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Browns claim OT Kilian Zierer off waivers
The Browns claimed offensive tackle Kilian Zierer off waivers, the team announced Sunday. The Falcons waived Zierer, a native of Munich, Germany, last week. The Browns also announced they waived fullback Troy Hairston and wide receiver Winston Wright. Zierer did not begin playing football until the age of 16, but with a wingspan of 83 5/8 to go with his 6-foot-7, 304-pound frame, Zierer earned a college scholarship. He played at College of the Canyons and was the No.1 JUCO prospect at his position, according to Rivals, when he signed with Auburn. Zierer started every game at left tackle for the Tigers in 2022. He signed with the Texans as an undrafted free agent in 2023 but went on injured reserve late in training camp with an ankle injury. In 2024, Zierer spent the season on the Texans' practice squad as part of the International Player Pathway Program.
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
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Gus Bradley's son joins 49ers, creating a unique father-son dynamic
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — As a longtime NFL coach, Gus Bradley rarely got the opportunity to watch his son, Carter, play football in person during his career in high school and college. Fall weekends were spent preparing his teams for games as either an assistant or head coach as Carter played quarterback in high school in Florida and then college at Toledo and South Alabama. Now the two are part of the same team after Carter Bradley signed a contract last week with San Francisco, where Gus is in his first season as a defensive assistant. "He's really excited. I can tell you that," Gus said Sunday. 'We haven't had much conversation. It's kind of been a whirlwind when that happened. But I know he's really excited to be here.' Gus Bradley said his relationship with Carter has always been more father-son than coach-player with the focus being more in life lessons such as how to respond to being cut than how to decipher a quarters defense. They had those types of conversations just after Carter was waived by the Raiders before the start of training camp. Gus got a heads up that the Niners planned to bring Carter in for a tryout last week, asking if he would be OK with it. 'I said, 'Yeah. But as far as you know, that's Carter Bradley and I'm Gus Bradley and we're separate,'" Gus said. 'You never want to put the organization in a tough position and that's not how this organization operates. It's too competitive. You only have so many roster spots.' Carter Bradley took part in the tryout with several other players last Wednesday. Gus and Carter talked briefly after the workout and Gus said goodbye before he headed into a meeting, figuring that Carter would be sent on a plane home right away. Gus came out of the meeting later that day and Carter was still at the facility waiting for word for what would come next. Carter got the news later that day that he had made the team. Coach Kyle Shanahan said Carter looked so good in the tryout and on a few dozen plays last preseason with Las Vegas that he earned the spot as the team's fourth QB. 'That's what I appreciate about them,' Gus said. 'It wasn't like 'Gus, hey we'll give you a heads up. Here's what we're going to do.' It was truly he's Carter Bradley, I'm over on the defensive side and we'll handle it that way.' Gus Bradley acknowledges he has more interest in Carter's performance than other offensive players but is able to compartmentalize it during practices when he is focused so intently on the defensive side of the ball. Sometimes it will take until film review later for him to see what Carter did on a certain play. 'I'm not going to lie. I'm still a parent, and he's here," Gus said. "But I thought it would be where you would be constantly looking. How's he doing? It it really is not that. It's Gus, where did that play hit. You can't watch what's happening on the offense and watch the whole defensive and do that.' Notes The Niners had the day off from practice headed into their first week with an exhibition game. San Francisco will practice on Monday and Tuesday and then take a day off before hosting a joint practice on Thursday against Denver. The teams will then play Saturday night. ... The 49ers signed WR Robbie Chosen and released WR Marquez Callaway. ___ AP NFL:
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27 minutes ago
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Colts RB Salvon Ahmed suffers 'severe leg injury' in practice due to reported illegal hip-drop tackle by teammate
Indianapolis Colts running back Salvon Ahmed's NFL season is in jeopardy. And it's due to a reported hip-drop tackle by a teammate during training camp. Ahmed sustained the injury on Sunday. Per reporters on the scene, Ahmed broke free for a long run during a live 11-on-11 drill in which tackling was permitted. According to reports, undrafted rookie safety Trey Washington chased Ahmed down from behind and dragged him down via an illegal hip-drop tackle. Per The Athletic's James Boyd, "Ahmed immediately grabbed his lower right leg and screamed in agony" after the tackle. ESPN's Stephen Holder reports that Ahmed's right ankle was "stuck in an awkward position." Practice was paused, and trainers removed Ahmed from the field on a stretcher. Ahmed was transported to a local hospital for X-rays. The precise nature of Ahmed's injury wasn't immediately clear. But head coach Shane Steichen told reporters that Ahmed had sustained a 'severe leg injury.' Hip-drop tackle is banned in games The NFL banned the hip-drop tackle prior to the 2024 season via a unanimous vote of team owners. NFL competition committee executive vice president Jeff Miller said prior to the vote that the technique 'results in about a 25 times rate of injury as a typical tackle.' Per the NFL rulebook, a hip-drop tackle occurs when a defender does the following: (a) grabs the runner with one or both hands or wraps the runner with both arms; and (b) unweights himself by swiveling and dropping his hips and/or lower body, landing on and/or trapping the runner's leg(s) at or below the knee." Steichen described the tackle that injured Ahmed as a hip-drop tackle and said that Washington was "down in the dumps" because of the injury. "Never want to see that happen," Steichen told reporters, per ESPN. "I know we don't encourage hip-drop tackles. "I know Trey's down in the dumps, and I don't think he's trying to do that. We're just trying to create an edge. ... Those [backups] are going to have to tackle come preseason." Ahmed, 26, is approaching his fifth NFL season. He played his first four seasons with the Miami Dolphins as a backup who averaged 4.3 yards per carry and tallied 867 yards from scrimmage and six touchdowns in 38 appearances. Ahmed signed with the Colts this offseason on a one-year, $1.17 million contract with no guaranteed money. Washington signed with the Colts this offseason after four years as a starter at Mississippi. Veteran Colts linebacker Zaire Franklin offered his support to both Washington and Ahmed in comments to The Athletic after Sunday's injury to Ahmed. 'Young Trey, he's competing for a job, straight up,' Franklin said. 'So, he's out here trying to compete and trying to be better. We're warriors on that field. When we step on the field, we understand what the possibilities are. "Obviously, we're a team. We're not trying to hurt each other, but at the same time, we're competing. These guys are trying to feed their families. It's a part of the game, but definitely a tough break for Salvon and definitely praying for him.'