
Rams S Jaylen McCollough / Credit: Rams Media Website
Here are my Week 6 NFL Game Predictions, both straight-up and against the spread and my results from last week and the season.
You’ll also find how VFLs performed last week HERE, plus an array of fantastic notes down below for Week 6 and the 2025 season courtesy of NFL Communications press releases.
Vince’s Picks Results
Week 5: 5-9 straight-up & 7-7 spread
Season: 51-27 (65%) straight-up & 41-37 (53%) spread
There are 27 VFLs on 53-player rosters in the NFL. There are 3 more on practice squads and 1 on injured reserve bringing the league total to 31 with NFL teams. See how each did in Week 5 here. Look for a VFL in the NFL, ex-Vol and local player update blog soon on this feed and website, 991TheSportsAnimal.com.
Winners are in bold. Pick against the spread selection is listed to the side.
Week 6
Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025
8:20pm
Philadelphia (-7.5) at NY Giants – NY Giants +7.5
Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025
9:30am
Denver (-7) vs. NY Jets in London – Denver -7
1pm
LA Rams (-7.5) at Baltimore – LA Rams -7.5
Dallas (-3) at Carolina – Dallas -3
Arizona at Indianapolis (-7.5) – Indianapolis -7.5
Seattle at Jacksonville (-1) – Seattle +1
LA Chargers (-4) at Miami – LA Chargers -4
New England (-3.5) at New Orleans – New England -3.5
Cleveland at Pittsburgh (-5.5) – Pittsburgh -5.5
4:05/4:25pm
Tennessee at Las Vegas (-4) – Las Vegas -4
Cincinnati at Green Bay (-14) – Cincinnati +14
San Francisco at Tampa Bay (-3) – Tampa Bay -3
8:20pm
Detroit at Kansas City (-2.5) – Detroit +2.5
Monday, Oct. 13, 2025
7:15pm
Buffalo (-4.5) at Atlanta – Buffalo -4.5
8:15pm
Chicago at Washington (-4.5) – Washington -4.5
Off This Week: Houston and Minnesota
VFL note from Sunday:
- New Orleans running back Alvin Kamara had 55 scrimmage yards (28 receiving, 27 rushing) and four catches in the team’s 26-14 win over the New York Giants.Kamara has 590 career receptions, surpassing Pro Football Hall of Famer Marcus Allen (587 receptions) for the fifth-most by a running back in NFL history. Only Larry Centers (827 receptions) and Keith Byars (610), as well as Pro Football Hall of Famers Marshall Faulk (767) and LaDainian Tomlinson (624) have more.
NEW YORK — Oct. 7, 2025 — Fantastic finishes and thrilling comebacks are the norm in the NFL this season, as there have been 24 games to feature a game-winning score in the final two minutes of regulation or in overtime, the most-ever through the first five weeks of a season. Seven teams – Carolina, Jacksonville, Minnesota, New England, San Francisco, Tampa Bay and Tennessee – accomplished the feat last week, the most in a single week since Week 15, 2022.
Last week also featured four teams – Tennessee (18 points), Carolina (17), Denver (14) and Jacksonville (14) – to complete comebacks of at least 14 points and win, tied with Week 13, 2013 for the most 14-point comebacks in a single week in NFL history. Two additional teams – New Orleans (11 points) and Washington (10 points) – completed comebacks of at least 10 points. The six wins by teams after trailing by at least 10 points also ties the most in a single week all-time, with the most recent occurrence coming in Week 13, 2013.
For Week 6 capsules, click here.
Here’s a look at a few interesting storylines entering Week 6:
- London: The second of three straight weeks with a London game features the Denver Broncos(3-2) and New York Jets (0-5) at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday (9:30 a.m. ET, NFL Network).
- Denver leads the league with 21 sacks this season and ranks second in scoring defense, allowing 16.8 points per game. Linebacker Nik Bonitto leads the NFL with seven sacks and can become the first player since 2013 to record at least 1.5 sacks in four consecutive games.
- The Jets, who played Minnesota last season at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, will become the seventh team to play in London in consecutive seasons, joining Detroit (2014-15), Jacksonville (2013-19, 2021-25), the Los Angeles Rams (2016-17), Miami (2014-15), Minnesota (2024-25) and the Raiders (2018-19).
