Author: nfltalk

  • CBS Sports ranks top 20 running backs for 2024 NFL season

    CBS Sports ranks top 20 running backs for 2024 NFL season

    Don’t call it a comeback, but the running back position underwent a resurgence in the 2024 NFL offseason.

    Just a year ago in the 2023 offseason, Josh Jacobs, Saquon Barkley and Tony Pollard all failed to come to terms with their respective teams on long-term extensions with each settling for the franchise tag, and there had only been one running back to win the league’s NFL Offensive Player of the Year award in the last five seasons: Derrick Henry in 2020.  

    This year, Jacobs, Barkley and Pollard all found multi-year contracts in free agency, as did many others at the position, and San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey took home OPOY honors after leading the NFL in rushing yards (1,459) and scrimmage yards (2,023) while co-leading the league in touchdowns (21) along with Miami Dolphins Pro Bowl running back Raheem Mostert. San Francisco naturally rewarded CMC with a two-year, $38 million extension that runs his previously running back-leading average-per-year salary up $3 million, from $16 million APY to $19 million APY. 

    Notable running backs to sign multi-year contracts this offseason

    Christian McCaffrey re-signed on a two-year, $38 million extension with 49ersDerrick Henry signed a two-year, $16 million contract with RavensJosh Jacobs signed a four-year, $48 million contract with PackersSaquon Barkley signed a three-year, $37.75 million contract with EaglesRhamondre Stevenson signed a four-year, $36 million extension with PatriotsAustin Ekeler signed a four-year, $24.5 million contract with CommandersD’Andre Swift signed a three-year, $24 million contract with BearsTony Pollard signed a three-year, $21.75 million contract with TitansJoe Mixon signed a two-year, $19.75 million extension with Texans

    The running back position may never hold as large of an importance as it once did in an NFL now geared toward the passing game, but the 2023 season proved that when utilized…

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • Why Oklahoma State running back Ollie Gordon II is college football’s most undervalued player

    Why Oklahoma State running back Ollie Gordon II is college football’s most undervalued player

    Oklahoma State’s Ollie Gordon II won the 2023 Doak Walker Award as the best running back in the nation. He was the Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year (besting the likes of Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers for the honor), a unanimous All-American and he finished seventh in Heisman Trophy voting, the highest of three running backs that placed in the top 10. 

    And he’s still college football’s best-kept secret; according to Las Vegas oddsmakers, that is. 

    In the most recent run of Heisman Trophy futures, Gordon was tagged with +15000 odds to take home the sport’s top individual award. That put him 53rd on the list of eligible athletes, alongside the likes of Nebraska true freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola and Ohio State’s Julian Sayin, who’s expected to back up starting signal caller Will Howard in his first year with the Buckeyes.

    Of course, the Heisman is a quarterback-slanted award. Seven of the last eight winners have made their name tossing the ball around the field. The only non-QB to win the Heisman in that span — former Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith — stood out because he was elite at catching those passes thrown by quarterbacks. 

    A running back hasn’t won the Heisman since 2015, when Derrick Henry carried Alabama to a College Football Playoff National Championship. Even then he garnered just 65.7% of the vote, the lowest mark for a Heisman winner since 2011.  

    Regardless of recent trends, Gordon shouldn’t just be in the Heisman conversation; he should be an early front-runner. He has the potential to follow in that Henry mold as the most important player on a team with conference championship aspirations and College Football Playoff upside. 

    Because if Oklahoma State wants to reach those goals, it will follow Gordon. He…

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • Kittle applauds Purdy’s leadership, growth as 49ers QB

    Kittle applauds Purdy’s leadership, growth as 49ers QB

    Kittle applauds Purdy’s leadership, growth as 49ers QB originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

    NASHVILLE, Tenn., — It was a 49ers reunion at the fourth annual Tight End University — a camp co-hosted by All-Pro George Kittle and Kansas City Chiefs superstar Travis Kelce — and one common theme at the event was the positive state of Brock Purdy as the leader of San Francisco’s offense.

    Kittle has not been on the field with Purdy since undergoing core muscle surgery during the offseason, but he has noticed the quarterback’s command of the players on the field.

    “He looks like the guy, which is really nice,” Kittle told NBC Sports Bay Area. “He’s in the building every day and is the same guy every single day, consistent. He’s incredibly competitive. It’s fun seeing him yell at guys when they don’t hit their route depth or have the wrong landmark.”

