NFL Previews for Week 10

Let’s move to what the networks are saying about the upcoming action this Sunday in the League Where They Play for Pay.

First, ESPN has the features it will be airing for its studio shows.

ESPN’s Weekend and Monday NFL Studio Features

ESPN’s Sunday NFL Countdown will preview the day’s matchups Sunday at 11 a.m. ET with Chris Berman and analysts Cris Carter, Mike Ditka, Tom Jackson and Keyshawn Johnson. ESPN senior analyst Chris Mortensen and NFL insider Adam Schefter will provide headlines and league news.

The two-hour program will include reports from Rachel Nichols covering the Cincinnati Bengals at Pittsburgh Steelers, Ed Werder at the Cowboys – Packers game, and Sal Paolantonio in San Diego for the Eagles at Chargers. Other highlights:

Cedric Benson: When he was selected with the No. 4 pick in the 2005 NFL Draft, many projected Cedric Benson as the next great Bears running back. After three seasons marked by on- and off-the-field problems, the Bears released him. Tom Jackson profiles Benson’s road to redemption as the NFL’s second-leading rusher and a key member of the Bengals’ 6-2 season.

Patriots/Colts – Rivalry Remembered: The Patriots and Colts were division rivals in the old AFC East, and it feels that way again with the seventh straight regular season game between the two teams Sunday. Greg Garber visits with former Patriots and Colts for their insight on the rivalry.

Mayne Event – Kim-Il Zong 8: In the past, Kenny Mayne has told seven cautionary tales of the mythical Kim-Il Zong, the most expensive bust in Seahawks history. In this week’s Mayne Event, Mayne presents what happened when Seattle finally cut ties with Zong.

Virtual Playbook – Carson Palmer vs. Troy Polamalu: Using the Virtual Playbook, Jackson previews the matchup of former University of Southern California teammates – Cincinnati quarterback Carson Palmer and Steelers safety Troy Polamalu.

NostraDitka – Predicting a Perfect Season for the Saints: Legendary coach and player Mike Ditka channels his alter ego – NostraDitka – as he predicts whether the Saints are en-route a perfect season.

Start ‘Em or Sit ‘Em with Matthew Berry and Merril Hoge: ESPN’s fantasy football guru Matthew Berry and NFL analyst Merril Hoge debate which players to start or sit this weekend.

Berman, Carter, Ditka, Jackson and Johnson will pick the biggest games of the day and tell fans which players will make the biggest impact in NFL’s Week 10 action. The list of game picks will be posted on www.espn.com/sundaycountdown after the show.


MONDAY NIGHT COUNTDOWN
, 7 P.M. ON ESPN

Monday Night Countdown with Berman, Carter, Ditka, Jackson, Johnson, Mortensen and Schefter (in Bristol) and Stuart Scott, Matt Millen and Steve Young (at the MNF game in Cleveland) will review Sunday’s games and preview Monday Night Football. The 90-minute, pre-game show will lead into the kickoff of the Baltimore Ravens at Cleveland Browns (8:30 p.m.) game, featuring Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden and Ron Jaworski.


Reporters Suzy Kolber (Ravens) and Michele Tafoya (Browns) will cover the teams. Other highlights:


Soundtracks – Best of Ray Lewis
: For the past decade, Ray Lewis has been the fiery leader of one of the NFL’s best defenses. In this week’s “Soundtracks,” Countdown relives some of the best in-game audio by one of the league’s fiercest defensive leaders.

Unmasked – Terrell Suggs: One of NFL’s best pass rushers, Terrell Suggs commands the attention of an entire offense. Countdown takes viewers under the helmet to reveal what motivates Suggs.

WEEKLY MONDAY NIGHT COUNTDOWN SEGMENTS

TEAMS AT 20
Every 20 minutes reporters Tafoya and Kolber will update news from the teams in their preparations for the game, beginning with NFL Live at 3:30 p.m.

FIELD PASS
Countdown offers an all-access look at pre-game preparations as the players get ready for kickoff. Analysts will also breakdown the important storylines and key players before the game.

C’MON MAN
Countdown personalities share their head-scratching plays from Week 10.

In addition, Monday Night Football’s Tirico, Jaworski and Gruden will preview the night’s match-up, with Mortensen and Schefter covering breaking news from around the league, and the Countdown analysts offering their “Lead Pipe Lock” predictions for the game.


