Category: NFL News

  • Former Rams and Eagles QB Roman Gabriel, 1969 NFL MVP, dies at 83

    Former Rams and Eagles QB Roman Gabriel, 1969 NFL MVP, dies at 83

    Roman Gabriel, pictured in 1969, was a league MVP. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

    Former NFL MVP and four-time Pro Bowl quarterback Roman Gabriel died on Saturday. He was 83 years old.

    Gabriel played 11 seasons for the Los Angeles Rams and five for the Philadelphia Eagles during his 16-year NFL career. After playing college football at North Carolina State, he was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1962 AFL Draft by the Oakland Raiders and the No. 2 overall selection in the NFL Draft that same year. Gabriel opted to sign with the Rams.

    He won MVP honors in 1969, throwing for 2,549 yards and 24 touchdowns for an 11–3 Rams team. His 154 career touchdown passes are the most in franchise history.

    We mourn the loss of Rams legend and football pioneer, Roman Gabriel. We extend our condolences to his family and friends during this difficult time. pic.twitter.com/NY6y6ddm1x

    — Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) April 20, 2024

    Gabriel’s best season, statistically speaking, was in 1973 when he threw 3,219 yards and 23 touchdowns for an Eagles team that finished 5–8–1. His performance earned him Pro Bowl honors for the fourth time in his career.

    Unfortunately, Gabriel didn’t experience much postseason success during his career. His teams lost in the divisional round twice in the playoffs. In 1967, the Rams went 11–1-2 but lost to the Green Bay Packers in the divisional round. And during his MVP season for an 11–3 club, Los Angeles was defeated by the Minnesota Vikings in the divisional round.

    That might be why Gabriel is not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame despite throwing for more career yards and touchdowns than Bob Griese, Bart Starr and Roger Staubach, all of whom won Super Bowl championships and are enshrined in Canton.

    RIP Roman Gabriel 🙏🏻#Rams #Eagles

    A Tribute to a Colossus of a Quarterback

    The 1969 NFL MVP, 1973 PFWA Comeback Player of the Year, and the Rams’ all-time career leader in touchdown passes pic.twitter.com/rFUOABC2P3

    — Kevin Gallagher (@KevG163)…

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  • Cowboys’ Dak Prescott ‘not trying to be highest-paid necessarily’; addresses possibility of leaving Dallas

    Cowboys’ Dak Prescott ‘not trying to be highest-paid necessarily’; addresses possibility of leaving Dallas

    DALLAS, Texas —  The Dallas Cowboys 2024 offseason has felt different than offseasons past for a variety of reasons.

    For the first time in the their string of three consecutive 12-win seasons, Dallas was humiliated in the postseason with a 48-32 faceplant of a defeat against the seventh-seeded Green Bay Packers. The previous two years ended with one possession losses against the San Francisco 49ers. 

    Another cause for a different feel around the Cowboys this time of year was of course the shift from owner and general manager Jerry Jones saying Dallas would be  “all in” to then saying they are going to “get it done with less” after letting many starters walk in free agency and mostly re-signing their own depth players. Veteran 32-year-old linebacker Erick Kendricks signing a one-year deal is the crown jewel of the Cowboys’ 2024 offseason. 

    Much of the blame for the Cowboys spending an NFL-low $13.7 million in free agency and just under $20 million less than the next cheapest team — the New Orleans Saints ($32.2 million) — per OverTheCap.com, is their inability to get 2023 Second-Team All-Pro quarterback Dak Prescott and 2023 First-Team All-Pro wide receiver CeeDee Lamb re-signed to new deals to spread out their cap hits. The inability to do so and the subsequent inactivity surprises even Cowboys Hall of Fame quarterback Troy Aikman. 

    “That would probably be fair,” Aikman said Friday at the Children’s Cancer Fund’s “A Knight to Remember” gala when asked if he was surprised about the Cowboys’ offseason inactivity. “I thought they would have taken care of Dak already. You guys follow it closer than I do. I don’t know what the game plan is. I know that everyone concluded a lot about Jerry’s comments in Mobile about being all in  and what that might look like, so I think it’s caught a lot of people by surprise. … I do think there’s a lot of scrutiny every offseason with every…

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  • From Maye to Harrison, what Red Sox would do with Patriots’ No. 3 pick

    From Maye to Harrison, what Red Sox would do with Patriots’ No. 3 pick

    From Maye to Harrison, what Red Sox would do with Patriots’ No. 3 pick originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

    If baseball players have a second sport, it’s generally football. That’s partly because so many of them hail from areas of the country where pigskin is king – Texas, Florida, anywhere in the SEC – and also because the skills overlap, but the seasons don’t.

    It should come as no surprise, then, that a good chunk of the Red Sox clubhouse follows college football as religiously as New Englanders drink Dunkin’. They’re glued to their TVs on fall Saturdays, and they know their Troy Fautanus from their Taliese Fuagas in the battle of Pacific Northwest tackles.

