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Russell Wilson reportedly joining Giants on 1-year, $21 million deal

Russell Wilson reportedly joining Giants on 1-year, $21 million deal

Yahoo25-03-2025

Russell Wilson has reached an agreement to join the New York Giants, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.
The deal for the 36-year-old quarterback is reportedly for one year and up to $21 million, with $10.5 million guaranteed.
ESPN Sources: The Giants and Super Bowl-winning QB Russell Wilson reached agreement today on a one-year deal worth up to $21 million, including $10.5 million guaranteed. The 10-time Pro-Bowl selection had been in discussions with the Giants, Browns and Steelers, but is opting for… pic.twitter.com/ZjjOz0U7bl
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) March 25, 2025
Wilson played with the Steelers on a one-year, $1.21 million contract in 2024 while still owed $37.79 million from the Denver Broncos. He said after the season that he wants to play 'as long as possible,' reiterating a statement he made in November that he wants to play 5-7 more years.
[Yahoo Fantasy Bracket Mayhem is back: Enter for a shot to win up to $50K]
Wilson joined the Steelers in the offseason after being released by the Broncos, but started on the bench in favor of Fields after a calf injury sidelined him in the preseason. He took over at quarterback in Week 7 and remained the Steelers' starter through the remaining 11 games of the regular season and a 28-14 wild-card playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens.
Pittsburgh won its first four games with Wilson at quarterback before a 2-5 finish to the regular season that included a four-game season-ending losing streak. Wilson completed 63.7% of his passes for 225.6 yards per game with 16 touchdowns and five interceptions in his 11 regular-season starts. He completed 20 of 29 passes for 270 yards with two touchdowns and no turnovers during the playoff loss to the Ravens.
Wilson's play improved from the worst of his disastrous stint with the Broncos that resulted in Denver releasing him in spite of a significant hit to the salary cap. He was good enough to keep Pittsburgh competitive as a playoff team, but there was little to indicate he could return to his Pro Bowl form from his Seattle Seahawks tenure and lift the Steelers into Super Bowl contention.

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Dentist carries father's memory with him into dream U.S. Open debut at Oakmont
Dentist carries father's memory with him into dream U.S. Open debut at Oakmont