- Primetime slate: Three of the seven teams with four wins – Philadelphia, Detroitand Buffalo are set to appear in primetime in Week 6.
- Philadelphia (4-1) at the New York Giants (1-4) (Thursday night, 8:15 p.m. ET, Prime Video): The Eagles are the sixth defending Super Bowl champion in the past seven years to begin the season winning at least four of their first five games. Philadelphia has won the past 10 meetings with the Giants in primetime.
- In Week 7 last season, Eagles running back Saquon Barkleytotaled 187 scrimmage yards (176 rushing, 11 receiving) and one rushing touchdown in the team’s 28-3 win at the Giants, his first game against his former team.
- In Week 4, the Giants earned their first win of the season over the then-unbeaten Chargers, as quarterback Jaxson Dart became the first quarterback to win his first career start against a team that was 3-0 or better in 23 seasons [Marc Bulger with the St. Louis Rams on Oct. 13, 2002, against the Oakland Raiders (4-0)].
- Dart – who had 54 rushing yards in Week 4 and 55 rushing yards in Week 5 – can become the third quarterback in NFL history with at least 50 rushing yards in each of his first three career starts, joining Jalen Hurts and Lamar Jackson.
- Detroit (4-1) at Kansas City (2-3) (Sunday night, 8:20 p.m. ET, NBC): The two clubs will be meeting for the first time since Detroit’s memorable 21-20 win over the defending Super Bowl champion Chiefs in the league’s 2023 Kickoff Game.
- Detroit leads the NFL in scoring offense, averaging 34.8 points per game, and have scored at least 34 points in each of their past four games. They can become the fifth team in the Super Bowl era to record at least 34 points in five games within a single season, joining the 2007 Patriots (eight games), 2000 Rams (eight), 2013 Broncos (six) and 1999 Rams (five).
- Running backs Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery each scored a touchdown last week. It marks the 14th game in which they each have scored a touchdown, tying Dallas’ Daryl Johnstonand Pro Football Hall of Famer Emmitt Smith for the most games among running back teammates each scoring a touchdown in the Super Bowl era.
- Including the postseason, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes has 299 touchdown passes in 138 career games. With a touchdown pass on Sunday night, he will surpass Aaron Rodgers(147 games) as the fastest player to 300 career touchdown passes, including the postseason, in NFL history.
- Buffalo (4-1) at Atlanta (2-2) (Monday, 7:15 p.m. ET, ESPN): The Bills seek to win five of their first six games of a season for the third time under head coach Sean McDermott (2022, 2019), while the Falcons have won seven of their past eight games on Monday Night Football.
- Atlanta running back Bijan Robinson leads the NFL with 146 scrimmage yards per game and Buffalo running back James Cook ranks four among running backs with 107.8 scrimmage yards per game. Each player won the September Offensive Player of the Month award in their respective conference.
- Robinson, with 100 receiving yards in Week 1 and 106 receiving yards in Week 4, became the fifth running back in the Super Bowl era with at least 100 receiving yards in two of his team’s first four games of a season.In the past 30 seasons (1995-2024), only four running backs have recorded three games with 100-or-more receiving yards in a season: Richie Anderson (2000 with the New York Jets), Austin Ekeler (2019 with the Los Angeles Chargers), Pro Football Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk (1998 with Indianapolis) and Arian Foster (2011 with Houston).
- Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen is the fifth player in NFL history with a completion percentage of 70-or-higher and multiple touchdown passes in four of his team’s first five games of a season, joining Tom Brady (2007), Drew Brees (2018), Derek Carr (2020) and Philip Rivers (2014).
- Chicago (2-2) at Washington (3-2) (Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET, ABC): Quarterbacks Caleb Williams, the Bears’ No. 1 overall selection in the 2024 NFL Draft, and Jayden Daniels, the Commanders’ No. 2 pick in 2024, are set to meet for the second consecutive season. It marks second occurrence ever where the No. 1 and No. 1 overall pick quarterbacks from the same Draft meet each other as starting quarterbacks in each of their first two seasons (Trevor Lawrence and Zach Wilson in 2021 and 2022).
