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Next Man Up: The Biggest Non-QB Injuries Heading Into Week 3

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
September 18, 2025
Next Man Up: The Biggest Non-QB Injuries Heading Into Week 3

Week 2 sprinkled in just enough injury news to keep fans refreshing their feeds — and not just about quarterbacks. If you’re looking for signal‑caller updates, we’ve got a separate piece for that, here. This one’s about everyone else: the backs, receivers, linemen, and defenders who quietly shape the way Sundays play out.

Think about it: you lose a starting center, suddenly the whole protection call feels shakier. A go‑to slot guy is gone, and those third‑and‑5 plays don’t look as automatic. A defensive captain gets dinged, and all of a sudden the middle of the field feels wide open. These aren’t flashy headlines, but they’re the kinds of injuries that change game plans, fantasy lineups, and even December playoff math.

So let’s dig in. Which teams took the biggest hits, who’s stepping up in their place, and how do these absences shift the matchups we’ll all be watching this weekend?

Backfield Triage: RB Rooms Go From Crowded to Thin Overnight

Washington: Austin Ekeler’s Season Ends — and the Croskey‑Merritt Era Starts Now

Austin Ekeler’s Commanders debut season lasted roughly a game and a half. A non‑contact Achilles tear late at Lambeau torpedoes Washington’s plan to build the run game around a veteran do‑it‑all back. Ekeler’s value has always been about leverage: motion him wide, check the front, audible into the look you like. He’s your easy button against heavy blitz.

With Ekeler done, seventh‑round rookie Jacory “Bill” Croskey‑Merritt moves from fun camp story to feature back. The kid flashes one‑cut decisiveness and contact balance; he hit the Giants for chunk gains in Week 1, then ran into a buzzsaw at Green Bay with the whole offense sputtering. Expect Washington to simplify the playbook a bit: more inside/outside zone, a little pin‑pull, and quick swing/checkdown options to get the ball out of harm’s way. Chris Rodriguez Jr. is the hammer for short yardage. They’ve also added veteran depth on the practice squad, so third‑down/pass‑pro snaps will be a week‑to‑week audition.

Minnesota: Aaron Jones to IR; Jordan Mason Becomes the Tone‑Setter

Sep 8, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Minnesota Vikings running back Aaron Jones Sr. (33) reacts after a touchdown against the Chicago Bears during the second half at Soldier Field.
Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images

Minnesota planned on sharing the load between a veteran creator in Aaron Jones and the downhill juice of Jordan Mason. Instead, a hamstring sends Jones to IR and turns Mason into RB1. He doesn’t dance in the hole; he hits it. That changes how the Vikings are going to call it on early downs. Duo and power make more sense with him, and the screen game may trend toward simple slip/screens rather than the full Aaron Jones gadget catalog. The front office kicked the tires on depth (hello again, Cam Akers), which tells you they’re bracing for a few weeks of committee behind Mason.

This also puts pressure on the Vikings’ early‑down efficiency. Without Jones’ explosive cuts in space, Minnesota’s margins shrink. Add in the fact that they'll be playing without J.J. McCarthy for at least this week, and it's a recipe for a slow start.

Houston: Joe Mixon’s Murky Timeline

Joe Mixon’s on reserve/NFI with a foot and ankle issue, and the Texans are being cagey about when he might be back. That kind of limbo isn’t just frustrating for fans — it makes life harder for roster planning too. They’ve already patched the room with bodies around Nick Chubb, but Mixon’s game isn’t just about carries. He’s the guy you trust to stand in, stonewall a blitz, and give your quarterback that extra second to breathe. You don’t just swap that in overnight. The run game itself can muddle through with a committee, sure, but those third‑down snaps where trust really matters? That’s where Houston’s going to feel his absence until someone steps up and earns the coaching staff’s confidence.

Pass-Catchers: Key Weapons Sidelined

Green Bay: Jayden Reed Out 6–8 Weeks

Green Bay Packers wide receiver Jayden Reed (11) does a Lambeau Leap after scoring a touchdown against the Detroit Lions on Sunday, September 7, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers won the game, 27-13.
Credit: Tork Mason/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin

Jayden Reed fractured his collarbone and, in the same week, had a procedure to address the Jones fracture in his foot that nagged him through camp.

On the field, Reed’s absence reshuffles the tree. He’s their best slot separator with YAC instincts; those option routes on third‑and‑5 don’t just port to the next guy. Expect Romeo Doubs to soak up more chain‑moving work and Dontayvion Wicks to expand vertically and on crossers. Rookie Matthew Golden is the name casual fans will learn quickly — he’s already earned situational snaps. Green Bay’s staff will likely lean into condensed formations and motions to manufacture first reads while Christian Watson rehabs for a potential post‑bye (Week 6) return.

San Francisco: George Kittle to IR (Hamstring)

This one hurts in two ways: Kittle is a coverage dictator and an elite run blocker. Not only do you lose his impact on the box score, but you also lose his impact in the run game and the type of coverage he attracts when he's running a route. Without Kittle, they lose a ton of 12‑personnel flexibility, and their split‑flow play‑action loses bite. They’ll survive because Kyle Shanahan always seems to have the answers on the passing game, but their margin for error just got a lot smaller, no matter which quarterback is able to suit up this week.

Other Names to Keep an Eye On

  • Chris Godwin has been ramping up after last season’s ankle injury and is trending back toward game action soon. That’s a serious route‑running toolkit waiting to rejoin (signs point to Week 5 as of right now) a Bucs offense suddenly leaning on late‑game heroics.