NFL MATCHUP
, SUNDAY 3 A.M. AND 7:30 A.M. ON ESPN

NFL Matchup with host Sal Paolantonio and analysts Merril Hoge and Ron Jaworski will preview the weekend’s games by bringing viewers inside the film room for the Xs and Os analysis of the matchups. The 30-minute program – taped each week at NFL Films in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey – highlights team strategy and game planning. This week’s features:

Patriots @ Colts: Communication in the Secondary – Hoge illustrates how the Colts’ inexperience at the cornerback position will hurt their chances against the Patriots.

Patriots @ Colts: Colts
Offense vs. Patriots Defense
– Jaworski demonstrates how the Colts offense will rely on precise execution Sunday in Indianapolis.

Eagles @ Chargers
– Jaworski reveals how the Chargers have attacked defenses with route combinations.

Bengals @ Steelers
– Hoge shows how the Bengals must keep Ben Roethlisberger in the pocket and maintain coverage responsibilities if the Steelers quarterback breaks contain and scrambles.

Cowboys @ Packers
– Jaworski unveils how the Packers defense must recognize double moves by quarterback Tony Romo and the Cowboys offense to be successful.

Lions @ Vikings
– Hoge displays how the Vikings put opposing defenses in a pass-run bind, making it more difficult for third level defenders to help out against the run.

Ravens @ Browns
– Jaworski highlights how Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco struggled to recognize disguised defensive plays last Sunday against the Bengals, and how he will have similar problems against the Browns defense.

Saints @ Rams – Hoge pulls out his ‘Coaches Clicker ‘and spotlights how the Saints left guard Carl Nicks has been a catalyst for the top-ranked offense in the league.

CBS will have a rather interesting feature on Sunday’s NFL Today.

“THE NFL TODAY” FOCUSES IN ON “WHAT NFL COACH IS POLITICAL TIMBER” WITH

FRANK LUNTZ FOR WEEK 10 ON SUNDAY, NOV. 15

THE NFL ON CBS, home of Super Bowl XLIV and broadcasting its Golden Anniversary 50th year of the NFL, continues its 2009 NFL season on Sunday, Nov. 15 (1:00-7:00 PM, ET) beginning with THE NFL TODAY (12:00 Noon-1:00 PM, ET).

This week THE NFL TODAY welcomes expert in communication and pioneer of the “Instant Response” focus group, Frank Luntz, in the studio to rate sound bites of several coaches and players. Based on his expertise Luntz will answer, “What NFL coach should run for political office?” and “What controversial NFL star player is better off keeping his mouth shut?”

James Brown hosts THE NFL TODAY along with analysts Dan Marino, Boomer Esiason, Shannon Sharpe and Bill Cowher, NFL TODAY “General Manager” Charley Casserly, as well as Lesley Visser and Sam Ryan reporting.

Eric Mann is senior producer and Bob Matina is director of THE NFL TODAY.

And Phil Simms and Dan Dierdorf talk about the games coming on Sunday.

THE NFL ON CBS: WEEK 10 (SUNDAY, NOV. 15)

AUDIBLES WITH LEAD “NFL ON CBS” ANALYST PHIL SIMMS AND DAN DIERDORF

The CBS Television Network, home of Super Bowl XLIV, continues its Golden Anniversary 50th year broadcasting the NFL with THE NFL ON CBS on Sunday, Nov. 15 (1:00-7:00 PM, ET) beginning with THE NFL TODAY, the Network’s one-hour studio show (12:00 NOON-1:00 PM, ET), live from THE NFL TODAY studio in New York City.

THE NFL ON CBS lead announce team of Jim Nantz, who this year is marking his 25th with CBS Sports, and Phil Simms call the action from the Cincinnati Bengals-Pittsburgh Steelers game live from Heinz Field in Pittsburgh, Pa. Lance Barrow is the coordinating producer and lead game producer and Mike Arnold is the lead game director.

Throughout the 2009 season, THE NFL ON CBS will broadcast all of its games each week in HDTV, the highest definition television format – 1080i lines of picture resolution – along with 5.1 digital audio.

Sean McManus is President, CBS News and Sports, and serves as executive producer of CBS Sports’ coverage of THE NFL ON CBS. Harold Bryant is Vice President, Production, CBS Sports.