    As such, a number of Red Sox players are enjoying the same pastime as the rest of us, wondering what the Patriots might do with the No. 3 pick in next week’s draft. And they don’t lack for opinions.

    From the debate of Jayden Daniels vs. Drake Maye vs. J.J. McCarthy at quarterback, to advocates for Marvin Harrison Jr., to one Georgia boy going off the board in favor of Bulldogs tight end Brock Bowers, they have thoughts on what the Patriots should do, and they don’t mind throwing on their NFL GM hats for a minute and pretending they have all the answers.

    “If you get a top-five pick, you’ve got to get a guy that’s going to change the game,” said shortstop Trevor Story last month.

    Here is how a few of the Red Sox would approach the draft if they were the Patriots.

    Justin Slaten: J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan

    The Rule 5 right-hander who’s off to an excellent start is a Texas native but a Packers fan with strong feelings about how the Patriots should draft and develop a QB. His first order of business would be sitting the pick behind veteran Jacoby Brissett.

    “These quarterbacks at the top, Caleb Williams is the only one where you feel like he could come in on Day 1 and go,” he said. “The other guys, I feel like they’re going to have to sit and learn for a little bit. I’m a Packers fan, so I’m biased to that…

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  • 2024 NFL Draft: Buyer beware on Bo Nix, Keon Coleman and these other top prospects

    2024 NFL Draft: Buyer beware on Bo Nix, Keon Coleman and these other top prospects

    We won’t know this right away, but despite hype that leads to prospects being picked in Round 1 of the 2024 NFL Draft, a small grouping of selections will go much too early. This happens in every single draft class. 

    To warn you about who those prospects may very well be, I’m generating another “Buyer-Beware” prospect list.

    While I’m not insinuating these prospects are guaranteed to bust, they’re just the most risky propositions who could still land somewhere in the first round or very early on Day 2. In my estimation, they’ll have a difficult time living up to their draft positions. These are my buyer-beware prospects in the 2024 class. 

    Bo Nix, QB, Oregon

    Why: Lacking standout trait(s)

    Nix can be categorized as an “incomplete” grade, for two reasons. The system at Oregon was incredibly gimmicky — but incredibly effective — and he threw to an incredible amount of wide-open Duck receivers and tight ends the past two years in Eugene. 

    As for the nearly 78% completion percentage, Nix isn’t nearly as accurate as that record-setting rate indicates. Does he have a ball-placement issue? No. But he’s not hyper accurate. There’s an athleticism element to his game. Without question. Will he be a major running threat in the NFL? I can’t envision it.

    Now, can Nix be a quality game-manager, who operates within structure soundly? Sure. Will I trust him making challenging throws at the intermediate level or down the field in key moments? No. I didn’t see that from him on a routine basis in either of the last two seasons at Oregon. And I need that confidence from a first-round quarterback. It’s an absolute must. Because of that, and, from afar, Nix not possessing a standout trait, are why I’m placing him on this team.

    Marshawn Kneeland, EDGE, Western Michigan

    Why: Limited pass-rush move arsenal, high pad level, lacking collegiate production

    There’s a future reality in which Kneeland…

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  • Deion Sanders disputes having list of six acceptable teams for Shedeur and Travis Hunter

    Deion Sanders disputes having list of six acceptable teams for Shedeur and Travis Hunter

    Several weeks ago, Colorado coach Deion Sanders said he knows where he wants his son, Shedeur, and teammate Travis Hunter to play in the NFL. Deion also said there are specific places he doesn’t want them to go.

    Today, Sanders was asked about it by Romi Bean of CBS Colorado.

    The clip starts with Bean asking this question: “Everybody’s saying, right, you’re only letting Shedeur and Travis go to only six teams. Is this true? Can we get some insight?”

    Responded Deion: “Who said that and did you see me say that? . . . The thing about a lie, a lie is so fast. It can outrun the truth any day. That’s a bold-faced lie. That’s a stupid lie. I have more than six owners that are friends. I have more than six G.M.’s that are friends. You gotta understand I played fourteen and I worked another seventeen I believe in the NFL, NFL Network and . . . CBS. I know a lot of people. Come on. So I would never do that. Before I would disclose — if I was that stupid, I wouldn’t disclose the teams I would want them to play for, I would disclose the several that I wouldn’t.”

    Here’s the clip from last month.

    “I know where I want them to go,” Deion said. “So, it’s certain cities that ain’t gonna happen. , , , It’s going to be an Eli.”

    Before that, Deion said he doesn’t want Shedeur to play in a cold-weather city.

    While the list might not be six, he said “I know where I want them to go.” He also said that in “certain cities” it “ain’t gonna happen.”

    Whatever the number of places he’ll approve, the fact remains that he’s planning a power play, the likes of which we haven’t seen since Eli Manning in 2004 and, before that, John Elway in 1983.

    And to that we say, “It’s about time someone else does it.”

