgical treatment within the next 120 hours.” Feeling good right now.

Jaguars (+11.5) over RAMS

I know we just spent more than 3,000 words explaining why the 2013 Jags are hopeless. But I can’t lay this many points with Sam Bradford unless you’re holding me upside down and electrocuting my scrotum … and even then, I’d probably fight you off for a solid hour.

News flash: It’s not insane to take historically bad teams once the spreads shift against them to the point that it becomes ridiculous. The 2008 Lions went 0-16 but 7-9 against the spread, playing four straight single-digit games from Week 6 through Week 9. The pathetic 1990 Pats lost a Week 7 game by seven points in Miami to a 12-4 Dolphins team. The secretly egregious 2010 Panthers (2-14, blown out 10 times) nearly won in New Orleans in Week 4 and beat San Francisco in Week 7. The list goes on and on. Historically bad teams usually make a couple runs in October before rolling over and playing dead. And again, you can’t lay this many points with SAM BRADFORD. Come on.

Speaking of Sam …

Sam Bradford’s career stats: 10,471 yards, 77.8 rating, 52 TDs, 37 picks, 58.3 completion percentage

Josh Freeman’s career stats: 13,534 yards, 78.8 rating, 80 TDs, 66 picks, 58.2 completion percentage

Sam Bradford’s career record: 16-29-1

Josh Freeman’s career record: 24-35-0

Sam Bradford’s birthday: November 8, 1987

Josh Freeman’s birthday: January 13, 1988

(Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm.)

PACKERS (-7) over Lions

That Lions bandwagon is getting a little too crowded right now, even if Ndamukong Suh has been playing out of his mind. I think Aaron Rodgers is good for 40 fantasy points this week against that ravaged Lions secondary. Regardless, here’s our Sneaky-Good Watch for Week 5: the Reggie Bush–Lions match … Seattle’s pass rush with Chris Clemons back … every kick to Trindon Holliday … Kiko Alonso’s Defensive ROY chances … having Morena Baccarin back on Sunday nights … Greg Schiano’s “First Coach Fired” stock … every game that’s called by Ian Eagle … Le’Veon Bell’s “one bright spot of the Steelers’ season” stock … Carolina’s fantasy defense this weekend … Ndamukong Suh’s superstar potential … the much-anticipated Antonio Gates comeback season (we’ve been waiting three years!) … Matt Cassel stock (still dirt-cheap) … the distance between Jimmy Graham and every other tight end (growing by the week if Gronk doesn’t come back soon).

Patriots (-1) over BENGALS

When I was in London for the Olympics last year, I woke up one morning, checked my e-mails and found out that the Lakers traded for Dwight Howard. I thought there couldn’t be a worse way to wake up. Well, waking up Monday morning to Vince Wilfork’s season-ending Achilles injury was 10 times worse. My favorite current Patriot. Heart of the defense. Lovable in every respect. What a bummer. A Boston reader named Ken Koehler e-mailed me that “I would rather tear my own Achilles than have Big Vince out for the year,” which reminded me of my “Gone in Eight Minutes” mailbag in 2008, in which someone asked if I’d rather blow out my own knee than have it happen to Tom Brady. My response still stands …

I think it depends on your mindset as a sports fan in that specific time, as well as your age. For instance, I wouldn’t absorb Brady’s injury because I wouldn’t want to be on crutches for a few months when I have two young kids, and besides, they won three Super Bowls this decade. But let’s say you’re my friend Mike Tollin, a die-hard Philly fan who’s a little older than me and has older kids. If the Mets and Phillies were tied with a week to go and Ryan Howard’s wrist was broken by a pitch, would Mike do the switcheroo and take the broken wrist? Well, I called him and here was his first response: “The left one or the right one?”

COLTS (+3) over Seahawks

Terrific slate of early games this Sunday, thanks to the Bye Week Fairy stealing four teams with a combined record of 2-14 in Week 5. This is the best one — you can feel the nail-biter coming, and if anyone knows how to play the “We’re underdogs at home, NOBODY BELIEVES IN US!” card, it’s Chuck Strong. And don’t sleep on the whole “Andrew Luck playing with a massive chip on his shoulder because everyone spent the past few months raving about the Wilson-Kaepernick-Griffin trio” — couldn’t you see Luck’s brilliance becoming the dominant story line out of Sunday’s games?