* * * * *

PHIL SIMMS

(On Cincinnati vs. Pittsburgh AFC North Rivalry and being tied for first at 6-2): Well, of course I never played in it, but I understand the rivalry surrounding it. When I once saw Bill Cowher go in his locker room and do the Cincinnati Bengals chant, ‘Who dey? Who dey,’ and all that, it showed me how heated and personal this rivalry is. I sense it every time I’ve done one of the games. I did the first one this year. It will live up to it.

(On Cincinnati’s best start in 20 years): You always have to find ways to win your division. The Bengals have changed their football team. It didn’t happen overnight, but they’re tougher and play a different style. It matches up better against Pittsburgh and Baltimore at this time. That’s one of the biggest, if not the biggest reason, they’re 6-2. When I read and watch nightly shows about the NFL, it’s interesting that sometimes Carson Palmer’s name doesn’t even come up when they talk about the Bengals. It is about their defense. It is about Mike Zimmer, the defensive coordinator. It is about Cedric Benson, and oh, by the way, Carson Palmer’s still there. That is an example of what a well-rounded team they’ve become. And that is why they’re 6-2.

(On Pittsburgh): The big thing about the Pittsburgh Steelers is that even with four defensive starters out in Denver, they overcame and made some great plays to win. But the biggest thing is the offensive line.Last year when I did their games, I really never could get past their offensive line. But now their offensive line is back to Steeler football – big and physical. They’re unified. They work well together. We are always trying to find a weak link to a football team and last year we said the offensive line was it for the Steelers. You can’t say that anymore. They’ve really, really played well so far this year.

DAN DIERDORF

(On Washington): For the Redskins’ second half of the season, it’s all about being professionals. You’re being paid to play. Your season, in terms of making the playoffs, has gone up in smoke. They’re not in a good position where they have to win their remaining games to go 10-6. So, the playoffs are an unreasonable expectation for them to even be talking about at this point. Now is the time for them to be professionals and do what they are paid to do – work hard during the week; prepare well; and attempt to salvage something from this season.

It is seldom where you see a team where there is such disparity between the offensive and defensive units. They are a playoff-caliber football team defensively. And offensively, they are just woeful. They have so many injuries on the offensive line. It’s the old adage, ‘If you can’t compete on the line of scrimmage.’ I don’t care who you have playing the so-called skill positions, you can’t be competitive. With so many quality players hurt or on injured reserve, the Redskins have to throw out a different line-up every week. They just don’t compete well on the line of scrimmage. That handicaps the quarterback and the receivers. The running game also has suffered because of that.

(On Denver): In any sport, confidence can be very fleeting. At 6-0 and entering the bye week, it was all lollipops, candy canes and sunshine. It was a beautiful world. Then all of a sudden they lose two games in a row where they didn’t just lose the game, they lost the physical part of the game as well. That six-game winning streak must seem like so long ago for the Denver Broncos. They need something to feel good about. They need this game against Washington.

With two big games coming up between San Diego and the New York Giants, this is the kind of game that if Denver goes to Washington and stumbles, all of sudden Josh McDaniels will have his hands full.

Denver’s problem the past two weeks has been very simple. Their inability to run the football just cripples them offensively. They don’t have an Indianapolis passing game. Their play-action is so much of their passing game and Kyle Orton is not a deep-threat quarterback. If Denver can’t run, they’re in trouble. Washington is a really, really good defensive football team. This will be another litmus test for the Denver Broncos as to how they’re go
ing to be able to handle things in the second half of the season.

* * * * *

TRIP IN THE NFL ON CBS WAY BACK MACHINE…

In commemoration of THE NFL ON CBS celebrating its 50th year broadcasting the NFL, footage from historic highlights will be featured during each game. Included among the clips this week during the Kansas City-Oakland game will be a highlight of Super Bowl IV when the Chiefs, led by Len Dawson and Otis Taylor, beat the Vikings, 23-7, on January 11, 1970.

Fox’s NFL insider Jay Glazer touches on a bunch of subjects including last week’s visit to Afghanistan.