NBC Sports

timean hour ago

  • NBC Sports

Dentist carries father's memory with him into dream U.S. Open debut at Oakmont

Matt Vogt is a proud product of the Steel City. Born and raised just outside of Pittsburgh, Vogt inherited his sports fervor from his dad, Jim, who loved the Penguins and Steelers and Pirates and perhaps most of all, watching his only boy play golf. From those junior-varsity days at Strawberry Ridge Golf Course in Butler County to whatever Matt could find time for on his way to becoming a 34-year-old dentist, husband and father of a 1-year-old girl, Jim never missed a tee time. Even in recent years when Jim's declining health prevented him from physically attending his son's tournaments, there would always be several texts waiting for Matt after his round. Nice birdie! What the heck happened on 4?! Good luck tomorrow! But on April 6, those messages stopped. Jim Vogt was diagnosed with colon cancer last summer, and he was gone quickly, at age 65. 'These past couple months,' Matt Vogt said, 'I've just spent so much time praying for strength and trying to find it.' He found it in the most unlikely of places. Vogt, who now resides in Indianapolis, had never traveled to the state of Washington, let alone played golf there. But when he was scouting courses for U.S. Open final qualifying, held last Monday across the country, he knew he wanted to get away from the PGA Tour pros in Ohio and Canada, and Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, with its sprawling layout and wide fairways, looked inviting for a guy who may have Doctor of Dental Surgery tacked onto the end of his name but has also piped a long drive of 466 yards, albeit off the grid. Oh, how spot on Vogt was. A man of faith, Vogt wholeheartedly believes that we carry our loved ones with us long after they've passed, and far from home, Vogt pinned a dark-blue ribbon on his similarly colored Titleist hat and set off to make his dad proud. 'I knew I could do it,' said Vogt, who drafted off playing competitor Brady Calkins to the tune of back-to-back 68s, his 8-under total earning him medalist honors and one of two tickets, along with Calkins', to Oakmont Country Club, where he'd attended two U.S. Opens with his dad, in 2007 and 2016, and in between caddied a few years at the venerable club about a half-hour east of Pittsburgh. 'You know, Oakmont, Pittsburgh and everything there, it all means so much to me … and it took every ounce of energy in my body to not think about that all day. And I'm just so proud of staying present, staying in the moment. I feel like I'm going to wake up from a dream here in a little while and this isn't going to be real, but it is real.' And now, Matt Vogt is headed home. Vogt began caddying at Oakmont, the Henry C. Fownes masterpiece, just a few months before he joined Butler's men's golf team. Though he only competed three semesters for the Bulldogs, Vogt remained in Oakmont's caddie yard, nearly every day of every summer, until he started dental school at Indiana University-Indianapolis in 2013. 'It's just a special place,' Vogt said of Oakmont. 'I have such great memories of the membership and their guests, a lot of successful people who love and are obsessed with golf. … You walk around Oakmont as a kid, and you think about what it'd be like to play in championships there. You just kind of daydream.' Vogt never really dreamed about playing professional golf. He was realistic as a kid; he wasn't good enough, so the PGA Tour was never part of the plan. He stayed at Butler to finish his undergrad, mainly because he met his now wife, Hilary, there. After completing his doctorate, the couple remained in Indy, where in 2018, Vogt opened his own practice, the Dentists at Gateway Crossing in McCordsville. He chuckles at how he's been portrayed in recent days, as this dentist who grinds away five days a week, finds some time to hit balls after work and then somehow, qualifies for the U.S. Open. 'I want to be honest with everybody,' Vogt admits, 'I work with another dentist in my office; she's awesome, and my team is incredible.' Vogt spends two to three days in the office doing his clinical tasks. The rest of his work week includes some administrative duties, plus some consulting in which he teaches other dentists how to start or acquire their own practices. When Dr. Vogt is away competing against Scottie, Rory and Bryson in his first major championship, Dr. Maria Summers will hold the fort. 'But no matter how my U.S. Open goes, I'll be back to work the week after,' Vogt says. Vogt developed the itch to play competitive golf again during dental school. He debuted in the World Amateur Golf Ranking with a T-7 at the 2019 Indiana Open, and he's since finished third three times in the Indiana Amateur while adding a fourth-place finish at the 2022 Indiana Open. He also qualified for the U.S. Mid-Amateur two years ago, though his most proud accomplishment, at least prior to last Monday, was playing his first U.S. Amateur at Oakmont in 2021. Getting in as an alternate, Vogt earned the first tee time off Oakmont's 10th hole that first day, before storms brought torrential rains and softened up the terrain. He then proceeded to open with a quadruple-bogey 8, and his first-round 81 was 11 shots worse than playing competitor Parker Coody, though only about four strokes higher than the field average. While Vogt missed match play by six shots, he did bounce back with a second-round 68 at nearby Longue Vue. 'You play your practice round and learn that golf course, and then you step on the golf course when the tournament starts and find they've ratcheted the fairways and greens to 10s,' Vogt said. 'I was just way over my skis. I was that guy who was shooting a bazillion while Parker was legitimately trying to win the U.S. Amateur.' That U.S. Amateur also holds significance considering it was the last tournament that his dad saw him play in person. Not long after, Jim Vogt, already dealing with some minor health and mobility issues, suffered a stroke. His vision then deteriorated, and as a result, the man who'd shuttled Matt that half-hour to and from Strawberry Ridge countless times and traveled to 49 states in his lifetime had lost his ability to drive. The cancer prognosis, Matt describes, was 'very bad.' Yet, Matt's biggest fan fought long enough to hold his granddaughter, Charlotte Morgan, who was born Feb. 21. 'He was starting to suffer,' Matt Vogt recalls. 'The last couple months have been a mixture of sadness, relief that he's at peace, and kind of growing up and processing that my dad's gone and now I'm the dad for my daughter. I don't know if it's a maturity or a peace, but everything I felt last week, and what I've felt these past few months, is I'm glad he's in a better place.' Kevin O'Brien can unfortunately relate. One of Vogt's best friends and fellow mid-amateurs, O'Brien lost his father, Patrick, after a four-year cancer battle in February 2021, just months before he, too, teed it up at the 2021 U.S. Amateur outside his native Pittsburgh. In early April, O'Brien and Vogt were teaming at the Champions Cup in Houston when Vogt got the call that his dad didn't have long left. 'We played that final round with him knowing,' O'Brien said, 'and knowing what it felt like when I lost my dad, we were both emotional.' Less than three weeks after his dad's death, Vogt advanced through his local qualifier at Otter Creek in Columbus, Indiana, by a shot. Then in mid-May, he won the PGA Indianapolis Open by two. Then came the dream day in Walla Walla. If only he could read those texts. On Golf's Longest Day, O'Brien was at a mid-am tournament at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas, where Vogt would've otherwise been if not for final qualifying. When Vogt threw a dart from the waste area to a foot with just a few holes remaining, O'Brien and over a dozen other guys gathered at the bar went nuts. Once it became official and Vogt was being interviewed, the setting sun illuminating just how much Vogt's eyes were welling, O'Brien shared in the sentiment. 'It was such an amazing moment,' O'Brien said. 'I'm impressed he was even able to hold it together.' Vogt had already made plans with his family to make the trip to Oakmont as a spectator, though he'd always hoped his priorities would change. Boy, have they ever. Video of Vogt's emotional reaction last Monday evening quickly went viral, and Vogt says he's received too many interview requests to count, though any unanswered questions can be addressed during his Monday press conference at Oakmont, where he's the only qualifier with formal interview time and slotted between Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele. On the two-hour drive to the airport on Tuesday morning, he phoned into ESPN's Pat McAfee Show. 'Nick, one of their producers, waived his HIPAA rights in telling everybody that I was his dentist,' Vogt said. Vogt squeeze in several more phone interviews on Wednesday, including which greatly appreciated the time. Vogt plans to stay with O'Brien, who lives just minutes from Oakmont, during championship week to help take his mind off the magnitude of this moment. (They'll surely spend some time discussing Aaron Rodgers' recent signing with the Steelers.) 'Overnight, this has just become something I've never dreamed of,' Vogt said, 'so I'm trying to surround myself with the people who know me best. I'm going to do my best to soak it all in but also do what I need to do to play my best.' O'Brien believes Vogt's best can contend – straight and powerful drives; Bryson-like putting, setup and all; a greatly improved wedging ability. 'He doesn't have a hole in his game,' O'Brien said. Added Vogt: 'I'm a different player than I was in 2021; I'm a better player, I know that, but I'm also playing with the best players in the world.' The pair got in nine holes, just them and the maintenance staff, on Saturday evening and were surprised at how normal it felt. 'We've both seen Oakmont enough,' said O'Brien, who sees the Fownes gem a few times a year for the Diebold Cup, an intraclub match that includes O'Brien's Pittsburgh Field Club and often serves as the testing ground for new pins and tees. 'And once the crowds get up and the cameras are there, it will take some getting used to, but we're just going to have fun and embrace it.' Jim Vogt never forced his son, Matt, to play golf. Never gave him a golf tip, either. He just cheered him on. And though Matt Vogt can no longer hear, or read, that encouragement, he can feel it, and he's strengthened by it. He'll carry that fortitude with him to Oakmont's first tee on Thursday, and no matter what this brute of a golf course throws his way, Vogt will be determined to make his dad proud. 'I wish he was here to share in this,' said Matt Vogt, 'but I know he's always watching.'