By the way, we just kicked off a brutally unfair travel stretch for the Seahawks (perpetually handicapped by being stuck in the Pacific Northwest, far away from everybody): at Houston (last week, 10 a.m. PT), at Indy (this week, 10 a.m. PT), home for Tennessee, at Arizona (Thursday night, no less!), at St. Louis (10 days later on Monday night), home for Tampa, at Atlanta (10 a.m. PT). Good luck getting your body clocks adjusted, everybody. Seattle will fly 28,238 miles in all this season, more than anyone but San Francisco. Compare that to the Lions, who will fly just 4,202 miles for their eight road games this season (none on Thursday night, either). Does this stuff matter a little? A lot? Sometimes? It’s just too bad Nate Silver isn’t launching his own website soon that could explain something like this.

(Late update: Barnwell tackled this subject for Grantland in July, although he did say that we needed a lot more research to be done. This may have been the exact moment when Nate decided to launch his site.)

Minnesota’s Bye Week (-5.5) over Tampa’s Bye Week

I feel guilty about dumping Josh Freeman for Russell Wilson last season. Not as guilty as Ashton Kutcher feels after he dumped Demi Moore for Mila Kunis and watched Demi spin out of control … but still, a little bit guilty. Here we were in happier times.

Chiefs (-3) over TITANS

It’s like Andy Reid ditched his first wife (Philly) for a much younger trophy wife (KC) — he should have pushed it up a notch by losing 50 pounds, doing yoga every day and buying a Ferrari. Anyway, as much as I like the Titans as a possible playoff team, Kansas City’s defense is a little too frightening for me to stomach the thought of the sentence, “I’ll take Ryan Fitzpatrick and the points.”

Quick Chiefs tangent: Steve in Indianapolis wonders, “Don’t the Chiefs seem eerily similar to the Kerry Collins led Titans of 2008? They were 13-3 that year with a strong defense but a ball control offense that nobody was really scared of. Did anyone really think (outside of Tennessee) that the 2008 Titans would not blow up in the playoffs? That’s where I see the Chiefs and Alex Smith … is anyone really afraid of him when we get to January? Come on … he’s Alex Smith.”

You know what’s funny? We said the same exact thing about the 13-3 Niners in 2011 … who were helmed by none other than … (drumroll please) … Mr. Alex Smith! Some other examples from this century: the 2001 Bears finished 13-3 with Jim Miller and Shane Matthews (wait, what?) … the 2003 Chiefs finished 13-3 with Trent Green (who’s slightly too good for this paragraph, but still) … the 2005 Broncos finished 13-3 with Jake Plummer … the 2006 Ravens finished 13-3 with a long-in-the-tooth Steve McNair … and the 2006 Bears finished 13-3 with the immortal Rex Grossman. So, depending on how you feel about Trent Green in 2003, we’re averaging slightly more or slightly less than one shaky 13-3 QB every other year in the 21st century. In other words … THE CHIEFS ARE FINISHING 13-3. Lock it down right now.

GIANTS (-1.5) over Eagles

Here’s where the Giants rope in their fans with the old, “Wait a second, we’re only a game back in the division” trick on Sunday night. By the way, I think this is either the 27th or 28th time that I have definitively felt like Michael Vick’s career is over.

Panthers (-2.5) over CARDS

Is it possible Carolina is better than we think? You could argue that it’s two plays away from 3-0. The Panthers went toe-to-toe against Seattle in Week 1. They should have beaten Buffalo in Week 2. They annihilated the Giants in Week 3. Football Outsiders has them ranked sixth in DVOA. Ron Rivera hasn’t done anything dumb in three solid weeks. (Thinking.) Take my wallet. Just take it. Hide it from me. I don’t trust myself.

Washington’s Bye Week (-6) over Pittsburgh’s Bye Week

Doug in South Carolina puts it best: “There used to be two things you could always count on. The Steelers being a competitive, respectable, tough professional football team, and the Simmons’ phone ringing and distracting the podcast interview you were giving when you did the podcast from home. Sigh.”

Come on, Doug — I’ve moved on to bigger and better screwups, like mispronouncing at least one name per preview in our “Bill & Jalen’s NBA Preview” series on the Grantland Channel. Sorry, “Ennis” Kanter. My bad, Nikola “Peko-vic.” I’ll get you next time, Jonas “Valan-SHOONIS.” If you haven’t seen any of the previews yet, here’s my favorite of the first five (Charlotte), if only for the Ronald Miller cameo.

COWBOYS (+9) over Broncos

And now it’s time for America’s favorite new game, “A Snarky, Insecure-About-The-Pats Boston Fan Shits On Denver’s Incredible-So-Far 2013 Season!”