FOX SPORTS NOTES, QUOTES & ANECDOTES

NFC’s Best Take Center Stage:

FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader Features Saints, Vikings and Cowboys

Jay Glazer on Larry Johnson: “I Wouldn’t Touch Him”

GLAZER: THE WORST THING TO HAPPEN TO LARRY JOHNSON WAS GETTING PAID Following his release by the Chiefs, free agent running back Larry Johnson is looking for work. FOX NFL Insider Jay Glazer says that if it were his call, he wouldn’t sign him. “I like Larry. I like him an awful lot, but being completely objective, I wouldn’t touch him. Not just because of what he can do in the locker room, but his lack of productivity. The worst thing to happen to Larry was getting paid. When he got paid, he stopped running like Larry Johnson. Before that happened, Larry was a beast. Since getting paid, he’s been very hesitant, looking for the open space so he can hit a home run almost to validate himself and validate the contract.”

SURGING COWBOYS HEAD TO LAMBEAU – The 2009 NFL on FOX campaign rolls into Week 10 on Sunday, Nov. 15 with doubleheader coverage of seven exciting matchups—each presented in crystal clear HD. At 1:00 PM ET, Brett Favre leads the 7-1 Vikings into Detroit take on Matthew Stafford and the Lions. In St. Louis, Drew Brees and the Saints put their undefeated record on the line when they face Steven Jackson and the Rams. Also at 1:00 PM, the Panthers host Matt Ryan and the Falcons while the Bucs take on the Dolphins in Miami. At 4:00 PM ET, the majority of America will focus on Lambeau Field as Tony Romo and the surging Cowboys take on Aaron Rodgers and the Packers. In other late game action, Donovan McNabb and the Eagles travel west to battle Philip Rivers and the high-powered Chargers.

Coverage begins at 12:00 PM ET with America’s most-watched pregame show, FOX NFL SUNDAY. Terry Bradshaw and Curt Menefee co-host the Emmy Award-winning program and are joined by analysts Howie Long, Michael Strahan and Jimmy Johnson. The crew is joined by NFL Insider Jay Glazer who presents the latest league news and scoops in the FOX NFL SUNDAY studio and comedic prognosticator Frank Caliendo contributes his weekly “Frank’s Picks” segment. In this week’s show, the guys discuss whether it’s too soon to consider if New Orleans can go undefeated and they also recap their unbelievable trip to Afghanistan to meet the inspiring men and women stationed there.

GLAZER: BARRING A MIRACLE, RAIDERS WILL FIRE CABLE – Another week, another drama unfolds in Oakland. Raiders Owner Al Davis is working with the NFL to find a way to fire head coach Tom Cable without having to pay him. FOX NFL Insider Jay Glazer weighed in on Oakland earlier today: “Here’s the bottom line with the Raiders; if somehow they have a miraculous comeback and they make a run, he’s not getting fired. Do we see that happening? No. I think regardless Tom Cable is getting fired at the end of the year. No one wants that job.”

GLAZER ON TRIP TO AFGHANISTAN – “A LIFE CHANGING EXPERIENCE”: “From start to finish it was an emotional trip,” said FOX NFL SUNDAY’s NFL Insider Jay Glazer. “We began the trip on an actual military mission. We flew in on a C-17 from Qatar to Afghanistan and dropped all the way down to about 15,000 feet, opened up the back of the plane and dropped about 30,000 pounds of supplies to the troops on the ground fighting. At the end we were scheduled to leave but were delayed because a Special Forces Marine was killed and they ended up sending the body back to Qatar with us. We went through a Fallen Heroes C
eremony on the back of the C-17 before we took off. For me, the entire trip was life changing. It was unbelievable.”

For instant updates during the week and games from the entire NFL on FOX crew, follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/NFLONFOX. Fans can gain more access to exclusive FOX Sports content by logging on to www.facebook.com/foxsports and www.myspace.com/foxsports.

And NBC is hyping the Patriots-Colts game on Sunday Night for good reason. Al Michaels, Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison all discussed the game during a media conference call earlier in the week.