- Last season, in Week 8, Daniels threw a 52-yard game-winning touchdown to wide receiver Noah Brown as time expired in the fourth quarter to give Washington an 18-15 victory, as Daniels became the second rookie quarterback since 1970 to record a 50-yard game-winning touchdown pass as time expired, joining Cleveland’s Tim Couchin Week 8 of the 1999 season (56-yard touchdown pass to Kevin Johnson).
- Daniels has 4,232 passing yards and 1,015 rushing yards in 20 career games and is the first player in NFL history with at least 4,000 passing yards and 1,000 rushing yards in his first 20 career games.
- Chicago wide receiver Rome Odunze was the only player in the NFL with a touchdown reception in each of the first four weeks of the season and can become the first player since Mike Evans in 2020 to record a touchdown reception in each of his team’s first five games of a season.
- Top defenses meet in Jacksonville: When the Seattle Seahawks(3-2) visit the Jacksonville Jaguars (4-1) on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, FOX), two of the top intercepting defenses from the first five weeks of the season will be in action, as Jacksonville leads the league with 10 interceptions and Seattle ranks tied for second with seven.
- Jacksonville linebacker Devin Lloyd leads the NFL with four interceptions this season, tied with Kiko Alonso (2013) and Pro Football Hall of Famer Derrick Brooks (2002) for the most by a linebacker in his team’s first five games of a season since 2000. Last week, he had a 99-yard interception-return for a touchdown against Kansas City, marking the longest regular-season interception-return touchdown by a linebacker in NFL history.
- o Seattle head coach Mike Macdonald, since being hired in 2024, is one of five head coaches all time to win nine of his first 10 road games, along with George Seifert(10 wins), Pro Football Hall of Famer Paul Brown (nine), Don McCafferty (nine) and Sean McVay (nine).
- 49ers (4-1) and Buccaneers (4-1) meet for fourth straight season: The 49ers and Buccaneers will meet in Tampa (4:25 p.m. ET, CBS) in a battle of four-win teams coming off dramatic victories. Eddie Pineiro converted a 41-yard field goal in overtime to lift San Francisco over the Rams, 26-23, on Thursday Night Football, while Chase McLaughlin connected on a 39-yard field goal as time expired in regulation to help Tampa Bay win in Seattle, 38-35. The Buccaneers are looking to begin a season 5-1 or better for the third time in 20 years (2021, 2005), while the 49ers can reach the mark for the third time under head coach Kyle Shanahan (2023, 2019).
- In addition to their last-second victory last week, Tampa Bay scored a game-winning touchdown with 59 seconds remaining in Week 1, a game-winning touchdown with six seconds remaining in Week 2 and a game-winning field goal with no time remaining in Week 3 and are the first team in NFL history to have each of their first four wins of the season come on a game-winning score in the final minute of regulation.
- In the win over Seattle, quarterback Baker Mayfield became the first player in NFL history to pass for at least 375 yards (379) in a game, with four-or-fewer incompletions (four).
- San Francisco running back Christian McCaffrey is the only player with at least 100 scrimmage yards in five games this season. He can become the first running back with least 100 scrimmage yards in each of his team’s first six games of a season since Saquon Barkley in 2018.
- Philadelphia (4-1) at the New York Giants (1-4) (Thursday night, 8:15 p.m. ET, Prime Video): The Eagles are the sixth defending Super Bowl champion in the past seven years to begin the season winning at least four of their first five games. Philadelphia has won the past 10 meetings with the Giants in primetime.
PUKA NACUA & MATTHEW STAFFORD
Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Puka Nacua leads the NFL with 52 receptions, the most by a player in his team’s first five games of a season in NFL history. He has recorded at least eight receptions in every game this year and at least 10 receptions in four of five games.
With seven receptions at Baltimore on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, FOX), Nacua can surpass Adam Thielen (58 receptions in 2018 with Minnesota) for the most receptions by a player in his team’s first six games of a season in NFL history.