  • Brian Thomas Jr. played through a sore wrist in Week 2 and it looked like it; Jacksonville’s top target is too clean of a mover to keep putting up inefficient days. The Jaguars need his field‑tilting speed to open space for the underneath game. He's likely to play this week, but if he's not 100%, who knows just how effective he's going to be. 

Trenches & Defense

Tampa Bay: Two Body Blows — Calijah Kancey Done for the Year; Luke Goedeke Out Multiple Weeks

Dec 29, 2024; Tampa, Florida, USA; Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young (9) throws the ball as Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive tackle Calijah Kancey (94) rushes during the second quarter at Raymond James Stadium.
Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Calijah Kancey’s torn pec is as big as it gets for a defense that wins with its front four. He’s a gap‑shrinker next to Vita Vea, the kind of interior rusher who stuffs runs on first down. Without him, Bowles leans on Greg Gaines and a rookie rotational piece to hold serve while dialing up more simulated pressure to create the same stress. It’s not the same ceiling.

On the other side of the ball, right tackle Luke Goedeke re‑aggravated a foot injury and is expected to miss multiple weeks. Tampa was already juggling up front, so this amplifies the need to live in quick game and move the pocket around. Charlie Heck is the plug‑in option; expect some help from tight ends and backs on obvious pass downs.

Chicago: Jaylon Johnson Facing Season-Ending Groin Injury

This one stings for a Bears defense already searching for stability. Jaylon Johnson battled through an adductor injury all summer, came back briefly, and now looks likely done for the year after re-injuring his groin against Detroit.

When he’s on the field, he’s not just a corner — he’s a tone-setter, the guy who erases a side of the field and lets the pass rush play faster. Without him, Chicago’s secondary gets thin in a hurry. Tyrique Stevenson, Nahshon Wright, and a rotating cast will be tested every week, and the Bears will have to shade more safety help or lean heavier into zone looks.

That shifts the whole identity of the defense from aggressive and matchup-based to more reactive. For a unit already giving up chunk plays, losing Johnson isn’t just a setback — it changes the entire script of how they want to defend.

Carolina: Two Starting OL to IR — Robert Hunt (Biceps), Austin Corbett (MCL)

Dave Canales’ offense was starting to find an identity up front. Losing Hunt (surgery) and Corbett (Grade 3 MCL) in the same game forces immediate reshuffling at center and right guard. That’s protection communication in the blender right before you face a Falcons' front that's coming off their best game in years. Expect more under‑center, heavier personnel, and a lean into play‑action to slow down interior pressure.

Dallas: Cooper Beebe Sidelined (High‑Ankle Sprain)

Dec 29, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Dallas Cowboys guard Cooper Beebe (56) blocks Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Oren Burks (42) at Lincoln Financial Field.
Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

Second-year centers don’t usually look this composed, but Beebe’s been a stabilizer. High‑ankle sprains are the enemy of an anchor, and Dallas will feel it on inside shades. The Cowboys have bodies, but swapping the pivot in September reroutes calls and chemistry — especially on twists. Watch their third‑and‑medium protection: if it’s clean, they can ride the defense and play field position; if not, that’s where drives are going to consistently die.

Buffalo: Ed Oliver and Matt Milano Nicked Up

On paper, Buffalo’s depth is better than last year. In practice, Ed Oliver’s ankle and Matt Milano’s pectoral issue are the exact kinds of dings that turn a top‑10 unit into a bend‑don’t‑break group.

Oliver’s first‑step wins you money downs; Milano’s range is the duct tape that holds the underneath zones together. If either (or both) miss significant time, the Bills will need more “win with four” snaps from Greg Rousseau, A.J. Epenesa, and Joey Bosa, as well as some better tackling from the second level.

Pittsburgh: Alex Highsmith (Ankle) Out for Week 3

Highsmith’s closing speed is a finishing move for that Steelers front. Without him, Pittsburgh loses some of the pass-rushing juice that's already gotten off to a slow start. They have the depth on that side of the ball to make it work without him, but their inability to make it work when he was there doesn't bring a lot of optimism.

Los Angeles (Rams): Ahkello Witherspoon Breaks His Collarbone

This one stings more than the headline suggests. Witherspoon’s length and eyes were a nice match for how the Rams want to mix coverages. Without him, the outside CB rotation gets younger and more volatile. Expect more split‑safety shells on early downs to protect inexperienced corners and invite opponents to run into Aaron Donald’s replacement committee up front.

Baltimore: Kyle Van Noy (Hamstring) and Marlon Humphrey (Groin)

Dec 15, 2024; Houston, Texas, USA; Baltimore Ravens linebacker Kyle Van Noy (53) celebrates after sacking Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud (7) during the first quarter at NRG Stadium.
Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Classic Ravens story: they’ll be fine because they’re built to live in the gray. Van Noy missing time hurts their package flexibility on third down. Humphrey managing a groin means more match/zone help and fewer true island snaps. Baltimore will compensate with disguises, but those are resources you’d rather save for surprise, not necessity.

September Is About Survival

Week 2 didn’t just test depth charts; it changed identities. September football is always a vibe check. The teams that handle this week with a plan — not panic — will steal a win or two that matter in December. Tape tells the truth. We’ll see whose next‑man‑up is ready to be more than a slogan on Sunday.

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