COLTS AND PATRIOTS RENEW ‘RIVALRY OF THE DECADE’ ON “SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL”

“Peyton Manning is the best pure quarterback in the National Football League but Tom Brady is my quarterback with a minute left and we’re down four points.” – “Football Night’s” Harrison

“There is no other quarterback that I would want” – “Football Night’s” Dungy on Manning

"This one is as good as anything I can remember...very similar to Dallas and San Francisco in the 90's." – SNF's Michaels on Rivalry

NEW YORK – Nov. 11, 2009 – Peyton Manning and the undefeated Indianapolis Colts (8-0) host Tom Brady and the New England Patriots (6-2), who have won three straight, in the latest installment of the 'Rivalry of the Decade' on "NBC Sunday Night Football" in a game that will have significant consequences on the AFC playoff picture.

Coverage begins with "Football Night in America," Sunday at 7 p.m. ET with Bob Costas hosting live from inside the stadium. Al Michaels (play-by-play), Cris Collinsworth (analyst) and Andrea Kremer (sideline reporter) call the action from Lucas Oil Stadium.

Dan Patrick and Keith Olbermann will co-host "Football Night" from NBC's 30 Rockefeller Plaza studios joined by Super Bowl-winning coach Tony Dungy, two-time Super Bowl winner Rodney Harrison and Sports Illustrated's Peter King. "Football Night's" Tiki Barber will report from Lambeau Field on the Cowboys-Packers game.

NBC Sports conducted a media conference call Wednesday with Michaels, Dungy, Harrison and SNF producer Fred Gaudelli. Highlights of the call are below:

HARRISON ON COVERING THIS GAME AS AN ANALYST: "Now that I'm covering it from a media standpoint, it gets me even more excited because now I get a chance to...sit back and relax and enjoy the game and not have to really worry about being nervous or having that anxiety facing those guys."

MICHAELS ON THE RIVALRY: "This is the fifth time in six years that our crew has had a chance to do this game (third time on SNF, twice on MNF) and this game has been either the most anticipated or one of the most anticipated of the season. It's one of those games when the schedule comes out and you see it you just hope each team gets out to a pretty good start and they have. Without question, this is the rivalry of the decade."

DUNGY ON THE RIVALRY: "From a coaching standpoint, it's a tremendous matchup. When you play against a team like (New England), it's such a big challenge. It brings out the best in you and elevates your game. It's just a tremendous rivalry. The respect for each other is there and it's been a great game and one I'm looking forward to seeing for the first time from a different perspective."

HARRISON ON THE RIVALRY: "I've played in this rivalry many times. You get really excited about facing the biggest challenge of the year, which is always going to be the Indianapolis Colts. Just being a part of one of the greatest rivalries in football really gets you excited. I know both of these teams have a mutual respect for one another, but I also know they have a distinct dislike for one another. It'll be exciting and hopefully the Patriots can go out and kick some butt."

MICHAELS ON COMPARING THIS RIVALRY: "This one is as good as anything I can remember. This is very similar to Dallas and San Francisco in the 90's."

GAUDELLI ON THE QUARTERBACK MATCHUP: "Without a doubt, besides the fact that they are two great teams, the headline of this game...is the two quarterbacks, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady. Al (Michaels) and I were talking over the last week, and in any decade was there one single quarterback matchup where you can clearly say these are the two best guys? While there were a lot of great matchups in the '90's, '80's and '70's, we couldn't really delineate two quarterbacks where you could say, 'these were absolutely the two best guys.' In this decade, I don't think there is any question, and you can put them in any order you want -- Tom Brady-Peyton Manning, Peyton Manning-Tom Brady -- these are the two best quarterbacks of this decade. They are what make this game really special on Sunday night."

ON THE BETTER QUARTERBACK:
HARRISON: "Peyton Manning is the best pure quarterback in the National Football League but Tom Brady is my quarterback with a minute left and we're down four points and we need a touchdown because he's done it. Three Super Bowl rings, Super Bowl MVP, a guy whose preparation goes above and beyond anyone in that facility. It's not very often that you find Tom Brady not prepared or ready to go. He's my guy with a minute left."

DUNGY: "I've been with Peyton Manning for seven years, I've seen him prepare and I've seen what he does and how he's lead our team. There is no other quarterback that I would want, and I might see it differently if I had been with Tom Brady for seven years, but that's the experience I had and I can't imagine anybody running the of fense and doing as much as Peyton does for the Colts."

ON THE PATRIOTS DEFENSE TRYING TO CONFUSE MANNING:
HARRISON: "The thing that Bill (Belichick) gave us to do was to create a lot of freedom by trying to disguise the coverage. I lined up at cornerback and Ty Law lined up at safety at times which really seemed to confuse Peyton."