    Former 49ers tight ends Charlie Woerner and Ross Dwelley joined Kittle at the two-day event, and while they both now are part of the Atlanta Falcons’ organization, they remarked on how Purdy was able to take control of coach Kyle Shanahan’s offense in his debut season.

    “Super proud of Brock,” Woerner said. “He handled everything like a pro, coming in starting as the third string. From where he started, and how he showed up every day, just continuing being a pro, and ready for his opportunity. And when he got it, everyone knows he took advantage of it, and has been crushing it.”

    Dwelley, who was with Woerner during Purdy’s first offseason as a rookie, noticed from the start that the quarterback’s intensity was at another level, even with his limited rookie reps.

    “He really kind of came in and he just had the mindset that he didn’t really care about anything else going on,” Dwelley said. “He was really to himself and focused on learning the playbook as best he could, as fast as he could, and doing the best with every opportunity he got during that training camp.

    “I don’t know if…

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • LSU legacy receiver target receives crystal ball to Georgia days before commitment

    LSU legacy receiver target receives crystal ball to Georgia days before commitment

    LSU is hoping to add to its already strong 2025 recruiting class with a legacy in four-star receiver CJ Wiley, son of former Tigers defensive end Chuck Wiley.

    However, it seems LSU has some ground to make up just a couple of days before Wiley is set to commit on Tuesday. On Sunday, he received a crystal ball projection in favor of Georgia from 247Sports’ Benjamin Wolk, the second he has received for the Bulldogs so far.

    UGA is also an 82.3% favorite to land him according to On3’s recruiting prediction machine. He visited Athens earlier this month followed by a trip to LSU and is set to commit coming off a visit to Florida State this past weekend.

    The Milton, Georgia, native who ranks as the No. 136 player nationally and No. 15 receiver, will decide between those three teams on Tuesday.

    Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

    Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno

    Story originally appeared on LSU Tigers Wire

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • Tom Brady considers longtime NFL rival ‘the gold standard for quarterback play’

    Tom Brady considers longtime NFL rival ‘the gold standard for quarterback play’

    Tom Brady might be considered the GOAT, though he says there is another quarterback whom he considers as the NFL position’s ‘gold standard.’ 

    Brady gave that title to former longtime rival Peyton Manning, who was on hand for Brady’s recent induction into the Patriots Hall of Fame. Manning was there to honor Brady, but the seven-time Super Bowl champion took a moment to pay homage to Manning and the impact he had on his career. 

    “I think that I could never have been the type of player that I was without having someone like Peyton that I had to aspire to be like,” Brady said at his Patriots Hall of Fame ceremony held at Gillette Stadium. “And I looked at him as the gold standard for quarterback play, and I still do.” 

    Manning had taken the mantle from Brett Favre as the NFL’s premier quarterback when Brady was beginning his legendary run as the Patriots’ starting quarterback. In fact, Brady’s first career victory in the NFL came against Manning’s Colts. That game was the start of a historic rivalry between the era’s top-two quarterbacks. 

    “They liked me here … because I always lost here,” Manning joked during the ceremony while alluding to his lack of success in Foxborough that included losses in consecutive postseasons. “I’m much more popular than Eli [Manning] here, I promise you that. But no, absolutely, you knew when you were playing against a Tom Brady team, you better be at your best, because if you weren’t, Tom Brady was going to beat you every time.” 

    In all, Brady won 11 of his 17 career matchups against Manning. Manning, however, went 3-2 against Brady-led teams in the playoffs that included a 3-1 record in AFC Championship games during his years with the Colts and Broncos. Combined, Manning and Brady won nine Super Bowls, 14 conference titles, eight league MVPs and six Super Bowl MVPs during their respective careers. 

    While their rivalry was real, so too is the…

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • Games featuring Group of Five teams that will define the 2024 College Football Playoff race

    Games featuring Group of Five teams that will define the 2024 College Football Playoff race

    An expanded College Football Playoff adds a lot of intrigue to the regular season for Group of Five teams. After watching the four-team postseason tournament from the outside for a vast majority of its existence — Cincinnati was the only team to make it, once, in almost a decade  — the non-power conferences are guaranteed at least one spot in a 12-team format going forward.

    Five automatic bids go to the highest-ranked conference champions. The Power Four conferences are virtually guaranteed one automatic spot each, but the Pac-12’s dissolution means the fifth auto-bid is open for one of the 66 teams spread across the Group of Five conferences. 