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  • Bill Belichick nowhere close to landing any HC jobs this offseason, per report: He was ‘voted off the island’

    Bill Belichick nowhere close to landing any HC jobs this offseason, per report: He was ‘voted off the island’

    One of the most surprising results of the NFL offseason was that, after the coaching carousel had finished spinning, longtime New England Patriots head coach and living legend Bill Belichick ended up without a job. Belichick is just 15 career wins shy of setting the NFL’s all-time record, and he wanted to coach in 2024. But that didn’t happen, and it apparently was not very close to happening.

    Belichick, according to ESPN, finished outside the top three of the Atlanta Falcons’ finalists, and that was the closest he came to landing any of the available — or even potentially available — head-coaching positions. Belichick apparently tried to convince owner Arthur Blank and the Falcons’ front office that he was willing to just be the head coach and not have full control over the organization, but was unsuccessful and then got blindsided when the Falcons instead decided to hire former Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris.

    “He was essentially voted off the island,” a Falcons source told ESPN.

    ESPN also went through the list of the other available head-coaching positions this offseason and provided the apparent reasoning why Belichick was ultimately not the man for the job, even if he was willing to cede organizational power to the front office:

    Philadelphia Eagles: Owner Jeffrey Lurie did not seriously consider moving on from Nick Sirianni, though he did have a conversation with Belichick where coaching for the organization did not come up. “You’ll have to start over again,” an Eagles source told ESPN. “Who would replace him? He hasn’t had a good record of developing coaches. They were afraid that he’ll have changed everything and every person, and [then] you’ll be starting from scratch again. He didn’t demand those changes, but they felt like, if we hire him, we have to give everything to him and trust how he does it.”Dallas Cowboys: Change-averse Jerry Jones decided quickly to…..

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  • Veteran WR Taylor returns to 49ers, signs one-year contract

    Veteran WR Taylor returns to 49ers, signs one-year contract

    Veteran WR Taylor returns to 49ers, signs one-year contract originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

    The 49ers have brought back veteran slot receiver and return man Trent Taylor, signing him to a one-year contract, the team announced Tuesday.

    The 49ers and Taylor were in talks about a reunion, a league source told NBC Sports Bay Area on Tuesday, and the conversation clearly moved quickly.

    Taylor has been in the NFL since 2017, when he was a fifth-round pick in the first draft class of general manager John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan with the 49ers.

    After four seasons with the 49ers, Taylor played two years with the Cincinnati Bengals and last season with the Chicago Bears.

    Taylor, 29, has appeared in 78 NFL career games. He has 87 receptions for 834 yards and three touchdowns. He had a standout rookie season with the 49ers with 43 catches for 430 yards and two touchdowns.

    Injuries sidetracked the early part of Taylor’s career, and he missed the entire 2019 season due to a foot injury and complications from surgeries.

    With Taylor back in the mix, the 49ers fill two important needs, as he supplies the team with an option at slot receiver, as well as competing to handle punt-return chores.

    The 49ers lost punt return Ray-Ray McCloud in NFL free agency this offseason when he signed with the Atlanta Falcons.

    Taylor has a career average of 9.4 yards on 112 punt returns in his career.

    Rookie Ronnie Bell struggled in the role of returning punts last season when McCloud was out of action for several games.

    Download and follow the 49ers Talk Podcast

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  • Raiders’ Antonio Pierce will not be part of Arizona State’s negotiated resolution with NCAA as case nears end

    Raiders’ Antonio Pierce will not be part of Arizona State’s negotiated resolution with NCAA as case nears end

    Las Vegas Raiders coach Antonio Pierce will not be part of the negotiated resolution between the NCAA and Arizona State tied to the almost-three-year-old case that’s nearing a conclusion, sources told CBS Sports.

    Pierce isn’t necessarily exonerated in the case. He’s not compelled to sit for an in-person interview with NCAA investigators looking into alleged major recruiting violations at the school, but instead, sources told CBS Sports that Pierce will be submitting a written statement to NCAA. After the statement is reviewed and compared to the NCAA’s findings, Pierce could then be penalized. Pierce’s cooperation with the NCAA is not required because he is no longer in college athletics. 

    Sources previously told CBS Sports the negotiated resolution, which is expected to be made official in the near future, contains a show-cause penalty for former Sun Devils head coach Herm Edwards. Pierce, considered a central figure in the recruiting scandal, could receive a similar penalty. 

    A show-cause penalty means a school could be subject to sanctions if it hires a coach during the length of that punishment. Neither Pierce nor Edwards are expected to return to college football anytime soon, however. 

    This is essentially the NCAA’s scarlet letter in preventing accused coaches from getting jobs. Show-cause penalties were recently strengthened at the NCAA’s annual convention in January.

    CBS Sports reported in February that Arizona State was expected to agree to major violations in the negotiated resolution process. The case began when the ASU staff allegedly entertained recruits on campus during the COVID-19 dead period, which was in violation of NCAA rules. Further postseason penalties are not expected after the school self-imposed a one-year bowl ban in August 2023 in an attempt to mitigate future punishment. 

    A negotiated resolution occurs when schools, involved persons and NCAA…

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