The Rich Eisen Top 5: NFL Teams Ready for a Big Turnaround Next Season
Rams GM Les Snead on Getting Back to the Super Bowl with Stafford
Rams GM Les Snead and Rich Eisen discuss L.A. trading out of the first round and their overall draft strategy this year and the team's desire to get back to the Super Bowl before Matthew Stafford retires.
3:09
Now Playing
Paused
Ad Playing

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why Lane Johnson believes he can be better than ever at 35 years old
Why Lane Johnson believes he can be better than ever at 35 years old originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia He turned 35 about a month ago. He's going into his 13th NFL season. He projects as the oldest starting offensive tackle in the league in 2025. And he'll be the 2nd-oldest offensive tackle in Eagles history, behind former teammate Jason Peters. Advertisement And Lane Johnson believes he just may be better than ever. 'Now, I feel like even though I'm 35, I feel better than I was when I started (or when I was) 29 or 30,' Johnson said after a recent OTA practice. 'I had the (ankle) surgeries and so for me the toughest year was '21 and you can go back and watch it, you can clearly see on film, I was very hindered with my left foot. 'And now, I feel like I'm getting close to maybe my peak. As weird as it is to say, but that's truly how I feel. 'Maybe they need to do a Combine for guys 10 years (in the league), see how we do compared to 10 years ago.' The notion of any other player getting close to his peak at 35 would be absurd. But when Johnson says it, you believe him. Advertisement He's made 1st– or 2nd-team all-pro in each of the last four years, he's made six Pro Bowls in all and he's one of only two position players – along with Brandon Graham – to win two Super Bowls in an Eagles uniform. Last year at 34, he became the oldest Pro Bowl right tackle since 36-year-old Hall of Famer Jackie Slater in 1990. Johnson is one of only five offensive tackles in NFL history with two championships, two 1st-team all-pros and six Pro Bowls. Four of the others are Hall of Famers – Forrest Gregg, Jim Parker, Art Shell and Rayfield Wright. The other is Jim Tyrer, who has been left out of the Hall of Fame for non-football reasons. Anybody who was paying attention knows Johnson should have locked up his third 1st-team all-pro last year, an honor that went to Penei Sewell of the Lions. He was good last year. Not as good as Lane. Advertisement As Johnson goes into his 13th season trying to bolster his Hall of Fame credentials and help the Eagles to a fourth Super Bowl and third title in nine years, that sort of thing drives him. 'Yeah, with anything you read, you try to change,' he said. 'If somebody has a bad opinion of you, hopefully you can get out there in the field and maybe, change their narrative on you. The only way how is to be more violent. For me that's what it's going to take.' Now here's a thought: What if Johnson wasn't an Eagle? What if he never had 13 years coached by Jeff Stoutland, the GOAT? What if he didn't man right tackle at a Hall of Fame level since 2013? It could have happened. The Chiefs, Jaguars and Dolphins had the first three picks in the 2013 draft, and they took tackle Eric Fisher, who had a good-but-not-great career, tackle Luke Joeckel, who had a brief career, and defensive end Dion Jordan, who only started five games. Advertisement 'I thought about what would have happened if I went to Miami,' he said. 'Kansas City wouldn't have been bad, but, you know, Jacksonville? But yeah, very fortunate to land here, and I just think the passion of the city and the intensity and how they focus so much on the sport, I think it allows, whatever pressure they put on you, I think it allows you to be the best player you can be. So it's something that you can really appreciate in time, and I know I have.' Including the postseason, Johnson has started 173 games, 5th-most in Eagles history. The only players to start more games in an Eagles uniform while never playing for another team are Jason Kelce and Fletcher Cox. Kelce started 205 games, so if Johnson plays every game this year and next year, he'll get to 207 and pass his close friend and longtime teammate. 'I'm very happy with how things have turned out,' Johnson said. 'You know, when you're in it, when you're still playing, there's always more to do, more to strive for. But, looking back, I'm very happy with how my career has gone, the players I got to play with, the mentors. Advertisement 'So yeah, I'm very fortunate. I don't know if I would be the same player or what would happen if I was with another organization. But this place has got the most out of me. And whatever time I have left, I think we can still be very, very good.'