4 takeaways from the Steelers signing of Aaron Rodgers
4 takeaways from the Steelers signing of Aaron Rodgers

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

4 takeaways from the Steelers signing of Aaron Rodgers

After a long wait, the Pittsburgh Steelers finally have their quarterback. According to multiple reports, Aaron Rodgers is headed to Pittsburgh and will sign his contract in time to get started with the team at their mandatory minicamp next week. This has been a long time coming even if we all assumed this was how it would go. Here are our big takeaways from the pending signing. Aaron Rodgers will be welcomed with open arms I know there has been some grumbling and some players have made off-hand comments here and there about Rodgers dragging this out. But make no mistake, Rodgers will be welcomed by every player on the roster when he shows up because they know the NFL is a business and they know Rodgers can play. The NFL was banking Rodgers signing with the Steelers All you have to do is look at the Steelers schedule and you know there was nothing random about how things played out. Pittsburgh is running a crazy gauntlet of games aimed at either former Steelers quarterbacks playing the Steelers or Rodgers against his old teams, and that isn't an accident. Rodgers signing won't change a thing about the 2026 NFL draft I know there will be plenty of fans who don't like this addition because they think this addition will make the Steelers just good enough to end up with a lower draft pick and not be abel to secure a top quarterback in the 2026 NFL draft. This won't be an issue. If the Steelers are set on a particular quarterback next year, they have the draft capital to move up and get them and Rodgers will be gone. Rodgers makes the team better If you ask most fans, they were not looking forward to watching Mason Rudolph start 17 games this season because the team isn't good with Rudolph at quarterback. Rodgers might not make the Steelers a Super Bowl contender or even that much better in terms of overall record. But it will be more watchable, competitive football. This article originally appeared on Steelers Wire: Takeaways from the Steelers signing of QB Aaron Rodgers

Contract details for new Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers
Contract details for new Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Contract details for new Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers

On Saturday new Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers showed up at the team facilities, passed his physical and signed his one-year contract. According to NFL reporter Ian Rapoport, the one-year deal for Rodgers is $10 million guaranteed with a $13.65 million base and performance incentives that could run the value up to $19.5 million. Rodgers and the Steelers had been courting all offseason long but it's always felt like a foregone conclusion that eventually the two sides will come together. This contract is a bargain for the Steelers and despite his age, the addition of Rodgers is an upgrade over Mason Rudolph. In an offseason where teams are giving out massive contracts to quarterbacks, Pittsburgh has a chance to win without breaking the bank for 2025. Rodgers got to the Steelers just in time to go through mandatory minicamp with his new team. Rodgers could have signed with the Steelers at any point in the offseason but waited to be sure to miss any voluntary workouts. This article originally appeared on Steelers Wire: Contract details for new Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers

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