Author: nfltalk

  • Emmitt Smith blasts the Cowboys

    Emmitt Smith blasts the Cowboys

    If PFT Live had a guest Hall of Fame, Hall of Fame running back Emmitt Smith (an annual Super Bowl-week guest) would have earned a spot with Friday’s visit alone.

    The full video is attached. Emmitt was as funny and engaging as ever. He also has very pointed in his criticisms of the current Cowboys.

    It started with a simple question: Were you surprised owner Jerry Jones didn’t fire head coach Mike McCarthy after a 48-32 home playoff loss to the Packers?

    “I was completely surprised,” Emmitt said. “I know how disappointed I was as a player to see that product put on the football field. It is not becoming of the Dallas Cowboys’ mystique, respect, the brand. It is not the appropriate representation of the brand itself. Now, Jerry understand these kind of words. The brand, right? The star. Everything has to be pristine, but this was not that. That right there was so disappointing not only to me, but to many of our fans and including people that was like, ‘What is that?’ It wasn’t a good look.”

    I asked Emmitt about my own theory that Jerry’s quest for another Super Bowl win is all talk, that he claims to want to win one more to keep the fans engaged but that his actions don’t back up his world.

    “You lose credibility,” Emmitt said of Jones. “And if you’re losing credibility, you’re losing respect. You lose respect, you have no honor. At the end of the day, I agree to some level. Things have to change. I thought the reason why I was so convinced that [McCarthy] was going to get fired because last year there was a whole lot of talk about ‘OK, this might be it. If he doesn’t perform this year, OK.’ You’re gonna accept twelve wins and the playoff berth, but you’re gonna accept the way we got kicked out of the playoffs? I mean, dominated. I mean, it’s like we went out and played with our hands tied behind our backs or we left our minds up in [the team facility in] Frisco and didn’t even take it over to AT&T [Stadium] in Arlington. It was such a disappointing thing. It…

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  • USC offers five-star 2026 edge rusher Kevin Ford Jr.

    USC offers five-star 2026 edge rusher Kevin Ford Jr.

    USC needs elite players. Class of 2026 prospect Kevin Ford Jr. fits the bill. For, an edge rusher from Duncanville (Texas), has announced via his social media channel that he has received an offer from USC. The 2026 prospect is the No. 1-rated player from the state of Texas in the 2026 class, 36th nationally.

    The 6-3, 225-pound Ford has offers from Texas, Arizona State, Nebraska, Penn State, SMU, North Texas, Texas A&M, Oklahoma, Florida, UCF and Baylor among others.

    The Trojans have lagged behind the top programs in the country in terms of overall recruiting rankings and top-line recruiting prowess. USC is outside the top 15 in the national rankings for the 2024 class. That’s not terrible, but it’s certainly not what USC had in mind. It is below expectations for Lincoln Riley and his program. It’s several notches below Oregon, Ohio State, and Miami, three programs which have not won any conference championships the past three seasons but have done a lot better than USC on the trail and in the transfer portal.

    Landing five-star prospects is exactly what USC needs to elevate itself as a program. Ford gives the Trojans an opportunity to boost their roster and change the narrative.

    Visit our friends at Fighting Irish Wire, Buffaloes Wire, and Ducks Wire. Follow our newest sites, UW Huskies Wire and UCLA Wire.

    Story originally appeared on Trojans Wire

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  • 49ers Super Bowl 58 injury report: San Francisco relatively healthy entering game vs. Chiefs; stars practice

    49ers Super Bowl 58 injury report: San Francisco relatively healthy entering game vs. Chiefs; stars practice

    Getty Images

    The San Francisco 49ers’ final injury report heading into Super Bowl LVIII only consists of one player carrying an injury designation, an excellent sign for a team looking for their first NFL championship in 29 years. Defensive tackle Kalia Davis (ankle) is the only player on the 49ers’ injury report up in the air for Sunday as he’s listed as questionable. 

    Davis has played just 54 defensive snaps for the 49ers all season, and none in the postseason. He could be listed as a game-day inactive come Sunday, even though he was listed as a full participant in Friday’s practice.

    Things certainly changed from the 49ers’ initial injury report on Wednesday. Tight end George Kittle (toe) and defensive lineman Arik Armstead (knee/foot) were limited during the team’s first practice of the week. They were elevated to full participants by Friday and not given an injury designation. 