    Given the CFP selection committee’s hesitancy towards ranking Group of Five teams highly in the past, that might be the only slot that these programs can lay claim to. So that adds an extra air of importance to early-season showcases against Power Four programs — where Group of Five schools can make waves with close showings or upsets — and the individual conference races. 

    When looking over the 2024 college football schedule, some games stand out as potentially impactful in the race for the postseason. Here’s a look at contests featuring Group of Five teams that have a chance to influence how the 12-team College Football Playoff pans out. 

    Oregon vs. Boise State (Saturday, Sept. 7) 

    Oregon is already penciled into just about every College Football Playoff projection on the planet. Dan Lanning has built a machine in very short order thanks to his elite ability to amass talent and get the most out of his players. The Ducks are in great shape to compete for a Big Ten title in their first year with the conference. Getting an early win against what should be a strong Boise State squad could set the…

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • Breece Hall: Christian McCaffrey is the NFL’s best, I want to play to that standard

    Breece Hall: Christian McCaffrey is the NFL’s best, I want to play to that standard

    The Jets play the 49ers in Week One on Monday Night Football, and Jets running back Breece Hall says that gives him the opportunity to show he belongs on the same field with the NFL’s best.

    The best, according to Hall, is 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey, and Hall sees opening the season against McCaffrey as an opportunity to show the football world that Hall is an elite running back too.

    “It’s on me,” Hall said of raising his game this year, via the New York Post. “I feel like right now McCaffrey’s the best in the league. To me, he sets the standard. We’re going to see him in Week One. . . . It’s exciting just to see where I stand and really let everyone see my full talent now that I’m healthy.”

    Hall was off to a great start in his rookie year in 2022 before suffering a torn ACL in his seventh game. He returned to play all 17 games in 2023, but he said the knee was affecting him for much of the season. Now, Hall says, he’s fully prepared to show off everything he can do.

    “I’ve gotten better this offseason. I’m a lot leaner. I feel a lot healthier. My knee feels a lot better. I just feel like I’m back to my old self,” he said.

    Hall also said a healthy Aaron Rodgers will transform not just the Jets’ passing game, but also their running game.

    “It will take a lot of pressure off me,” Hall said. “I won’t have to go against as many one-high boxes. I’m going to go against a lot of two-high boxes, which creates more space for me to work with. People aren’t going to be able to just sit in one-high because Aaron’s going to dice them up. I’m excited for sure.”

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More

  • Is Jake Strong or Will Hammond No. 3 QB for Texas Tech football? Joey McGuire explains

    Is Jake Strong or Will Hammond No. 3 QB for Texas Tech football? Joey McGuire explains

    When the 2024 college football season commences, Texas Tech football coach Joey McGuire fully expects Behren Morton to open as his starting quarterback, despite lingering questions about the health of Morton’s throwing shoulder. And the Red Raiders plan to incorporate newcomer Cameran Brown, who was recruited after McGuire directed his staff to find a dual-threat quarterback in the NCAA transfer portal.

    No one need tell the Tech coach, however, that he has to prepare for the possibility of his first two quarterbacks missing time on account of injury. That’s happened in each of McGuire’s first two years in charge of the Red Raiders.

    If the Red Raiders need to turn to a No. 3 quarterback this season, as it stands now redshirt freshman Jake Strong or true freshman Will Hammond would be next up. Which one? That depends.

    “You really want the ability to redshirt Will Hammond,” McGuire said last month, a few weeks after spring practice, “although if you just go by the spring stats, he had a better spring stat-wise than Jake. I would say Jake would be 3 and Will would be 4.

    “But if you got past Cam (Brown), it would be a deal where, ‘How can we win the game with who’s healthy?’ Will Hammond threw 25 touchdowns and only four interceptions during the spring on all competitive throws. He’s going to be really, really good for us.”

    How the Red Raiders stack up: Texas Tech football post-spring depth chart

    Recovery timelines for 13 players: Joey McGuire expects September return for Texas Tech football deep snapper Jackson Knotts

    Strong stayed in the four-game redshirt window last season, but he played the second half of a 38-21 loss to Kansas State and was pressed into starting duty the next week in a 27-14 loss at Brigham Young. Against Kansas State, he threw for 173 yards and a touchdown and set up a TD with a 54-yard run. At BYU,…

    ..

    [ad_2]

    Read More