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  • Sex offender, ex-Jags employee sentenced to 220 years in prison

    Sex offender, ex-Jags employee sentenced to 220 years in prison

    A U.S. District judge in Florida sentenced a convicted sex offender to 220 years in federal prison for producing, receiving and possessing child sex abuse material, and for hacking the jumbotron in the Jacksonville Jaguars’ stadium after the team did not renew his contract upon learning that he was a registered sex offender.

    U.S. District Judge Brian J. Davis sentenced Samuel Arthur Thompson, 53, for the offenses Tuesday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida said in a release. A federal jury convicted Thompson in November 2023 of the offenses, as well as of producing child sex abuse material while required to register as a sex offender, violating the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA) and possessing a firearm as a convicted felon.

    Thompson was previously convicted of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy in Alabama in 1998 and was required to register as a sex offender.

    Federal prosecutors said in their release that Thompson was hired by the Jaguars around 2013 to help design and install the stadium’s main screen and was then tasked with running it on game days.

    “Thompson’s contract with the Jaguars required him to report his conviction, but he did not. In January 2018, the Jaguars determined not to renew Thompson’s contract after learning of his conviction and status as a registered sex offender,” the release said. “Before the expiration of Thompson’s contract in March 2018, Thompson installed remote access software on a spare server in the Jaguars’ server room. Thompson then remotely accessed computers that controlled the Jumbotron during three 2018 season NFL games, causing the video boards to repeatedly malfunction.”

    The Jaguars eventually found a spare server, and during its next game in December 2018 captured the IP address of the intruder attempting to remotely control the jumbotron. The FBI traced the intruder’s IP address to Thompson’s residence, per the release.

    In July 2019, the FBI searched Thompson’s home, seizing his computers and a firearm that he was prohibited from possessing as a convicted felon. The FBI found files from Thompson’s devices that showed they were used to remotely access the spare server, as well as thousands of images and hundreds of videos depicting child sex abuse material, according to the release.

    “Samuel Thompson repeatedly abused and exploited innocent children, inflicting immeasurable hurt on his victims,” Coult Markovsky, FBI Jacksonville’s acting special agent in charge, said in a statement. “He also abused and exploited his employer by installing malicious software to manipulate their systems, which could have caused significantly more damage if not detected.”

    In a statement released in November after Thompson’s conviction, the Jaguars thanked prosecutors for their work on the case.

    (Photo: Perry Knotts / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • Scholars of Mandeville Grand Opening to Feature New Orleans Saints Superstar Cam Jordan

    Scholars of Mandeville Grand Opening to Feature New Orleans Saints Superstar Cam Jordan

    Press Release


    Mar 26, 2024

    Scholars is celebrating the Grand Opening of its second tutoring location in the Greater New Orleans area Thursday, March 28th. This Thursday’s event features NFL superstar Defensive End Cam Jordan of the New Orleans Saints. Cam, the Saints all-time sack leader and 8x pro-bowler, will be available to meet and inspire the students and families of the Mandeville community.

    This Thursday, March 28th, Scholars will celebrate the grand opening of its new location in Mandeville, Louisiana. The event begins at 11:30 a.m. and will take place at 1901 U.S. Hwy 190, STE 27, Mandeville, La.

    Scholars is proud to be cutting the ribbon of its second location in New Orleans. This week’s event will also feature some NFL star power as Cam Jordan of the New Orleans Saints will be making an appearance. Renowned throughout the NFL for his ferocious and creative pass-rushing, Cam, the Saints all-time sack leader and 8x pro-bowler, is both a student of the game of football and a big believer in the importance of education off the field. Cam will meet and inspire the students and families of the community alongside Scholars CEO Matt Baxter and other special guests. 

    The event is free to attend and will feature giveaways, food from local vendors, face painting, pictures, games, and other surprises.

    Scholars of Mandeville owner Ryan Fitzsimmons is excited to give back to his community and to provide students in the area with world-class tutoring. “I’m always willing and able to help kids,” Fitzsimmons said. “I’m a huge believer in Scholars because I’ve seen it work. It’s really amazing and I’m excited to be a part of it.” 

    Scholars’ first Louisiana location was opened in 2021 by another NFL star, 5x Pro Bowl Offensive Tackle Terron Armstead. Scholars of New Orleans has brought the joy of success in school to hundreds of students over the past three years and provides the template which Ryan Fitzsimmons seeks to follow.

    Scholars, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2024, has over 80 locations across North America. It uses its world-class curriculum and programming coupled with qualified, caring teachers to provide exceptional tutoring services for students of all ages. It has won the Canadian Franchise Association’s Franchisees’ Choice Award for nine consecutive years, while also boasting the Franchisee of the Year Award in 2023. The first location in the United States was opened in Brookhaven, Georgia, by Baltimore Ravens great Jamal Lewis, and the company also includes local New Orleans legend & former Saints superstar Mark Ingram. 

    Scholars Education                                                         

    400 Applewood Cres, Suite 100

    Toronto ON, L4K 0C3

    1-866-777-2131

    info@scholarscanada.com

    Source: Scholars

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  • A ‘high butt factor’ might be an NFL Draft prospect’s most prized asset

    A ‘high butt factor’ might be an NFL Draft prospect’s most prized asset

    “So you want me to comment about how important a guy’s ass is in the evaluation?” Mike Mayock asked, laughing. “You’re really doing this, huh?”

    For years, the humble human haunches have been key indicators for football scouts as they evaluated players. Mayock, the former Las Vegas Raiders general manager, has reluctantly been installed as leader of the Cult of the Caboose since referencing the rump multiple times as an NFL Network draft analyst in the 2010s, which makes him a great source for a story about seats.

    “Over the years on television, I used to call it a power generator, and really, it was to be a little cute and funny with a germ of truth. It just kind of became representative of a strong lower body,” Mayock said. Sure enough, YouTube is full of clips in which Mayock references a player’s “bubble” butt.

    “I said it on the air at the combine multiple times to the point that it was almost embarrassing because our cameramen would be getting shots of the guy from behind to illustrate it,” Mayock said.