    Cornerback Ambry Thomas (ankle) and linebacker Oren Burks (shoulder), who were both limited practice participants all of last week, were limited on Wednesday. They were also full participants by Friday. 

    The 49ers are one win away from winning the franchise’s sixth Super Bowl and first since the 1994 season. It’s been a long road for San Francisco, who are hoping to put years of disappointing playoff finishes behind them by beating the Kansas City Chiefs, who edged them in Super Bowl LIV four years ago. 

    Entering Super Bowl Sunday, the 49ers are relatively healthy. 

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  • Benjamin Yurosek commits to Georgia: Productive TE from Stanford will compete to replace Brock Bowers

    Benjamin Yurosek commits to Georgia: Productive TE from Stanford will compete to replace Brock Bowers

    Former Stanford tight end Benjamin Yurosek is transferring to Georgia following a four-year career with the Cardinal. Yurosek, who is the No. 6 tight end in 247Sports’ transfer rankings, is a huge get for the Bulldogs, who needed an experienced tight end to replace star and expected first-round NFL Draft pick Brock Bowers. 

    “Obviously Georgia has the best of both worlds,” Yurosek told ESPN. “They have big-time football and the use of tight ends.”

    A graduate transfer, Yurosek was seen as a potential 2024 NFL Draft pick before an injury riddled 2023 season sidelined his professional hopes. He emerged as one of the nation’s best tight ends from 2021-22, starting in 23 games and tallying 92 receptions for 1,103 yards and four touchdowns. 

    His 15.3 yards per catch in 2021 ranked third among power-conference tight ends. Yurosek had a career-best performance to open the 2023 season, catching nine passes for 138 yards and a touchdown against Hawaii, but he suffered a shoulder injury in an Oct. 13 win against Colorado that caused him to shut things down for the rest of the year. 

    Yurosek should thrive in his role at Georgia with a good chance that his draft stock soars once more. The Bulldogs get more out of the tight end position than almost any school in the nation, as evidenced by Bowers’ prolific career. The two-time Mackey Award winner had 2,538 yards receiving and 26 touchdowns in his three years at Georgia, far more than any other tight end in that span. 

    The Bulldogs also used Bowers as a ferocious blocker on running plays and even gave him some work out of the backfield, a role that Yurosek should be familiar with given his 14 career carries — 11 of which came during the 2023 season. 

    Georgia loading up on skill talent

    Georgia is…

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  • NFL Honors 2024: Lamar Jackson thanks Ravens for ‘finally getting the deal done’ after winning second MVP

    NFL Honors 2024: Lamar Jackson thanks Ravens for ‘finally getting the deal done’ after winning second MVP

    USATSI

    Lamar Jackson used his MVP acceptance speech to discuss an old storyline that dominated the headlines for several years. 

    Now a two-time league MVP, Jackson thanked the Ravens for financially investing in him with a hefty new contract before the start of the 2023 season. The two had been locked in a tough negotiation prior to getting a deal done. 

    “I want to thank the Ravens for finally getting the deal done,” Jackson said during Thursday night’s NFL Honors.

    Jackson inked a five-year, $260 million deal prior to his second MVP season. Along with financially investing in him, the Ravens also gave Jackson a new wideout in rookie Zay Flowers. They also gave him a new offensive coordinator, Todd Monken, who built an offense that tailored to Jackson’s strengths. Jackson responded with his best season since 2019, when he won his first MVP. 

    Jackson and the Ravens came up one game short in their Super Bowl…

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  • Central’s Reddick flips to UCF

    Central’s Reddick flips to UCF

    Feb. 8—THOMASVILLE — On the eve before National Signing Day when ten of his senior teammates would make their football futures official, Thomas County Central junior Dee Reddick made headlines as he announced his surprising flip. Reddick has de-committed from Auburn and is now committed to UCF.w

    For many, the flip was a shock. UCF has recently joined the Big 12, but holds no where near the cachet that Auburn has being an SEC program and having recently hired Hugh Freeze, which puts them on an upward trajectory. However, when you look at UCF’s recent coaching moves, it makes sense.

    UCF’s head coach is Gus Malzahn, who has significant ties to Auburn. Malzahn served as Auburn’s head football coach for six years and led the Tigers to an SEC championship and national championship appearance in 2013.