DUNGY: "That was one of the few things that New England did that we hadn't seen before. That was very unusual with Rodney playing corner. Usually you come into a game with New England showing a lot of blitzes, five-man pressures and then in our game they decide to rush three and drop eight or vice versa. The thing from the Colts standpoint that we've always admired about the Patriots is they've been able to have a different game plan, even for a half sometimes. You have to be ready to adjust when you play New England."

DUNGY ON COACH CALDWELL: "He's a little more emotional, a little more fiery...It was important to the team to transition well and not take a step backwards and that's why everyone in our organization felt that Jim would be the best man for the job."

DUNGY ON CALDWELL AS A FIRST YEAR COACH AGAINST BELICHICK:
"Jim obviously has the benefit; he's not like most first year coaches. He's been there for seven years. He's seen it. He's provided a lot of the game planning, especially offensively, for those however many games were played. It's not like the new guy coming in. He's very aware of everything that's taken place in the last seven years. I really don't look at this like the first year coach in the normal sense."

HARRISON THE COLTS SECONDARY: "I look at a Colts secondary that's in trouble. You lose Bob Sanders, which is not a big surprise for those guys because he's missed a lot of time, but losing Marlon Jackson and Calvin Hayden. Two losses for them, especially Marlon Jackson. He's a guy who shows up a lot in the run game. Very physical, very aggressive cornerback who can play corner, safety, nickel back, dime back, cover a tight end, a guy that's very versatile. If you're Tom Brady and the Patriots you've got to look to really exploit that secondary."

DUNGY ON MICHAEL VICK IN BUFFALO: "That was my personal opinion. I didn't have anything to base it on. No conversations with anyone else. There are a number of teams that are going to be looking for quarterbacks at the end of the year and, looking at their quarterback situation, I think Buffalo is one of those that's a very good team with a lot of skill positions guys. Any quarterback would want to play with Lee Evans and T.O. and (Marshawn) Lynch and some of the guys they have there. They haven't gotten consistent quarterbacks playing the last three or four years. That's probably been their Achilles heel, so I think it could be an intriguing situation."

###

RIVALRY OF THE DECADE: The Colts and Patriots have won four total Super Bowls this decade (NE-3, IND-1). The teams have met 13 times since 2000 with the Patriots holding an 8-5 edge, but the Colts have won four of the past five. Each of the last three games have been decided by four points or less. Each of the last four have been decided by seven points or less.

Six of the games have been played in Indianapolis with each team winning three. The Colts are 2-1 in the last three played in Indy. The teams have competed in three playoff games during the decade, including two AFC Championship Games. The Patriots are 2-1 in those games with the teams splitting the two title games.

COLTS VS. PATRIOTS: The Patriots lead the all-time series 44-28, including 2-1 in the playoffs. The teams played twice per season (except 1982 strike-shortened season) as members of the same division from 1970-2001. They have met every year since 1970 except 2002.

Dating back to 2008, the Colts have won 17 consecutive games and can tie the 2003-04 Patriots for the second-longest steak of all time with a win. Colts QB Peyton Manning has passed for 15 TDs vs. four INTs at home against the Patriots in his career. Patriots QB Tom Brady has passed for three consecutive 300-yard games, leading New England to a three-game winning streak.

COLTS-PATRIOTS IN PRIMETIME: Since NBC acquired the NFL's premiere primetime package in 2006, the Indianapolis Colts are 8-3 on "Sunday Night Football," including 2-0 this season. In Week 3, the Colts defeated Arizona 31-10. In Week 5, they defeated Tennessee 31-9. Both games were on the road.

The New England Patriots are 3-4 on "NBC Sunday Night Football." Sunday Night's game is the first of two scheduled NBC appearances for the Patriots this season. They are scheduled to travel to Miami to face the Dolphins in Week 13.

This is the third time the Colts and Patriots have met on SNF since 2006. Last season, the Colts defeated the Patriots at Indianapolis when QB Peyton Manning passed for 254 yards and completed two touchdowns to WR Anthony Gonzalez. In 2006, the Colts beat the Patriots 27-20 in New England in a game that was watched by 21.9 million viewers, tied for most in SNF history.

That’s it for this set of releases.

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