    At least he’s in good company. Six-time Super Bowl-winning head coach Bill Belichick is a fellow devotee of the derriere, according to Georgia coach Kirby Smart. In a video posted to X last year, Smart described the time he joined Belichick to watch defensive linemen run the 40-yard dash at the NFL combine. Smart, then the Dolphins defensive coordinator, was confused by Belichick watching the drill from behind the starting line.

    “I was like, ‘Why are we here? You can’t time the finish,’” Smart said. Dolphins coach Nick Saban, a friend and former colleague of Belichick’s, had the answer, according to Smart: “Bill likes to look and see how big their ass is when they get down in a 40-yard stance because he wants to sign the biggest-assed defensive linemen he can sign.”

    There is science behind this slightly cringy bit of scouting, the “germ of truth” Mayock mentioned.

    “In a broad sense, muscle hypertrophy (size) relates to muscle strength,” said Dr. Alexandra DeJong Lempke, an assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. “Usually a larger muscle indicates higher ability to produce force. So when you think of sprinting and explosive movements, that’s primarily driven from the glute maximus to give that explosive first step.”

    Football coaches have known this inherently for years even if they can’t break it down like a Ph.D.

    “It’s one of the largest muscle groups. It’s a prime mover of your hips. It’s what propels you forward. It’s what puts force in the ground,” said Luke Day, head strength coach at the University of South Carolina. “You know that player has the potential to create a lot of power because that muscle group is that important.”

    The first time Day learned there was a correlation between asses and athleticism came at a football camp at Miami (Ohio) University with strength coach Dan Dalrymple, now the Denver Broncos head strength coach. “Literally the first thing (Dalrymple) said, he said, ‘You guys come in here and you got a flat can, then we don’t want you,’” Day said. “I heard that as a 13-year-old so I wanted to make sure I squatted so I had a big ol’ butt.”

    Day has never quit working in the weight room, and he’s never quit believing in the power of the posterior. “It is an attribute of athleticism,” he said. “The more people on your team that have one, the better.”

    GO DEEPER

    Yaya Toure: Why bums are so important in football

    “The biggest lever you’ve got on your body is your hip, so the biggest power angle you have is from the knee to waist,” Atlanta Falcons offensive line coach Dwayne Ledford said. “Football is all about power angles.”

    Ledford is reminded about the power of the posterior at both work and home. When he was the offensive line coach at N.C. State, Wolfpack strength coach Tim Rabas commented on the physique of Ledford’s then-4-year-old son, Hudson. “He’s like, ‘Led, that dude is going to be strong.’ I’m like, ‘What are you talking about?’ He’s like, ‘Look at his posterior chain. That dude’s got a back on him,’” Ledford said. “Even now my wife and I joke about it. ‘Look at that posterior chain, man.’”

    Turns out Rabas, now an assistant in the Carolina Panthers’ human performance department, may have been on to something.

    “(Hudson) has got power,” Ledford said. “He’s about to be 11, and he gives me everything I want wrestling with him.”

    So, yes, asses are important to coaches. Which means they are important to scouts, who have been checking out butts as long as football players have had them.

    “When I was a young kid and got into scouting, I heard the term ‘anchor.’ I was like, what is anchor? It’s a big ass,” Falcons assistant GM Kyle Smith said. “One of the first things you learn getting into scouting is the anchor. Big asses, big rear ends, posterior chain — back and ass and hamstrings — that’s how you anchor.”

    Old-school scouts would cross linemen off their list after just seeing them walk down a hallway, Smith said. “You see a guy walk by and you say, ‘Can’t anchor. Don’t need to watch any tape.’”

    It’s not just on the line of scrimmage. The Caboose Correlation is used as an athletic indicator at all positions. Former NFL punter Dustin Colquitt said the talking points at his end-of-season exit interviews with Kansas City head coach Andy Reid were generally pretty uneventful, except for one.

    “He’d sit down with me and be like, ‘You went to the Pro Bowl, and we don’t have much to say to you. But don’t lose your butt. Punters have to have big butts. As soon as you start to look like you’re going downhill from a physique standpoint, you’re out of here. Keep that ass going.’”

    The rear end’s importance is so front of mind for NFL scouts and coaches that they’ve come up with their own language to reference it.

    “We used to call it the ‘Seat of Power,’” said former Washington Commanders and Cincinnati Bengals head strength coach Chip Morton, now the senior associate director of strength and conditioning at South Carolina.

    There are plenty of other rump-related euphemisms. Three NFL general managers with scouting backgrounds laughingly confirmed the link between butts and brawn at the combine in Indianapolis, but all three declined to discuss the subject on the record. One did say he’d heard it called a “woodhauler’s ass” and then mimicked — in the middle of a crowded Starbucks at the JW Marriott — how carrying a large load of firewood might build a person’s glutes.

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    When Pat Kirwan was scouting for the Buccaneers and Cardinals in the 1980s, scouts labeled prospects with a “high butt factor” and noted it on all written scouting reports.

    “We always abbreviate everything, so on a scouting report it would just be ‘HBF plus 9’ or ‘plus 10,’” said Kirwan, who went on to coach and work in personnel for the New York Jets and now hosts an NFL radio show for SiriusXM. “We’d give them a numerical grade on it.”

    Clemson defensive lineman Tyler Davis remembers a former Tigers assistant coach telling a teammate he had “a Coca-Cola booty.” He didn’t understand the soft drink reference.

    “We had all types of buzzwords at Clemson that were thrown around,” Tigers running back Will Shipley said (his favorite is “bully back”). “Around the football environment, it’s just something people look for, especially for the explosive athletes.”

    There is also phrasing for the opposite end of the spectrum. If a coach is calling a player “light in the ass,” that player knows his time on the team might be short.

    “I had a tackle who was light in the ass,” Kirwin said. “As soon as the defensive guys saw that, they were bull-rushing him. They knew he couldn’t drop his weight and stop a bull rush. They can figure out pretty quick who they are going to whip up on.”

