Paul’s pick
Given what comes next (49ers, at Rams, at Cowboys), this might be the only soft landing spot in the first five weeks. There is nothing overly frightening about the Bears and certainly nothing overly impressive with the Giants. Until they win a game, why go with them?
Bears 24, Giants 13
Marquee matchup
Bears WR Allen Robinson vs. Giants CB James Bradberry
There were rumblings last week Robinson, disgruntled with his contract status, either asked to be traded or at least inquired about moving on. He is in the final year of his three-year, $42 million deal and is the 14th highest-paid wide receiver in the league. He is coming of a sensational season (98-1,147, seven TDs), and in the season-opening 27-23 victory over the Lions caught five passes for 74 yards and one touchdown. He is long (6-foot-2) and quick. This assignment is why the Bradberry got the big bucks.
“Your best cover guy, is he best suited to cover their best player?’’ defensive coordinator Patrick Graham said. “We’re always trying to put our guys in the best spots.’’
Four downs
Slay ride: Is it time to consider Darius Slayton a No. 1 receiver? Since Week 5 last season, he has more receiving touchdowns (10) than any player in the league. Slayton and Daniel Jones as rookies displayed instant chemistry, and it was more of the same last week, when Slayton (6-102, two TDs) was a force against the Steelers. Jones targeted him nine times.
“Definitely being open helps the quarterback be more inclined to throw the ball to you, of course,’’ Slayton said. “I definitely think I’m off to a great start this year. Obviously, the goal is to be consistent and to keep building on this throughout the rest of the year.’’