In hiring Brian Schottenheimer, the Dallas Cowboys aren’t even trying to sell hope like other self-respecting NFL franchises. The Jones family had an affinity for Dan Quinn, allowed him to walk, and watched as Quinn roared to the NFC championship game with the Washington Commanders.
The Ravens top front office executive talked about the starters and role players slated to hit the open market.
Black Monday has come and gone, and now NFL teams will start filling their head coach vacancies. Who will be next in line to step into those openings? Let’s run through the top options that might be hired by teams in need of a coach this offseason.
The Buffalo Bills will play the Kansas City Chiefs on the road at Arrowhead Stadium in the AFC championship game. The Bills have won 12 of their last 13 meaningful games while the Chiefs have won 20 of their last 21 meaningful games. The Chiefs' only… This Detroit Red Wings forward is on a tremendous hot streak.
The NFL head-coaching vacancies are filling up fast. The Chicago Bears scooped up Ben Johnson, the New England Patriots hired Mike Vrabel, the New York Jets got Aaron Glenn, the Jacksonville Jaguars landed Liam Coen and most recently,
The football analyst pointed the finger at the Ravens quarterback, not just the tight end who dropped the ball on Baltimore's critical two-point conversion attempt.
Ben Johnson and Mike McCarthy have emerged as frontrunners for the Bears head coach job. But Todd Monken might just be the perfect fit.
Pressure can break even the most dependable players. The post Ex-QB With One Playoff Game Blames Lamar Jackson for Mark Andrews’ Costly Drop in Ravens’ Loss appeared first on EssentiallySports.
Following the Baltimore Ravens loss to the Buffalo Bills on Sunday in the NFL’s Divisional Round, most pundits placed the majority of blame on Ravens tight end Mark Andrews for the loss after two critical late-game errors.
Lamar Jackson, not Mark Andrews, is to blame for the Baltimore Ravens botching a 2-point attempt vs. the Buffalo Bills in the playoffs.
We started asking ourselves some questions on Sunday night after the Baltimore Ravens were eliminated from the NFL postseason. Or at least we started to think about what questions should and might be asked about the future.
How long will the Ravens’ Super Bowl window remain open? Is it time to move on from John Harbaugh? Columnist Mike Preston shares his take.