    A player taking what coaches and scouts call “NoAssAtAll” pills has got work to do in the weight room, said The Athletic’s Nate Tice, a former college football player and NFL staffer. When Senior Bowl executive director Jim Nagy was scouting college games for the Kansas City Chiefs and Seattle Seahawks, he’d simply write “saggy pants” if he was worried about an offensive lineman’s anchoring ability.

    “You occasionally get an exception, but if you’ve got a guy with a big, ol’ bubble butt and he squats the house or has crazy acceleration or a great vertical or broad jump, you never wonder why,” Day said. “If you’ve got a guy getting moved around or tossed out of the saloon and he’s flat — ain’t got nothing behind him — that’s the first thing that comes to mind.”

    For college coaches, the development of the derriere can be especially important for indicating which high school players will bulk up as they age. They take it as a matter of faith that a player’s body will catch up to his butt.

    “It sounds weird, but I’ll go to these recruiting functions, and I’ll bring my wife and I’ll go, ‘Did you see his butt?’” Day said. “I’m all excited about it, and she’s like, ‘What are you talking about, you weirdo?’”


    Former Chiefs punter Dustin Colquitt said Kansas City coach Andy Reid made Colquitt’s can a point of emphasis in exit interviews. (Dustin Bradford / Getty Images)

    At the NFL combine in February, Shrine Bowl scout Owen Riese predicted Texas Tech safety Tyler Owens would post great athletic testing numbers the next day.

    “You’ll notice he’s well-endowed in the posterior,” Riese said. “Typically guys who are more explosive are more well-endowed in the rear. There are some guys who are going to have a tough time finding pants, like, ‘I’ve got a 34 waist, but I really need to wear 40 because otherwise they don’t fit around my butt.’”

    The next day, Owens came within one inch of breaking the world record in the broad jump by leaping 12 feet, two inches from a standing start. His overall athletic score of 89 set by Next Gen Stats marked him as the most athletic safety in this year’s draft class.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    2024 NFL Draft consensus Big Board: Which prospects are rising, falling in March?

    Owens came to the combine unaware so many scouts would be checking out his tush. “I guess (that’s why) they have us in those little compression shorts,” he said. “They want to see if you’re toned up and cut up.”

    South Carolina wide receiver Xavier Legette, who ran a 4.39-second 40-yard dash and posted a 40-inch vertical at the combine, has steadily risen up draft boards since the end of his collegiate season even in a crowded field of wideouts.

    “Wait till you see that beeee-hind,” Day said.

    This year’s most glute-gifted prospect is Texas defensive lineman Byron Murphy “whose ass and legs are tree trunks,” according to Shrine Bowl director of football operations Eric Galko.

    “You think, that kind of looks like Aaron Donald looked,” Galko said. “It’s a hugely predictive measure. A lot of teams are measuring it now, whether it’s through biomechanics or an actual tape measure, just to make sure they have an idea of what your potential is as an athlete.”

    In fact, the butt can even be a measure of the heart.

    “It’s a reflection of not only their strength but also it shows, ‘Does this guy care?’” Galko said. “I don’t know if there is a direct correlation between how much you squat and how much you care about your lower body and success in the NFL, but I bet you there’s some correlation between having a strong lower half and being somebody who works their ass off in the weight room.

    “No pun intended.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    NFL beat writer mock draft 2.0: Vikings, Broncos trade up into top 10 to grab QBs

    (Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic; photos: Justin Casterline, Kevin Sabitus / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • NFC East 2024 free agency grades: Dallas Cowboys edition

    NFC East 2024 free agency grades: Dallas Cowboys edition

    Heading into the 2023 season, the favorites to represent the NFC in the Super Bowl were the Philadelphia Eagles, the San Francisco 49ers, and the Dallas Cowboys. As usual, the Cowboys had a good record during the regular season, going 12-5, winning the NFC East. And, well, as usual, they were a quick out in the playoffs, getting blown out at home in the wildcard round by the Green Bay Packers.

    At the Senior Bowl in January, Jerry Jones promised that the Cowboys would be “all in” to win a Super Bowl in 2024. Their free agency actions have not exactly backed up those words, as they lost a slew of notable players, and barely added anyone.

    Players gained

    LB Eric Kendricks: Kendricks is a nine-year veteran who has eight straight seasons with 100-plus tackles. He played his first eight seasons in Minnesota before signing with the Chargers last season. In 2023, he had 117 tackles (7 for loss), 3.5 sacks, 6 pass breakups, a forced fumble, and 7 QB hits. While not the same player he was at the peak of his career when he was a first-team All-Pro in 2019, Kendricks is still a good starting linebacker who will help Mike Zimmer install his new defense in Dallas.

    Players retained

    CB Jourdan Lewis: Lewis was competing for a roster spot last offseason, but eventually became the CB3 after Trevon Diggs was lost for the season. He was one of the weaknesses of the Cowboys’ defense in 2023, in my opinion, and he had some rough moments in their playoff loss to the Packers.

    RB Rico Dowdle: Dowdle has been the Cowboys’ preseason workhorse over the last few years, but in 2023 he finally got some carries that mattered. He had 89 rushes for 361 yards (4.1 YPC) and 2 TDs as the backup to Tony Pollard. If the season started today (it doesn’t), Dowdle would be the team’s No. 1 back, but they’ll almost certainly add another player to be the primary ball-carrier.

    CB/ST C.J. Goodwin: Special teams guy.

    LS Trent Sieg: Long snapper Trent Sieg is a long snapper.

    Players lost

    LT Tyron Smith: Smith had a rare healthy season in 2023, at least by his standards. After missing 13 games in 2022, 6 games in 2021, and 14 games in 2020, Smith only missed four games in 2023, and he played well. He signed a one-year deal with the Jets. It will be interesting to see if the Cowboys move LG Tyler Smith out to LT or if they’ll keep him at LG and draft a LT early to start as a rookie. Either way, the Cowboys are highly likely to experience a dropoff in play on the left side of their line.