    Malzahn recently made a splash in the coaching world, hiring away Auburn’s director of player personnel and excellent recruiter Trovon Reed. It is believed that Reed had a lot to do with Reddick’s flip.

    “That’s kind of one of the reasons Gus had hired him was they wanted to bring in some really good top recruiters and I think that was one of the pieces that kind of fell into place,” said Matt Murschel of the Orlando Sentinel.

    Malzahn and his staff did take a trip to Thomas County Central to meet with Reddick. Reddick felt a connection with the Knights, later attending a recruiting weekend. He made the flip soon after.

    “A connection was made by coach Malzahn and his staff when they came here,” said Central head coach Justin Rogers. “And, obviously, a further and deeper connection when he went on his trip.”

    Getting Reddick to flip is a big win for the UCF program. According to Murschel, Malzahn and UCF have put a real emphasis on recruiting, posting their best ever recruiting class in 2024, which ranked in the top 35 in the…

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  • Super Bowl 2024: Kyle Shanahan has put one negative narrative to bed … can he do away with another?

    Super Bowl 2024: Kyle Shanahan has put one negative narrative to bed … can he do away with another?

    No person is under more pressure in Super Bowl LVIII than San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan. He’s been the play-caller (either offensive coordinator or head coach) for two of the six largest blown leads in Super Bowl history (more on that in a minute). 

    First, let me recognize that the high expectations and pressure come equally because of his coaching excellence as they do the blown playoff leads. He’s coaching in his second Super Bowl at age 44 and is one of the best offensive minds the NFL has ever seen. His teams average the most yards per play and yards per pass attempt of any head coach in NFL history (min. 100 games). Until Brock Purdy arrived, he managed to guide his teams to historic levels of offensive efficiency without a Pro Bowl QB.

    He just helped Purdy set an NFL record for yards per pass attempt in a season (9.6) with at least 350 attempts. The record Purdy broke belonged to Matt Ryan from 2016 — when Shanahan was Ryan’s OC. Shanahan is an expert at creating deception, space and mismatches with his playmakers. You can see the impact of his style also paying dividends with two of his disciples in Miami (head coach Mike McDaniel) and Houston (offensive coordinator/play caller Bobby Slowik). 

    Shanahan’s ability to play chess with motion and a position-less group of superstar playmakers puts defenses in a blender. On any given play we could see running back Christian McCaffrey lined up at wide receiver, fullback Kyle Juszczyk split out wide, wide receiver Deebo Samuel at “wide back” and tight end George Kittle in the slot, all with any combination of them in motion. 

    Shanahan’s greatness is clearly a big reason his teams are consistently competing for Super Bowls. It’s also a reason he faces a lot of scrutiny when his teams fall short of the ultimate prize. There have been two primary narratives following Shanahan for years: He can’t come from behind to win…

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  • SEC commissioner Greg Sankey speaks on problems facing college football: ‘There are no magical answers’

    SEC commissioner Greg Sankey speaks on problems facing college football: ‘There are no magical answers’

    SEC commissioner Greg Sankey has been a busy man of late. In the past week alone he announced a “joint advisory committee” partnership with the Big Ten and the state of Tennessee filed a pivotal lawsuit against the NCAA that could change the way name, image and likeness is governed going forward in college football. In a Wednesday appearance on ESPN, Sankey had a chance to address those topics. 

    Speaking on the SEC’s partnership with the Big Ten, Sankey says it grew out of frustration in the lack of progress at College Football Playoff committee meetings. 

    “We have all been in rooms with people, big rooms filled with a lot of people,” Sankey said. “We don’t seem to be making a lot of progress on the key issues present in college athletics. Here’s an opportunity to slim down the participants, focus on two conferences with the idea that we can introduce some concepts that others can consider and react to. … We have a set of pressing issues upon us that merit this kind of conversation.”

    The Big Ten will expand to 18 schools in the 2024-25 academic year, while the SEC will add Oklahoma and Texas to reach 16 members. Sankey believes both conferences’ decision to expand has aligned some of their interests when it comes to access to the College Football Playoff, among other things. 

    “We made an announcement back in the Summer of 2021 about the SEC’s growth of 14 to 16 members, that announcement changed my relationship within meeting rooms,” he said. “It resulted in some of the delays in decision making that I spoke of earlier. Fast forward a year later and the Big Ten made an expansion decision.”

    Last week attorneys general from…

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