
Broncos believe linebacker Dre Greenlaw's latest leg injury isn't serious
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Linebacker Dre Greenlaw pulled up while covering running back J.K. Dobbins in a 1-on-1 drill Thursday, then jogged off the field with the Denver Broncos' athletic trainers and didn't return to practice.
Coach Sean Payton said afterward that it wasn't a recurrence of the thigh injury that sidelined Greenlaw this offseason. Payton motioned toward his own hamstring and said Greenlaw felt it tighten up.
'I think he'll be all right,' Payton said while adding that Greenlaw was undergoing further tests.
That would be a big relief for the Broncos, who made Greenlaw the cornerstone of their offseason additions when they signed the former San Francisco 49ers star to a three-year, $31.5 million contract.
Earlier this week, Payton spoke glowingly about Greenlaw.
'He plays like Mike Tyson,' Payton said. 'He's tough. He's physical. He's built that way. There's not a lot of leaky yardage. He's a knock-back tackler. They stop where he hits them. There's an intensity to how he plays. He's one of those players where if you put the film on and didn't say anything, at some point early you would ask, 'Who is this guy?''
Greenlaw said Payton isn't the first one to compare him to the former heavyweight champion.
'Yeah, I've gotten that before for sure. I don't know, I just like to play football and go out there, and I give it my all,' Greenlaw said Monday following Denver's first padded practice of training camp. 'You never know when it's going to be your last chance on the field, your last chance to play, so you want to make a statement any time you can. I just love doing it and am thankful to be able to do it.'
Greenlaw played in just a couple of games last season after tearing an Achilles tendon running onto the field in the 49ers' 25-22 loss to Kansas City in the 2024 Super Bowl. He and former 49ers star safety Talanoa Hufanga joined the Broncos in the offseason despite strong efforts by San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan and general manger John Lynch to keep them in the Bay Area.
Greenlaw said he wanted to join Denver's stellar defense, which also added versatile defensive back Jahdae Barron in the first round of the NFL draft.
'They've had one of the best defenses for quite some time now. I know last year they really took that up a notch, and I just wanted to be a part of that,' Greenlaw said. 'I wanted to be where I was accepted, where I was wanted and this is the right place for me.'
Middle linebacker Alex Singleton broke his left thumb on Monday and won't be back until next week, so after Greenlaw left practice, the Broncos' front-line inside linebackers were undrafted rookie Levelle Bailey and veteran Justin Strnad.
Greenlaw said he's eager to play alongside Singleton when both are healthy.
'That's what I also looked into when I came here, just to see what type of leaders are on the team,' Greenlaw said. 'Alex is a vocal guy when he needs to be. He's also a tackling machine. ... He's somebody that's going to give it all he's got every play. I saw that in Alex that I see in myself, so I thought this was going to be a great little duo.'