    C Tyler Biadasz: Biadasz has been the the Cowboys’ starting center for the last three seasons, but he’s just kind of a guy. He agreed to a three-year deal with the Commanders for just under $30 million. He’s now the eighth-highest paid center in the NFL, and while he’s certainly not in the top quarter of league’s centers in terms of talent, he was a solid enough starter and the Cowboys will now have to replace him.

    RB Tony Pollard: Pollard got franchise tagged last year, and he turned in a disappointing season as the lead back, averaging 3.99 yards per carry and 5.7 yards per catch. He signed a three-year, $21.75 million deal with the Titans. The Cowboys were right not to try to retain Pollard at that number, but they also have a bare cupboard at running back. They’ll very likely bargain shop at RB over the next couple of weeks. 

    DE Dorance Armstrong: Armstrong has been part of the Cowboys’ defensive line rotation for six years. He didn’t do much during his first three seasons in the NFL, but he has 21 sacks over the last three seasons. He agreed to a three-year deal worth $33 million with the Commanders. There was no way the Cowboys were matching that.

    • LB Leighton Vander Esch: The Cowboys released Vander Esch with a failed physical designation. He retired a few days later. Vander Esch was a good player when he was on the field, most notably as a rookie in 2018, when he had 140 tackles, 7 pass breakups, and 2 INTs on his way to being named second-team All-Pro. However, he had significant durability issues as a result of a series of neck injuries. He missed 7 games in 2019, 6 games in 2020, 3 games in 2022, and 12 games in 2023.

    • WR Michael Gallup: Gallup had a promising start to his career when he had 507 receiving yards as a rookie in 2018, 1107 yards in 2019, and 843 yards in 2020. Those first three seasons Gallup averaged 15.6 yards per reception. However, in his fourth season he tore an ACL, and has not been the same player since. In 2022 and 2023, he averaged 27.2 receiving yards per game, and just 11.5 yards per reception. The Cowboys released Gallup, who will count for $8.7 million in dead money in 2025.

    DT Johnathan Hankins: Hankins started 14 games for the Cowboys in 2023. He had 27 tackles and 3 sacks. He signed with the Seahawks.

    DE Dante Fowler: Fowler had 10 sacks over the last two seasons as a situational pass rusher for the Cowboys. He signed a one-year deal with the Commanders for a little over $3 million.

    DT Neville Gallimore: The Cowboys thought they had a steal when they selected Gallimore in the third round of the 2020 draft, but he was mostly a disappointment. He’s now a Dolphin.

    CB Noah Igbinoghene: Igbinoghene was a Dolphins first-round bust who signed with the Cowboys last season, and played in five games. He became the fourth non-impact Cowboys player to sign with the Commanders.

    Still free agents, but likely moving on

    • CB Stephon Gilmore: Gilmore played well for the Cowboys last season at the age of 33. The Cowboys lost Trevon Diggs for the season with a torn ACL, and DaRon Bland stepped up in his place, becoming a star player. With Diggs and Bland returning, Gilmore will probably cost too much to bring back as a CB3.

    S Jayron Kearse: Kearse was a starting safety who has become good in coverage on the back end, but with Donovan Wilson and Malik Hooker at safety, Kearse will likely sign elsewhere.

    The tale of the tape

    Players gained  Players retained  Players lost  Probably gone 
    LB Eric Kendricks CB Jourdan Lewis LT Tyron Smith CB Stephon Gilmore 
      RB Rico Dowdle  C Tyler Biadasz  S Jayron Kearse 
      CB C.J. Goodwin  RB Tony Pollard   
      LS Trent Sieg  DE Dorance Armstrong   
        LB Leighton Vander Esch   
        WR Michael Gallup   
        DT Johnathan Hankins   
        DE Dante Fowler   
        DT Neville Gallimore   
        CB Noah Igbinoghene   

    Analysis/Grade

    The Cowboys knew that they were going to be one of the most cap-constrained teams in the NFL this offseason, especially with CeeDee Lamb and Micah Parsons soon to not be playing on their rookie contracts any longer. That had to have made their one-and-done playoff performance all the more devastating. As expected, they lost a number of key players so far this offseason. Their starting lineup on offense currently looks like this: 

    • QB: Dak Prescott
    • RB: Rico Dowdle
    • WR: CeeDee Lamb
    • WR: Brandin Cooks
    • WR: Jalen Tolbert
    • TE: Jake Ferguson
    • LT Tyler Smith
    • LG: T.J. Bass
    • C: Brock Hoffman
    • RG: Zack Martin
    • RT: Terence Steele

    That offensive line is looking verrrry shaky. Martin is on the downside of his career, Steele stunk in 2023, Smith may be moving from LG to LT, and Bass/Hoffman are a pair of undrafted guys with a combined 564 career snaps played.

    Spoiler: The Cowboys are going to take an offensive lineman in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft, and probably another one on Day 2.

    Defensively, the Cowboys’ starting lineup is still fine enough, but they lost a lot of role players and depth.

    While losing a bunch of players was probably an unavoidable inevitability, there is also no evidence of a creative plan to replace them yet, and they only have three picks in the first four rounds of the draft.

    Grade: C-.


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  • Eagles sign CB Tyler Hall

    Eagles sign CB Tyler Hall

    According to the NFL transaction report, the Philadelphia Eagles have signed defensive back Tyler Hall.

    The Falcons signed Hall as an undrafted rookie out of Wyoming in 2020. He appeared in 9 games as a rookie, making 6 tackles. In 2021, he played for the Rams, where he appeared in 4 games (no stats), but with no snaps in the regular defense. In 2022 and 2023, Hall played for the Raiders. He had 20 tackles and 4 pass breakups in 2022, and 20 tackles in 2023. It’s perhaps also noteworthy that he averaged 31.7 yards per kick return in college with a pair of return TDs (shown here), but he has not yet been used as a returner in the NFL.