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bill Belichick says he's 'still learning''everyday at college level
Coaching at a new level of football is a challenge for anyone, even Bill Belichick, an 8-time Super Bowl Champion between his time with the New York Giants and New England Patriots. The North Carolina Tar Heels made offseason headlines in December 2024, when they hired Belichick to be their next head football coach. While Belichick hasn't coached at the college level before, UNC fans hope his NFL success will turn UNC into a consistent winning program. Advertisement Belichick is already generating national media attention, the kind North Carolina football hasn't experienced before. On Friday morning, Belichick's media tour continued on Good Morning America with Michael Strahan: a 7-time Pro Bowler, the 2001 NFL Defensive Player of the Year and Super Bowl XLII Champion, which he won against Belichick's Patriots. "I've learned so much being back in the college environment, whether it be recruiting, the college game, the rules, the hashmarks, some strategy and putting a team together," Belichick told Strahan. "I learn every day." Strahan also asked Belichick about his much-younger girlfriend, Jordon Hudson. Unlike the ACC Spring Meetings on Tuesday, where Belichick didn't want to talk about Jordon, he praised Jordon for her help. Advertisement "She's been terrific through the whole process, and she's been very helpful to me," Belichick said. "She does the business things that don't relate to North Carolina that come up in my life, so I can concentrate on football, and that's really what I want to do. I acknowledged her in the book. She was very helpful on that with the tribute pages and also giving a perspective of the book from kind of a business side. Sometimes I get a little football technical, and she did a good job of keeping me on balance there." There's plenty of anticipation building for the Tar Heels' 2025 season, which begins Monday, September 1 against the TCU Horned Frogs. Kickoff time was initially announced for 7:30 p.m., but got pushed back 30 minutes. Follow us @TarHeelsWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of North Carolina Tar Heels news, notes and opinions. This article originally appeared on Tar Heels Wire: Bill Belichick says he's 'still learning' everyday at college level


USA Today
38 minutes ago
- USA Today
Tom Coughlin: NFL acknowledges Jaguars' Myles Jack wasn't down in AFC Championship game
Tom Coughlin: NFL acknowledges Jaguars' Myles Jack wasn't down in AFC Championship game On an appearance on 1010XL, Tom Coughlin explains how the league acknowledged that the Jaguars' Myles Jack wasn't down in the AFC Championship game. The NFL APOLOGIZED for calling Myles Jack down in the 2017 AFC Title game??? Jaguars legend Tom Coughlin joins The Drill to discuss the 2017 playoffs and much more! FULL VIDEO: | #DUUUVAL@DanHicken @iame2thet — 1010 XL / 92.5 FM (@1010XL) June 12, 2025 We all knew that Jacksonville Jaguars' linebacker Myles Jack wasn't down on the fumble that he forced and then recovered in the fourth quarter of the 2017 AFC Championship game against New England. Well, the NFL has apparently acknowledged that as well, although that obviously doesn't change the outcome of the game. Let's rewind. The Jaguars were up 20-10 early in the fourth quarter of that game. The Patriots were just shy of midfield, and in an effort to drum up some offense, they dialed up a double-pass to Dion Lewis, who was picking up some chunk yardage on the play. But from behind came Jack, who forced the fumble, recovered it, and began running towards the Jaguars' end zone with a very clear path to six points. However, the refs blew the play dead, saying that Jack was down upon recovering the fumble. The Patriots' defense would go on to get a stop, rally from their 10-point deficit, and ultimately win the game, securing another Super Bowl berth. Now, back to today, Tom Coughlin was making a recent appearance on 1010XL with Dan Hicken and said that the NFL acknowledged that they got the call wrong. "How you keep quiet over that one?" said Coughlin. "And I got the compulsory letter which said, we're so sorry. My response to the league was, 'do you realize what that would have meant to this town, this city, if that had been properly officiated?' Because the ball is in the end zone, right? There's nobody there left, and they get the ball, Brady takes it down, and like he's done so many times." That loss was the beginning of the end for Sacksonville. The Jaguars would go 5-11 in 2018 as numerous key players from that defense ended up elsewhere over the next few years.