Which players should be seeing more snaps this season? We asked Pro Football Focus to pick a player for all 32 teams, and here are the results -- with the statistics to back them up. NFL Nation reporters chime in, too, with their take on each players future role.All stats provided by Pro Football Focus.NFC East | NFC North | NFC South | NFC West AFC East | AFC North| AFC South | AFC WestNFC EASTDallas CowboysDefensive tackle David IrvingPro Football Focus:?The Dallas defensive line is struggling to get pressure this season, but Irving has performed well when given the opportunity to rush the passer. He has a sack, three QB hits and eight hurries on only 132 rushes, providing pressure at a higher rate than all but?Tyrone Crawford?on the Cowboys line.NFL Nation:?Sometimes players can get overexposed when they play too much. That might be the case with Irving. Defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli wants to rotate his eight defensive linemen to keep them all fresh. When you dont have the big-dog pass rusher, thats the way to go. Irving, a second-year player who went undrafted in 2015, has been good in small samples, but he will get out of his gap or take the wrong angle to the quarterback to affect a blitz that will upset the coaches. The Cowboys like his potential but dont think hes a full-time, prime-time player right now. -- Todd ArcherNew York GiantsDefensive end Romeo OkwaraPro Football Focus:?Okwara has been strong against the run as a rookie, and he should see even more snaps on early downs to spell New Yorks two workhorses at defensive end,?Jason Pierre-Paul and Olivier Vernon. Pierre-Paul has played 577 snaps (second in the NFL) and Vernon has played 549 (sixth in the NFL), so getting Okwara out there on early downs could help keep them fresh down the stretch.NFL Nation:?What the Giants liked about Okwara this summer was his ability to play with power and get after the passer. He has some talent but hasnt produced much in his limited playing time to date. The Giants just dont seem willing to ease up on Vernon and Pierre-Pauls workload. Okwara played just nine snaps Monday night against the Bengals, and, unless there is an injury to Vernon or Pierre-Paul, his playing time will probably remain in that range for the rest of the season. Kerry Wynn is their preferred interior rusher on passing downs. -- Jordan Raanan Air Max From China . "No difference at all," chirped U.S. roommate and linemate James van Riemsdyk. "Its still the same cranky Phil. Air Max Outlet . -- PGA TOUR Canada member Steve Saunders took a three-stroke lead Saturday in the Web. https://www.airmaxchina.us/ . Haas said he "felt a lot of pain" in his right shoulder when he slammed his racket to the ground in frustration after losing his serve at 3-3 in the first set. Cheap Authentic Air Max . -- An ugly goal by Nick Bonino helped the Anaheim Ducks overcome the defensive-minded Phoenix Coyotes on a night when their ragged power play continued to struggle. Clearance Air Max . The Swede became the first golfer to win the PGA Tours FedEx Cup and European Tours Race to Dubai in the same season. "It is still taking a little time to sink in what Ive achieved this week as was the case when I won the FedEx Cup but then it just kept getting better and better as the days went on and I am sure this will be the same," he said. ALMATY, Kazakhstan -- Four days after shutting down work at the Olympic drug-test laboratory in Rio de Janeiro, the World Anti-Doping Agency has suspended another lab, this time in Kazakhstan.WADA said on Tuesday that the lab in Almaty had its accreditation suspended for four months as of this past Friday as a direct result of the more stringent quality assessment procedures enacted by WADA.WADA did not say how exactly the Almaty lab failed to pass such an assessment.In addition to announcing a suspension for the Rio lab also on Friday, a move that plunged Olympic drug testing into uncertainty, WADA has also suspended labs in China, Spain, South Africa and Portugal this year.The lab in Moscow lost its accreditation altogether after accusations that its former director helped to cover up doping by Russian athletes, sparking a round of new checks at other labs worldwide.ddddddddddddThe Almaty lab reportedly opened in 2003 and is one of the lesser-known of the 35 labs approved worldwide by WADA. Last week, Kazakhstan Prime Minister Karim Massimov was quoted by local media as ordering officials to find private sponsors to finance an upgrade of the facilities.That came shortly after four Kazakh gold medalists in weightlifting from the 2012 Olympics were announced to have failed retests of their samples. They stand to lose their medals. ' ' '