    Hall measured in at 5’8, 183 in 2020 at Wyoming’s pro day, where he ran a 4.41 40. The Raiders listed him last season at 5’10, 190. Hall has played almost exclusively in the slot during his four NFL seasons, and will very likely play there for the Eagles during the spring and summer. He’ll have a chance to make the team out of training camp, but is certainly not guaranteed a roster spot.

    After Avonte Maddox got hurt last season, the Eagles tried to replace him with a half dozen different players in the slot — James Bradberry, Mario Goodrich, Bradley Roby, Josiah Scott, Sydney Brown, and Eli Ricks. All of those guys even started games in the slot, with the exception of Ricks.

    “I’ve got to do a better job of bringing in more guys to be able to play that position,” Howie Roseman said at the NFL Combine.

    The Eagles will likely continue to add players to the mix at the slot corner position.


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  • Eagles mock draft roundup, version 3.0

    Eagles mock draft roundup, version 3.0

    On Monday, we published our third Philadelphia Eagles-only mock draft of the offseason. Today we’ll take a peek around at some of the national guys and see who they have going to the Birds at 22nd overall.

    Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson (Daniel Jeremiah, NFL Network)

    The Eagles’ pass defense was atrocious last season. Wiggins is the most natural cover man in this year’s draft.

    #JimmySays: To begin, I don’t believe that Wiggins will be available to the Eagles at pick 22, because he’s 6’1 and he ran a 4.28 40. Someone will fall in love with those traits and take him too early. But even if he is available at pick 22, I’d be really concerned that he’s in the 82nd percentile in height, and just the 2nd percentile in weight.

    He’s a really good coverage guy, but he can be bullied and he’s a liability against the run. His profile reminds of Emmanuel Forbes (without the ball skills), who got bodied as a rookie all season by NFL receivers. Maybe Wiggins will be an awesome player in the NFL. I don’t know. But I think these non-physical, uber-skinny guys have high bust potential.

    Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson (Mel Kiper, ESPN)

    This has been an offseason of change for the Eagles, who have new coordinators on both sides of the ball and have seen two stalwarts retire in center Jason Kelce and defensive tackle Fletcher Cox. And after a rough end to their season, coach Nick Sirianni finds himself with a few holes on his roster. I almost slotted in a receiver to add to Jalen Hurts’ fantastic set of skill-position talent — how about Xavier Worthy (Texas)? — but I see defense as the bigger problem.

    Philadelphia ranked 30th in both points allowed per game (25.2) and QBR allowed (55.7), and it was 31st in passing yards allowed to receivers (3,125). Veteran starting corners Darius Slay and James Bradberry are each on the wrong side of 30. Wiggins could step in and play a huge role for a team with Super Bowl aspirations. At 6-foot-1, 173 pounds, he’s slender, but he has elite speed. He ran a blazing 4.28-second 40-yard dash at the combine.

    #JimmySays: See above.

    Taliese Fuaga, OL, Oregon State (Trevor Sikkema, PFF)

    Broncos receive Pick Nos. 22 and 53; Eagles receive Pick No. 12 and a 2025 third-round pick

    Look, you can’t tell me Howie Roseman doing something like this is too crazy to predict. With no second-round pick, the Broncos could aim to move back from No. 12 if they can’t trade up for a quarterback. The Eagles have an extra second-round pick, which could make this a deal. In doing so, Philadelphia — which has always looked ahead when it comes to building in the trenches — could draft a player like Fuaga, who could start at guard early on and then kick out to right tackle when Lane Johnson retires.

    #JimmySays: I feel like this is a scenario that like >95 percent of Eagles fans would hate, but in my opinion Fuaga makes a ton of sense for the Eagles, and I could see them doing something like this.

    Jackson Powers-Johnson, iOL, Oregon (Joel Klatt, FOX)

    The Eagles have to do something in the interior offensive line following Jason Kelce’s retirement. Powers-Johnson is a good fit here. They could go corner, but they need to replace the heartbeat of the line.

    #JimmySays: The Eagles already did something to account for Kelce’s retirement, which was to take Cam Jurgens in the second round of the 2022 draft. Powers-Johnson has guard/center versatility, but his best position is probably at center, where Jurgens will be playing in 2024. So if you’re drafting Powers-Johnson, you’re not only taking a guard in the first round, but you’re taking a guard whose primary position isn’t even guard, and who won’t eventually take over for Lane Johnson down the line. JPJ is a good player, but he makes a lot less sense for the Eagles than he does for other teams.

    Troy Fautanu, OL, Washington (The Ringer, author unclear)

    The Eagles took a guard/tackle hybrid early in the third round last year in Tyler Steen, and Steen is now slated to be the starting right guard entering camp, as Cam Jurgens moves over to center to take the mantle from Jason Kelce. With Fautanu, another college tackle who likely transitions to a guard in the league, the Eagles can hedge their bets. Fautanu and Steen will fight for the starting job, and the losing player will be the sixth OL and back up both tackle and guard spots.

    #JimmySays: I think that Fautanu is a reasonable pick as long as you think he can take over for Lane Johnson long-term, and you’re pretty certain he can start out of the box at guard. I do not agree with the selection of Fautanu based on the reasoning above, which (a) does not mention Lane Johnson, and (b) includes a scenario in which a first-round guard could lose a camp battle to a guy who struggled transitioning there last camp.

    Ennis Rakestraw, CB, Missouri (Nate Davis, USA Today)

    Offensive line – between the tackles – could be a consideration following C Jason Kelce’s retirement. But EVP/GM Howie Roseman knows his defense needs attention and knows starting CBs Darius Slay and James Bradberry are north of 30. Rakestraw’s physical style would resonate nicely in Philly.

    #JimmySays: Rakestraw isn’t one of the 22 best prospects in this draft, and therefore the Eagles shouldn’t take him at 22. Maybe if they get a bunch of picks for trading back? Otherwise, there will be better players available. For example, the four guys Davis has going after Rakestraw are Olu Fashanu, Jackson Powers-Johnson, Tyler Guyton, Laiatu Latu, and Cooper DeJean. I’d take four of those guys over Rakestraw, who is pretty much just an “Eagles need a corner, here’s a corner for them” projection.

    Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa (Ryan Wilson, CBS)

    If the Eagles trust Cam Jurgens at center, they can pass on Jackson Powers-Johnson here and instead focus on the secondary. DeJean is a big, strong, fast cornerback with return ability.

    #JimmySays: DeJean would be an outstanding fit. And yeah, passing on Powers-Johnson is a no-brainer.

    Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama (Ryan Fowler, The Draft Network)

    Howie Roseman typically adds at premium spots on day one and I expect no different in April. If you’re out on Terrion Arnold because of his 40 time in Indianapolis, please turn on the film. The Eagles need pop at the position and I don’t see how Roseman could feel comfortable with James Bradberry as his CB2 at this point in time.

    #JimmySays: Arnold ran a 4.51, which isn’t awful, but it could make him slide to the Eagles at 22. And as Fowler notes, he can play. Arnold could be this year’s Trent McDuffie, who didn’t have great measurables, but was just a really good football player.


    MORE: Jimmy’s Eagles-only mock draft, version 3.0


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  • Eagles 2025 compensatory draft pick tracker

    Eagles 2025 compensatory draft pick tracker

    The Philadelphia Eagles are likely to sign more compensatory pick-qualifying free agents this offseason than they’ll lose, so they are probably not going to be awarded any comp picks in 2025 after being awarded four in 2024.

    Still, we’ll track each signing (both lost and gained), and whether or not each player will count toward the compensatory pick formula.

    Qualifying players lost

    RB D’Andre Swift: The Bears are reportedly signing Swift to a three-year deal worth $24 million.

    QB Marcus Mariota: The Commanders reportedly signed Mariota to a one-year deal worth $6 million, plus incentives.

    Qualifying players gained

    EDGE Bryce Huff: Huff signed with the Eagles on a three-year deal worth $51 million.

    RB Saquon Barkley: Barkley signed with the Eagles on a three-year deal worth just under $38 million.

    S Chauncey Gardner-Johnson: Gardner-Johnson signed with the Eagles on a three-year deal worth “up to” $33 million.

    Comp pick cancellation chart

    We will be referencing OverTheCap’s comp pick cancellation chart here:

    Players lost (APY) – Projected round  Players gained (APY) – Projected round 
    RB D’Andre Swift – 6th RB Saquon Barkley – 5th
    QB Marcus Mariota – 6th  EDGE Bryce Huff – 4th 
      S Chauncey Gardner-Johnson – 5th 

    • Contract details are still to be determined for the following incoming players: LB Devin White, OL Matt Hennessy, LB Zack Baun, LB Oren Burks.

    • Contract details are still to be determined for the following outgoing players: OL Jack Driscoll, Sua Opeta.

    So how many compensatory picks are the Eagles expected to receive? 

    Zero. They have signed more qualifying free agents than they have lost. 


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  • What happened to the 2021 NFL Draft QBs? Why Justin Fields and others are with new teams

    What happened to the 2021 NFL Draft QBs? Why Justin Fields and others are with new teams

    They entered the NFL with great fanfare and lofty expectations of one day ranking among the best collections of talent the NFL had seen at their position. But just three years later, the 2021 quarterback draft class instead largely looks like one great big bust.

    While NFL teams continue their assessments of another highly touted group of quarterbacks leading up to April’s draft, two of the five QBs drafted in the 2021 first round (Justin Fields and Mac Jones) were just traded for meager compensation. A third (Trey Lance) prepares to enter Year 2 as a backup for his second team. And a fourth (Zach Wilson) is facing an uncertain future in the NFL.

    Trevor Lawrence — the No. 1 pick — is the only 2021 first-round quarterback still viewed as the answer for his drafting team, the Jacksonville Jaguars. But even Lawrence has yet to blossom into a transformative star. Meanwhile, Wilson clearly is in his last days with the New York Jets, who will trade or cut him. Lance is a backup for the Cowboys, traded to Dallas after Brock Purdy took over as the leader of San Francisco’s offense. Fields just got shipped from Chicago to Pittsburgh. And the Patriots essentially gave Jones to the Jaguars, who will use him as Lawrence’s backup.

    Instead of rivaling the 1983 draft class of Hall of Famers John Elway, Jim Kelly and Dan Marino, the 2021 QB class will instead serve as a cautionary example about how commonly teams miss when it comes to talent evaluations, projections and developmental plans.

    But what went wrong? Why are these once-heralded quarterbacks still stuck in developmental stages and/or bordering on bust territory?

    An examination of each situation reveals some common themes and answers.


    Trevor Lawrence is still with the Jaguars but has had an up-and-down three seasons. (Steve Roberts / USA Today)

    Lawrence and the Jaguars

    Lawrence has not yet approached elite status, but he’s the closest thing to a franchise quarterback this bunch has yielded. He is 20-30 as a starter with 58 touchdown passes, 39 interceptions and a completion percentage of 63.8. His lone winning season (9-8 in 2022) yielded a playoff appearance (Jacksonville went 1-1 in the postseason) and a Pro Bowl selection after he passed for 4,113 yards, 25 touchdowns and just eight interceptions. Lawrence and the Jaguars took a slight step backward in 2023, however, and missed the playoffs after an up-and-down year that concluded with a 1-5 skid.

    Although Lawrence has struggled with consistency, most NFL talent evaluators still think he has promise. They believe his development was handicapped by a rookie season marked by dysfunction and toxicity under Urban Meyer, who was fired after a 2-11 start. The Jaguars replaced him with Doug Pederson, who has been good for Lawrence, though some of the accuracy issues the QB exhibited in college against top-level DBs (see the LSU and Alabama matchups in particular) have followed him to the NFL. Lawrence also played through some injuries in 2023. Health and another season in Pederson’s system should help advance his development, but the Jaguars also must find a quality No. 1 receiver to replace Calvin Ridley to further help the 24-year-old Lawrence.