___
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
recommended
Item 1 of 3

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
a few seconds ago
- Fox Sports
Teddy Bridgewater Opens Up About Coaching Suspension, 'Excited' For Bucs Opportunity
National Football League Teddy Bridgewater Opens Up About Coaching Suspension, 'Excited' For Bucs Opportunity Published Aug. 6, 2025 5:12 p.m. ET share facebook x reddit link TAMPA, Fla. — Teddy Bridgewater has been here before. In the pre-draft process in 2014, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers brought him in for an official visit, and he still remembers the restaurant they took him to and how he liked the idea of getting back to his home state after playing in college at Louisville. Alas, the Bucs picked at No. 38 and the Minnesota Vikings traded up to No. 32 to grab him, so it never happened. Then in 2020, when Bridgewater was a free agent, the prospect of him signing with the Bucs was close enough "I thought it was a lock," he remembers, but then Tom Brady entered the picture, signed and led Tampa Bay to a Super Bowl championship. On Wednesday morning, the 32-year-old Bridgewater looked back on his first practice as a Bucs quarterback, smiling as he talked about how long it had been coming. "We've been flirting for years," he said. "I'm finally here. So I'm excited, man." Bridgewater's NFL career has come full circle as he enters his 12th season. He had a promising first two years with the Vikings, making the Pro Bowl and making the playoffs in his second year, only to have a torn ACL basically take away the next two years. He's bounced from the New York Jets to the New Orleans Saints to the Carolina Panthers to the Denver Broncos to the Miami Dolphins to the Detroit Lions. While Bridgewater hasn't started a game since 2022, he recently made headlines at his most recent stop. He dabbled in coaching at his high school alma mater, Miami's Northwestern High, but his tenure there came to a pause in July when he was suspended for allegedly giving impermissible benefits to his players. ADVERTISEMENT Bridgewater stood by his actions on Wednesday, saying he provided Uber rides home and meals to players because he was once in their shoes, at the same school in the same bad neighborhood, and wanted to protect them. "Everyone knows that I'm just a cheerful guy, a cheerful giver as well. I'm a protector. I'm a father first before anything," Bridgewater said. "When I decided to coach, those players became my sons and I wanted to make sure I just protect them in the best way I can. Miami Northwestern is in a tough neighborhood, and sometimes things can happen when kids are walking home. "I just tried to protect them, give them a ride home instead of them having to take those dangerous walks," Bridgewater added. "I just want people to continue to see me for the person I've been from the time I arrived in the NFL, from the time I arrived at the University of Louisville, just a humble guy who has a big heart and a cheerful giver." Bridgewater, who will wear No. 16 for the Bucs, wants to keep close tabs on his players at Miami Northwestern, knowing the time commitment of being an NFL player will keep him away, but he'll try to get back when the schedule allows him, thanking them for inspiring him as a player and coach. "It's a great group of kids. They see so much hope when they look at me," he said. "I've always said it's food for my soul." As Bridgewater is looking to continue to serve as a leader for the high school kids he coaches, that leadership is just part of the reason why the Buccaneers recently brought him in. "He brings us a wealth of experience," coach Todd Bowles said on Wednesday. "We think we need some experience in that room. The more experience, the better. He can't do anything but help." The quarterback has personal connections all over his new team. When he was a freshman in high school, Bucs linebacker Lavonte David was a senior, so the two have been friends for half their lives. Bucs offensive coordinator Josh Grizzard was a Dolphins assistant when Bridgewater played in Miami in 2022, and as he settled into his hotel room Tuesday night, a knock on the door yielded another familiar face: Bucs defensive line coach Charlie Strong, who was his head coach at Louisville. "Coach Strong was doing room checks last night in the hotel and he knocked on the door. I'm like 'Man, what the hell?'" Bridgewater said. "I said, 'Man, this feels like the University of Louisville all over again.' I thought I was an 18-year-old freshman again. We laughed and were like, 'We just rewound the clock.' It feels great, though." Teddy Bridgewater rejoined the Lions late in the 2024 season, opting to sign a deal after the high school team he coached season's ended. (Photo by) The Bucs have an entrenched starting quarterback in Baker Mayfield, coming off a 41-touchdown season, so Bridgewater's challenge will be trying to unseat fifth-year pro Kyle Trask as the top backup. Stuck behind Brady and Mayfield as two quarterbacks who never come off the field, Trask attempted only 11 passes in four years, so Bridgewater's game experience could be a plus. The third quarterback, Michael Pratt, has yet to practice this year due to a lower-back injury. Bridgewater's recent coaching experience could also give him an edge in the backup quarterback battle. As it turns out, coaching has made him a better quarterback, Bridgewater admitted. He'd never