1. Congratulations, the Broncos scored 179 points in four games against the Ravens, Raiders, Giants and Eagles … four juggernauts! And three of those games were in Denver! What an accomplishment!

2. We learn this every season: You definitely want to peak in September.

3. Wake me up when it’s Week 12 and they have to travel to New England and Kansas City in back-to-back weeks.

4. You definitely want to bring an explosive, pass-happy, high-scoring offensive attack into January and February when the weather is freezing and you can’t be explosive and pass-happy anymore. Great plan. You know they’re playing the Super Bowl outdoors in February in New Jersey, right? Good luck with that one.

5. Peyton Manning under 40 degrees.

6. The Farmer’s Almanac predicts an especially cold winter, saying “We’re using a very strong four-letter word to describe this winter, which is C-O-L-D. It’s going to be very cold.”

7. Peyton Manning in January under 40 degrees.

8. The Farmer’s Almanac predicts an especially cold winter as well as an East Coast storm between February 1 and February 3. The Super Bowl happens on February 2.

9. Peyton Manning under 40 degrees.

(I’m dropping the nitpicking/insecure/secretly jealous/undermining mic.)

RAIDERS (+5) over Chargers

I have very few gambling rules, but here’s one: “Anytime they have to change the time of a Sunday NFL game to an especially odd hour at night, and it’s directly following a playoff baseball game that could stretch for four-plus hours and make that football game start after 9 p.m., and that game is happening in a beaten-down stadium that’s been battling major sewage issues and will have the craziest fans in the league on hand … TAKE THE POINTS.”

Speaking of shaky, a Bellevue reader named Ryan suggested that I rename the “Shaky Watch” after the grossest pizza chain in Los Angeles, Shakey’s Pizza. Great idea. Here’s your Shakey’s Watch for Week 5: the Andy Dalton era … the thought of paying Joe Flacco $121 million … the Chip Kelly era … Homeland, Season 3 … Scandal, Season 3 … Giants fans taking solace in knowing that at least they have an awesome front four … the fantasy studness of Doug Martin and A.J. Green … Tennessee’s playoff hopes if Jake Locker can’t come back within six weeks … the Morris Claiborne trade … the fact that my wife is pushing to see John Mayer at the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday night and I don’t think I can get out of it … Inside the NFL‘s “special guest cameos” this season … Detroit’s secondary … any sentence with the words “Jay Cutler” and “maturing” … Detroit’s closing prowess with a big lead … Baltimore’s running game … any safety who changes his name to “Hitner.”

Jets (+10) over FALCONS

An Atlanta reader named Danny Kneecaps explains: “I have a layup for you this week. It would be a dunk if you had any ups, but we all have our crosses to bear. The Falcons have now been outscored in the second half of six consecutive games (including last year’s playoffs). Significant injuries to key players like Stephen Jackson, Sean Weatherspoon, Kroy Bierman and one legged Roddy White leave this team with no way to close out games. In addition, in its last 10 home games, the Falcons have only beaten one team by more than 10 points: the New York football Giants. When New York’s better half comes to the Dome on Monday, grab the points.” Sure thing, Danny Kneecaps.

49ERS (-6) over Texans

Barnwell tried to defend the notion that Matt Schaub isn’t done yet, and that we’ve seen teams compete for Super Bowls with worse QBs than him. I get that point. But I also think QBs, closers, hockey goalies and coaches can pass the point of no return with cities and fan bases … and Schaub hit that point last week. When they’re lustily booing you at home, burning your jersey after games, talking about your pick-six streak and jokingly offering “pick-six burgers” in your honor … it’s gone a little too far.

I just don’t see how he bounces back. Could Schaub and Gary Kubiak be turning into the new Rivers and Norv? This e-mail from Mike P. in Houston captured the Schaub-related feelings from Texans fans in my inbox this week:

“Matt Schaub is like a cheap vodka. If you sprinkle him into the mix, you can live with it; hell, you might even have a few winners. When the rest of the drink is all pulling together, you hardly notice him and all is well. Now imagine drinking that cheap vodka EVERY DAY, and when you need a big play, you have to drink it straight. What happens? You gag and eventually puke. Eventually the sight or smell alone makes you nauseous. Every time I watch Matt Schaub drop back to pass late in a game, I get nauseous because I never know when he’s going to make me throw up again.”

(Needless to say, I’m laying the points.)

This Week: 1-0

Last Week: 9-6

Season: 29-31-4

This column originally stated that the Jaguars lost at Tennessee in Week 1; they lost at home to Kansas City. The error has been corrected.