The players with the most receptions in their team’s first six games of a season in NFL history:
PLAYER | TEAM | SEASON | RECEPTIONS |
Adam Thielen | Minnesota | 2018 | 58 |
Cooper Kupp | L.A. Rams | 2022 | 56 |
Keenan Allen | San Diego Chargers | 2015 | 43 |
Michael Thomas | New Orleans | 2019 | 53 |
Michael Thomas | New Orleans | 2018 | 53 |
Puka Nacua | L.A. Rams | 2025 | 52* |
*in team’s first five games |
Nacua can become the first player ever with at least eight receptions in each of his team’s first six games of a season and is already the first player ever with at least 10 receptions in four of his team’s first six games.
Since Week 14 of the 2024 season, Nacua has at least seven receptions in nine straight games and on Sunday, can become the third player ever with at least seven receptions in 10 consecutive games, joining Antonio Brown (14 consecutive games with Pittsburgh from 2014-15) and Cooper Kupp (11 with the Los Angeles Rams in 2021).
Nacua has at least 10 receptions in eight career games since entering the NFL in 2023 and can become the third player in NFL history with at least 10 receptions in nine games in his first three career seasons, joining Christian McCaffrey (nine games) and Michael Thomas (nine).
Quarterback Matthew Stafford leads the NFL with 1,503 passing yards this season and ranks second with 11 touchdown passes. He recorded 375 passing yards and three touchdown passes in Week 4 and 389 passing yards and three touchdown passes in Week 5.
With a similar performance on Sunday, Stafford can become the third player ever with at least 375 passing yards and three touchdown passes in three consecutive games, joining Tom Brady (2011 with New England) and Ryan Fitzpatrick (2018 with Tampa Bay).
Last week marked Stafford’s 19th career game with at least 375 passing yards. He can become the fifth player ever with at least 375 passing yards in 20 career games, joining Drew Brees (36 games), Tom Brady (29), Pro Football Hall of Famer Peyton Manning (22) and Ben Roethlisberger (21).
JAHMYR GIBBS, DAVID MONTGOMERY & AMON-RA ST. BROWN
Detroit’s Jahmyr Gibbs (five touchdowns) and David Montgomery (four) are the only pair of running back teammates each with at least four touchdowns this season. Since they became teammates in 2023, they have each scored a touchdown in 14 games, including Weeks 2 and 5 this season.
If they both score a touchdown at Kansas City on Sunday Night Football (8:20 p.m. ET, NBC), they will surpass Dallas’ Daryl Johnston and Pro Football Hall of Famer Emmitt Smith for the most games among running back teammates each scoring a touchdown in the Super Bowl era and tie Green Bay’s Pro Football Hall of Fame duo of Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor (15 games) for the third-most in NFL history.
The running back teammates with the most games in which each scored a touchdown in NFL history:
TEAMMATES | TEAM | GAMES |
Frank Gifford HOF & Alex Webster | N.Y. Giants | 20 |
Alan Ameche & Lenny Moore HOF | Baltimore Colts | 18 |
Paul Hornung HOF & Jim Taylor HOF | Green Bay | 15 |
Jahmyr Gibbs & David Montgomery | Detroit | 14 |
Daryl Johnston & Emmitt Smith HOF | Dallas | 14 |
Wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown ranks fourth in the NFL with 35 catches this season and has recorded at least seven receptions in each of his past four games. Since entering the league in 2021, he has registered at least eight receptions in 25 games.
With eight receptions on Sunday night, St. Brown will surpass Justin Jefferson (25 games) for the second-most games with at least eight receptions by a player in his first five seasons in NFL history, trailing only Michael Thomas (31 games).
The players with the most games with at least eight receptions in their first five seasons in NFL history:
PLAYER | TEAM | GAMES |
Michael Thomas | New Orleans | 31 |
Justin Jefferson | Minnesota | 25 |
Amon-Ra St. Brown | Detroit | 25* |
*in fifth season |
PATRICK MAHOMES & TRAVIS KELCE
Since entering the NFL in 2017, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes has totaled 299 touchdown passes in 138 career games, including the postseason.
With a touchdown pass against Detroit on Sunday Night Football (8:20 p.m. ET, NBC), Mahomes will surpass Aaron Rodgers (147 games) as the fastest player to 300 career touchdown passes, including the postseason, in NFL history.