    Zach Wilson is likely to be cut if the Jets can’t work out a trade for him. (Jasen Vinlove / USA Today)

    Wilson and the Jets

    Wilson pre-draft workouts and college game film showcased his escapability and an improvisational wizardry that reminded talent evaluators of Aaron Rodgers. But BYU didn’t face elite talent in 2020, competing against schools from Conference USA, American Athletic, Sun Belt and Mountain West conferences, and the jump to the NFL proved far steeper for the No. 2 pick than the Jets ever imagined.

    Wilson’s three Jets seasons have been a disaster. He’s 12-21 as a starter with 23 touchdown passes, 25 interceptions and a completion percentage of 57.0, plus multiple benchings. In retrospect, Wilson never should have gone as early in the draft as he did, and also needed to sit behind a veteran starter to learn and develop gradually both mentally and physically.

    Wilson now faces an uncertain future. The Jets are trying to trade him after he struggled again as a starter following Rodgers’ season-ending Achilles injury in Week 1. And while the first week of free agency featured a fair amount of quarterback movement, Wilson’s name hasn’t even been linked to teams in rumors of potential deals. If Wilson is cut, some rival talent evaluators believe someone will take a flier on him as a backup/reclamation project.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Howe: What I’m hearing on QB ‘battles’: Daniel Jones vs. Drew Lock, Geno Smith vs. Sam Howell

    Lance and the 49ers

    San Francisco knew Lance would be a project: The quarterback came out of North Dakota State with only one full season of experience (2019) after COVID-19 robbed him of a full junior campaign. Yet the 49ers deemed Lance worthy of trading up from No. 12 to take him third overall.

    After a season behind Jimmy Garoppolo, Lance entered 2022 as San Francisco’s starter, thanks largely to the fact Garoppolo was still recovering from offseason shoulder surgery. But in two games, Lance completed just 15 of 31 passes (48.4 percent) for 194 yards, no touchdowns and an interception before suffering a fractured ankle and missing the rest of the season. The emergence of Purdy later that same season, coupled with Lance’s continued developmental struggles in the 2023 offseason and training camp, caused the 49ers to lose patience. They traded Lance to Dallas for a fourth-round pick, and Lance spent the entire season as the Cowboys’ third quarterback, never taking a snap.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    The awkward and necessary end to the 49ers’ Trey Lance era

    The 49ers grossly erred in their assessment of Lance, who eventually proved to be far more raw, less dynamic as an athlete and not nearly as natural a thrower as they believed. That’s not to say that Lance can’t someday develop into a quality NFL quarterback. But the 49ers found themselves in a place of urgency as they try to capitalize on the window of opportunity they have with a championship-ready roster. Team officials ultimately decided they didn’t have time to wait for Lance to develop, and chose Sam Darnold as their No. 2 quarterback, deeming Lance expendable.

    Purdy (the last pick of the 2022 draft) wound up so dramatically exceeding expectations, he offset the potentially crippling Lance miscalculations by San Francisco GM John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan. Meanwhile, the ability to learn from Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott without the weight of expectations and a ticking clock could be the best thing for Lance’s development in the long run.

    Fields and the Bears

    Fields spent one season under Matt Nagy, who was fired after that 6-11 campaign, then had to start over again under Matt Eberflus and offensive coordinator Luke Getsy. Eberflus and Getsy turned Fields (the No. 11 pick) into much more of a running quarterback than he ever was at Ohio State, and Fields did prove dynamic as a rusher. He concluded the 2022 campaign with 1,143 rushing yards, joining Michael Vick and Lamar Jackson as the only quarterbacks to rush for 1,000 yards in a season. However, Fields was far less dynamic as a passer, throwing for just 2,242 yards, 17 touchdowns and 11 interceptions while leading the NFL in sacks (55) and fumbles (16). The perpetually poor state of Chicago’s offensive line also factored into Fields’ struggles.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Bears trade Justin Fields: Reaction to the compensation and what’s next for the QB

    Fields made moderate improvements in Year 3, but still lacked consistency as a passer. Fields seemingly struggles to see the field well, and rival scouts and coaches question whether he ever truly was comfortable in Chicago’s system. Ultimately, Fields was the product of a poor developmental plan and never had the benefit of playing for coaches who truly believed in him or had a great understanding of how to tailor an offense to his strengths. Eberflus did fire Getsy following the 2023 season, but the move came too late for Fields, whom the Bears traded to the Steelers on Saturday. Chicago is expected to draft USC quarterback Caleb Williams with the No. 1 pick.

    A reset is probably the best thing for Fields. He’ll begin his Steelers chapter as backup to Russell Wilson, a former Super Bowl champion who can help Fields further understand NFL defensive concepts and how to use his mobility as a tool to extend plays while he works to further refine his passing skills.

    Jones helped Alabama win a national championship but was never viewed as a dynamic NFL prospect. Playing for Nick Saban perhaps better prepared him for the pro game, but Jones was regarded by many talent evaluators as having the lowest ceiling of his fellow first-round quarterbacks because of average physical gifts.

    Jones, taken 15th by New England, had a solid rookie season. He beat out Cam Newton for the starting job and passed for 3,801 yards, 22 touchdowns and 13 interceptions, helping the Patriots go 10-7 and reach the playoffs. But he regressed in Year 2 after Josh McDaniels left his job as New England’s offensive coordinator to coach the Raiders. Bill Belichick then tabbed former defensive coordinator Matt Patricia and former special teams coordinator Joe Judge to direct the offense rather than giving Jones a true offensive coordinator. The legendary head coach/roster architect also failed to sufficiently bolster the Patriots’ skill positions. Despite the hiring of Bill O’Brien as offensive coordinator entering Jones’ third season, the quarterback never managed to regain his effectiveness and was benched off and on while going 2-9 as starter.

    Jones’ situation is a perfect example of team mismanagement. Despite his limitations (average arm strength and athleticism), he excelled in college while surrounded by superior talent that helped ease pressure on him. He succeeded as an NFL rookie because the highly creative McDaniels understood how to best mask his deficiencies and position him for success. Belichick foolishly thought Patricia and Judge could do the same. Without McDaniels’ offensive wizardry and lacking a talented supporting cast, Jones came crashing down to earth. Now, he’s in Jacksonville as Lawrence’s backup — a role that best fits his skill set.


