FOXSports.com senior NFL writer Alex Marvez weighs in with NFL news and notes every Monday. Here are his thoughts on the weekend's games.
FOXBORO, Mass. -- There's no "solving" Randy Moss.
That became clear in New England's 34-13 rout of Pittsburgh.
In his previous two games against Philadelphia and Baltimore, Moss was limited to a combined nine catches for 77 yards and one touchdown. Both opponents pressed Moss at the line of scrimmage, which helped eliminate him as a deep threat.
Because of their physical secondary, the Steelers' top-ranked defense was thought to have an excellent chance of duplicating such success. No dice. Moss returned to All-Pro form with seven catches for 135 yards and two touchdowns.
Why did the Steelers fail? Pittsburgh's Ike Taylor, who was frequently matched in single coverage against Moss, proved he doesn't fall into the category of "shutdown" cornerbacks. But Taylor didn't have much aid from Steelers safeties.
Moss had reason to worry about two heavy hitters in Philadelphia's Brian Dawkins and Baltimore's Ed Reed. Diminutive Steelers strong safety Tyrone Carter wasn't nearly the same kind of threat while replacing injured star Troy Polamalu. And free safety Anthony Smith's mental errors made his "guarantee" of a Steelers victory laughable.
Moss said he ignored the brouhaha surrounding his recent dip in productivity.
"I've been doing my thing for 10 years," Moss said. "How teams play me, I've seen it my whole career. Sometimes it is frustrating to get bumped, and then once you get to another [defensive] level, still get bumped. My main thing is just to try and stay focused."
Moss, along with quarterback Tom Brady, has three more games to continue his assault on the NFL's record books. He needs four more touchdown catches to break Jerry Rice's single-season record of 22.
Moss could reach that mark in the next two games against the New York Jets and Miami. He torched New York in the season-opener with nine catches for 183 yards and one touchdown. Miami comes to Foxboro on Dec. 23 having fared almost as poorly in October. Moss logged four catches for 122 yards and two scores in New England's 49-28 rout - and that was before the Dolphins added three more safeties to their injured reserve list.
Plus, Patriots coach Bill Belichick isn't expected to show mercy against either franchise even if opening a giant lead. If Smith's relatively innocuous quotes could generate so much venom from Patriots players, what vindictiveness will the "Spygate" scandal and Don Shula's "asterisk" comment evoke from Belichick?
A HAIRY SITUATION: After Sunday's win, the only ugliness coming out of the Patriots locker is Wes Welker's mustache.
Even his parents want Welker to shave it. But the baby-faced Welker said he is committed to the fuzz after a teammate backed off from doing the same.
Before a recent couples dinner with teammates, Patriots backup quarterback Matt Cassel told Welker he was sporting a mustache. Welker decided to counter Cassel's "surprise" by growing one of his own.
"We start talking at dinner and the next thing you know it's, 'We're keeping 'em! We're keeping the mustaches!" Welker said.
Such unity didn't last long. Cassel shaved shortly after the dinner because of what Welker says was pressure from his wife.
"He has to go home to her every night, so he got, 'Either the mustache goes or 'it' goes,'" Welker said. "He totally wussed out. I'm still rocking it, living up to my end of the bargain.
"Being a teammate and a friend, you would think he would step up. It just shows you what kind of guy he is."
Cassel, though, says there's more to the story than what Welker is letting on.
"Like what happens with any style when someone is the originator, other people want to jump on your bandwagon," Cassel said. "After a lot of people do it, it becomes uncool. When Wes started making it commonly known among the team that maybe wearing a mustache was cool, I had to change it up again.
"The fact is, yes, maybe the wife wanted to kiss me in a different manner. But I definitely would have to say it's more due to the fact I want to be a lone star. I don't like to have company when I sport a mustache. I didn't want to be that guy where people say, 'Oh, Wes Welker has a mustache. Matt Cassel has one, too.'"
Cassel does admit Welker grew a better mustache.
"It's probably bigger than he is," Cassel said.
DOLPHINS IN PRIME TIME?: With a Kansas City vs. New York Jets match-up likely to draw XFL-type television ratings, NBC will definitely use its flex scheduling option to snare another game for its Sunday night regular-season finale.
But finding a better replacement might not be easy. The NFL's playoff picture is quickly clearing up and there may not be an attractive game with post-season implications on the docket. Two of the NFL's most attractive teams also are off-limits, as New England plays Dec. 29 (a Saturday night) and Dallas already has reached its limit of prime-time appearances.
My suggestion: If the Dolphins are still winless by the selection deadline, choose their home finale against Cincinnati. Unlike teams who will rest starters because their playoff slotting is set, NBC would be assured a compelling game. Miami will desperately try to avoid becoming the first 0-16 team in NFL history, while the Bengals will work to assure such an infamous fate.
Unfortunately, it doesn't appears NBC will that route. A source said Sunday that the NFL has heavy influence on which teams are selected for flex scheduling changes. The league probably wouldn't want to place Miami in position of potentially being even more embarrassed by showcasing another type of perfect season, the source said.
By the way, I'm standing by my prediction that Miami will ends its skid this Sunday against Baltimore (I will be staffing this game for FOXSports.com).
After falling just short against New England -- which I predicted in last week's Monday Musings -- the Ravens delivered a lackluster effort in Sunday's 44-20 home loss to Indianapolis. Baltimore has now lost seven consecutive games and it's fair to question whether some players have tuned out coach Brian Billick.
Miami's play was as messy as the snowy conditions during Sunday's 38-17 loss at Buffalo and coach Cam Cameron has morphed into this decade's version of Rich Kotite. But Miami's defense is still good enough to stymie Baltimore's offense and create opportunities for their own anemic unit. Final score: Miami 12, Baltimore 10.