Tight end Travis Kelce has recorded 4,110 receiving yards in 54 career primetime games (7 p.m. ET start time or later). With 14 receiving yards on Sunday night, he will surpass Jason Witten (4,123 receiving yards) for the second-most receiving yards in primetime games in NFL history, trailing only Pro Football Hall of Famer Jerry Rice (5,351 receiving yards).
The players with the most receiving yards in primetime games (7 p.m. ET start time or later) in NFL history:
PLAYER | TEAM(S) | REC. YARDS |
Jerry Rice HOF | San Francisco, Oakland Raiders, Seattle | 5,351 |
Jason Witten | Dallas, Las Vegas | 4,123 |
Travis Kelce | Kansas City | 4,110 |
JAXSON DART & SAQUON BARKLEY ON TNF
New York Giants rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart will be making his primetime debut on Thursday Night Football against Philadelphia (8:15 p.m. ET, Prime Video). In his first career start in Week 4, he totaled 54 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown and last week, recorded 55 rushing yards in his second career start.
With at least 50 rushing yards on Thursday, Dart will become the third quarterback since 1950 to record at least 50 rushing yards in each of his first three career starts, joining Jalen Hurts and Lamar Jackson.
Since entering the NFL in 2018, Philadelphia running back Saquon Barkley has totaled 7,483 rushing yards and 2,506 receiving yards in 95 games.
With 17 rushing yards on Thursday, Barkley will become the sixth player in NFL history with at least 7,500 rushing yards and 2,500 receiving yards in his first 100 games, joining Pro Football Hall of Famers Edgerrin James, Thurman Thomas and LaDainian Tomlinson, as well as Steven Jackson and LeSean McCoy.
The players with at least 7,500 rushing yards and 2,500 receiving yards in their first 100 games in NFL history:
PLAYER | RUSH YARDS | REC. YARDS |
Steven Jackson | 7,948 | 2,670 |
Edgerrin James HOF | 9,498 | 2,921 |
LeSean McCoy | 7,584 | 2,531 |
Thurman Thomas HOF | 8,133 | 3,198 |
LaDainian Tomlinson HOF | 9,505 | 3,094 |
Saquon Barkley | 7,483* | 2,506* |
*in 95 career games |
DRAKE MAYE
New England quarterback Drake Maye ranks second among qualified passers with a 73.9 completion percentage, fifth with 1,261 passing yards and sixth with a 107.8 passer rating this season. He has recorded at least 200 passing yards and a passer rating of 100-or-higher in four consecutive games.
With at least 200 passing yards and a passer rating of 100-or-higher at New Orleans on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, CBS), Maye can become the fourth different player in NFL history under the age of 24 to record at least 200 passing yards and a passer rating of 100-or-higher in five consecutive games, joining Patrick Mahomes (seven consecutive games in 2018 and five games in 2018-19), Pro Football Hall of Famer Dan Marino (six games in 1984) and Dak Prescott (five games in 2016).
The players under the age of 24 with at least 200 passing yards and a passer rating of 100-or-higher in the most consecutive games in NFL history:
PLAYER | TEAM | SEASON(S) | CONSECUTIVE GAMES |
Patrick Mahomes | Kansas City | 2018 | 7 |
Dan Marino HOF | Miami | 1984 | 6 |
Patrick Mahomes | Kansas City | 2018-19 | 5 |
Dak Prescott | Dallas | 2016 | 5 |
Drake Maye | New England | 2025 | 4* |
*active streak |
CHRISTIAN MCCAFFREY
San Francisco running back Christian McCaffrey leads the NFL with 669 scrimmage yards and leads all running backs with 39 receptions and 387 receiving yards this season. He has recorded at least 100 scrimmage yards, 50 receiving yards and six receptions in each of the first five weeks of the season.
With at least 50 receiving yards at Tampa Bay on Sunday (4:25 p.m. ET, CBS), McCaffery can become the first running back in NFL history with at least 50 receiving yards in each of his team’s first six games of a season. He can also join Pro Football Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk (2000 with the St. Louis Rams) as the only players ever with at least 50 rushing yards and 50 receiving yards in five of their team’s first six games of a season.
Since entering the NFL in 2017, McCaffrey has recorded at least 50 receiving yards in 45 games. With 50 receiving yards on Sunday, he can tie Keith Byars (46 games) for the fourth-most games with at least 50 receiving yards by a running back in the Super Bowl era. Only Larry Centers (55 games), Pro Football Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk (50) and Ronnie Harmon (47) have more.