had to think about all 11 players on both sides of the ball, so he's more detailed in his preparation now. He understands what the offensive line is doing, blocking in front of him, and how the defensive front is trying to attack him. So he joins the Bucs as a player, but can help the team like another coach, reaching out even to young players at other positions. "Honestly, I'm just here right now to try to help this team in every way possible, whether it's in the quarterback room, the wide receiver room," Bridgewater said. "There's some young talent in that room and I'm excited to just share some of the wisdom I have, the experience I have from being in different offenses, different teams with guys who have had success at the receiver position. I'm just going to do whatever the role is for me, to try to be a humble servant like I've been doing." Whether Bridgewater sticks on the 53-man roster or on the practice squad or not at all, the Bucs are excited about how he can help their team, if not directly on the field, then indirectly in making those around him better. "Experienced guy, obviously very smart," Bucs general manager Jason Licht said. "Hell of a high school coach, hell of a coach in general. Just a good addition to have that wealth of experience there." Greg Auman is an NFL Reporter for FOX Sports. He previously spent a decade covering the Buccaneers for the Tampa Bay Times and The Athletic. You can follow him on Twitter at @gregauman . Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! share

NBC Sports
2 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Mike Vrabel's memory of QB Kliff Kingsbury: "He wasn't better than Tom Brady"
It was over 20 years ago, but Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel and Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury were teammates for one season together with New England. Vrabel was a veteran linebacker entering his third season with the club when the Patriots selected Kingsbury at No. 201 overall in the sixth round of the 2003 draft. Kingsbury spent that season on injured reserve as the team went on to win Super Bowl XXXVIII over the Panthers. With enough depth at quarterback, the Patriots cut Kingsbury at the start of the 2004 regular season. So what does Vrabel remember about being Kingsbury's teammate? 'He wasn't better than Tom Brady,' Vrabel said in his Wednesday press conference, eliciting some laughter. 'Kliff's a good friend. I mean there's a handful of coaches over there that I've played with in the league whether that's a year, or in Larry [Izzo]'s case, eight years. So, they've got a good staff, they've got a good mix of guys that played in this league and other guys that didn't, but that's a good coaching staff that they have. 'Kliff's really done a nice job everywhere he's been, offensively.' Kingsbury's NFL career may not have gotten very far, but he did get a Super Bowl ring from that victory over the Panthers. Vrabel helped make it happen on both sides of the ball, catching a 1-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter of the season's final game.
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jen Pawol will be Major League Baseball's first woman to umpire in a regular-season game this weekend
Baseball umpire Jen Pawol will make history this week as the first woman to work as an umpire in a Major League Baseball regular season game, crossing a historic gender barrier. Pawol has worked MLB games during spring training but her work on Saturday, when she will be in the crew for a doubleheader between the Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins at Truist Park, will be her first time in the big leagues. The doubleheader required a fifth umpire to be added to the crew, according to a report on She is one of 17 Triple-A umpires who are eligible to be called up to MLB games if needed, the league said. It'll be the latest history-making moment for Pawol, who became the first female umpire in 17 years to work a spring training game in 2024. She was the seventh woman to umpire in the minor leagues and made her pro debut in the Gulf Coast League in June 2016, according to MLB. Pawol got her start in 2015 at the MLB Umpire Camp in Cincinnati, Ohio, and was hooked from there, she said in an interview with in 2022. 'Someone told me about the MLB Umpire Camps program and even put it in my mind that what I had been kind of told or not told, for whatever reason, about professional baseball and how welcoming and amazing it is for women to work in, as soon as I heard that I went and checked it out for myself,' she said. 'And they were right. I think more women need to know that it's a safe environment, it's welcoming, it's incredible. I went in 2015 … I had an amazing time, I felt like it was going to be a great day, and it turned out to be amazing and it was going to change my life, actually.' Pawol played softball for Hofstra and is a native of New Jersey. She'll work the bases during Saturday's tilt between the Marlins and Braves before being behind the plate to call balls and strikes on Sunday, according to MLB. The officiating glass ceiling was shattered in the NBA in 1997, with Violet Palmer and Dee Kantner hired as referees. Sarah Thomas was the first woman to work on an NFL officiating crew in a regular-season game in 2015. She's also the first woman to officiate in a Super Bowl. Stéphanie Frappart became the first woman to officiate a men's FIFA World Cup match in 2022.