The running backs with the most games with at least 50 receiving yards in the Super Bowl era:
PLAYER | TEAMS | GAMES |
Larry Centers | Phoenix/Arizona Cardinals, Buffalo, Washington | 55 |
Marshall Faulk HOF | Indianapolis, St. Louis Rams | 50 |
Ronnie Harmon | Buffalo, San Diego Chargers, Houston/Tennessee Oilers | 47 |
Keith Byars | Philadelphia, Miami, New England, N.Y. Jets | 46 |
Christian McCaffrey | Carolina, San Francisco | 45 |
EMEKA EGBUKA & BUCCANEERS
Tampa Bay wide receiver Emeka Egbuka leads all rookies with 25 receptions, 445 receiving yards and five touchdown receptions this season. He has recorded a touchdown reception in four of five games and over 100 receiving yards in each of his past two.
With at least 100 receiving yards against San Francisco on Sunday (4:25 p.m. ET, CBS), Egbuka will become the fifth rookie in the Super Bowl era to reach the mark in three consecutive games, joining Odell Beckham Jr. (four consecutive games in 2014), Marques Colston (three in 2006), Mike Evans (three in 2014) and Pro Football Hall of Famer Randy Moss (three in 1998).
The rookies with at least 100 receiving yards in the most consecutive games in the Super Bowl era:
PLAYER | TEAM | SEASON | CONSECUTIVE GAMES |
Odell Beckham Jr. | N.Y. Giants | 2014 | 4 |
Marques Colston | New Orleans | 2006 | 3 |
Mike Evans | Tampa Bay | 2014 | 3 |
Randy Moss HOF | Minnesota | 1998 | 3 |
Emeka Egbuka | Tampa Bay | 2025 | 2* |
*active streak |
With a touchdown reception on Sunday, Egbuka can become the fourth player in the Super Bowl era to record a touchdown reception in five of his first six career games, joining Charlie Brown (1982 with Washington), Willie Green (1991 with Denver) and Donté Stallworth (2002 with New Orleans).
The Buccaneers scored a game-winning touchdown with 59 seconds remaining in Week 1, a game-winning touchdown with six seconds remaining in Week 2, a game-winning field goal with no time remaining in Week 3 and a game-winning field goal with no time remaining in Week 4.
They can become the first team in the Super Bowl era to win five games in a season with a game-winning score in the final minute of the fourth quarter.
NIK BONITTO & DEVIN LLOYD
Denver linebacker Nik Bonitto leads the NFL with seven sacks this season and has recorded at least 1.5 sacks in each of his past three games.
With at least 1.5 sacks against the New York Jets in London on Sunday (9:30 a.m. ET, NFL Network), Bonitto can become the sixth player since 2000 to reach the mark in four consecutive games.
The players with at least 1.5 sacks in the most consecutive games since 2000:
PLAYER | TEAM | SEASON | GAMES |
Michael Strahan HOF | N.Y. Giants | 2001 | 6 |
Simeon Rice | Tampa Bay | 2002 | 5 |
Robert Mathis | Indianapolis | 2013 | 4 |
Aldon Smith | San Francisco | 2012 | 4 |
Lamarr Woodley | Pittsburgh | 2011 | 4 |
Nik Bonitto | Denver | 2025 | 3* |
*active streak |
Jacksonville linebacker Devin Lloyd leads the NFL with four interceptions this season and has recorded an interception in three of his past four games.
With an interception against Seattle on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, FOX), Lloyd will become the fifth linebacker in the Super Bowl era with five interceptions in his team’s first six games of a season.
The linebackers with the most interceptions in his team’s first six games of a season in the Super Bowl era:
PLAYER | TEAM | SEASON | INTERCEPTIONS | |
Cato June | Indianapolis | 2005 | 5 | |
Ken Lee | Buffalo | 1972 | 5 | |
Jack Pardee | Washington | 1971 | 5 | |
Chuck Howley HOF | Dallas | 1968 | 5 | |
Devin Lloyd | Jacksonville | 2025 | 4* | |
*in team’s first five games | ||||
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