    In five weeks, the next crop of star college quarterbacks will enter the NFL with great fanfare and expectations they will change the fortunes of the teams that will invest handsome draft picks to acquire them. The Bears and Patriots — owners of the first and third picks of the draft, respectively — are expected to once again take swings at finding a franchise quarterback. The Commanders, Vikings, Raiders and Broncos also could draft quarterbacks.

    Their success will hinge largely on an ability to avoid the mistakes made by the Jets, 49ers, Bears, Patriots and so many other teams before them: Poor talent projection, overvalued prospects and a failure to provide the quarterbacks with adequate coaching or roster support.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    NFL Power Rankings post-free agency: The Texans are going for it, the Cowboys are … not

    (Top photos of Trey Lance, Justin Fields and Mac Jones: Christian Petersen, Michael Reaves and Chris Unger / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • Feeding the ‘demon inside’: Ex-employee tells how and why he stole $22 million from Jaguars

    Feeding the ‘demon inside’: Ex-employee tells how and why he stole $22 million from Jaguars

    Feb. 2, 2023 began like any other morning for Amit Patel. He was sitting in his cubicle on the ground floor of EverBank Stadium, home to the Jacksonville Jaguars. Patel, a manager in the team’s financial department, was closing out the last cycle of expenses, as he did at the beginning of each month.

    When Jaguars chief financial officer Mark Sirota asked Patel to come to Sirota’s office, he thought it might be to discuss a new project. But then Patel got there and Sirota lowered his voice and asked Patel to shut the door behind him. Sirota then told Patel a delegation from NFL security was in a suite upstairs waiting to talk to him.

    Sirota escorted Patel through the office, then the bowels of the stadium. As they made their way to an elevator, Patel looked back and saw a contingent of human relations officials and team security trailing them. When he arrived on the fourth floor and stepped into a suite, he was met by one of the team’s lawyers and three men in suits, one of whom was sitting behind a laptop.

    “I already knew they had everything on the computer in front of them. My entire gambling history,” Patel, 31, told The Athletic in an interview from his attorney’s office in Jacksonville last week.

    When the NFL security team asked where Patel got the money to place the bets they had discovered, he lied. He said it was from family wealth and cryptocurrency. When they asked whether they could have access to his phone and computer, he looked to the Jaguars’ lawyer for advice, only to realize the lawyer was there to protect the team, not him. He handed his devices over and the lawyer took him for a walk around the concourse. As they walked, Patel feverishly calculated what those security officials might identify as they transferred data from his computer and phone.

    When his boss later asked him for his password to the company’s virtual credit card program, Patel knew it was over. He was caught.

    FBI investigators subsequently discovered that Patel, over a four-year period, had embezzled more than $22 million from the Jaguars by creating fraudulent charges on the club’s virtual credit card and then covering his tracks by sending falsified files to the team’s accounting department. Patel’s attorney said the vast majority of what he stole he gambled away via online sports gambling sites. The government said he also used the money to fund a jet-set lifestyle and to purchase vehicles, a condominium, a designer watch worth over $95,000 and other extravagances.

    Last Tuesday, in U.S. District Court in Jacksonville, Patel stood before a judge, voice quivering, and said he was “ashamed” of his actions. The prosecution asked for a sentence of 84 months, emphasizing the scale of his fraud, the media attention the case received and the message it would send to others who might “steal millions and live like a king.” Patel’s attorney asked for probation, citing his client’s gambling addiction and subsequent recovery efforts as reasons for leniency.

    Patel received a 78-month sentence.

    In his first interview since he pleaded guilty last year, Patel said that after months of anticipation, dread and unease, he feels a sense of relief to finally face his punishment.

    “I’m dealing with the consequences of something that happened a year and a half ago. I’ve been a completely different person since then through my recovery,” Patel said. “I’m dealing with something that’s happened in the past when I was a different person.”

    Patel had roughly two dozen friends and family on hand at his sentencing, some of whom made statements vouching for his character. His older brother said he was the prototypical golden child who excelled at sports and school only to be derailed by alcohol abuse and gambling addiction. His high school teacher said he was a “model student.” His girlfriend insisted he was a good person who had taken responsibility for his actions and committed to a life of sobriety.

    Government attorneys described him as a fabulist who conned his company and enjoyed the spoils. Court filings included pictures of Patel partying at swanky hotels, flying on private planes and flashing expensive bottles of champagne. In that filing, the prosecutor handling the case wrote that Patel continued to “enjoy the finer things” even after he was fired. Megha Parekh, the Jaguars chief legal counsel, issued a blistering assessment of Patel, stating that his actions invited an inordinate amount of scrutiny on the organization and diverted key resources and time from current employees: “He was our teammate and he betrayed us.”

    Those depictions, while seemingly in contrast, coexist in Patel’s retelling, and he frequently toed the line between expressing remorse for his actions and ascribing those actions to a problem outside his control.

    “I was battling with a secret addiction that nobody knew about,” Patel said. “Everyone thought I was doing great, dandy. You know, on Instagram they see you having fun, you’re with your friends and family, but there’s a mental demon inside.”

    Patel grew up in a strict household where his parents, who immigrated from India, expected academic excellence from their two sons. He said he was impacted greatly by two losses earlier in his life: Patel’s father died of a heart attack when Patel was 13, and one of his best friends died in a car accident nine years later when he was in college. By that time, Patel said his drinking, drug use and gambling were all-consuming.

    But Patel also had an abundance of love and support coupled with ambition and opportunity. He was, as the government attorney described in court, an example of the American Dream. Popular and well-liked among his classmates. Elected class president at the Paxon School for Advanced Studies in Jacksonville. Captain of his high school lacrosse team. And he had an entrepreneurial spirit, dabbling in e-commerce and side projects that suffused him with cash and freedom.

    Like many people his age, Patel was drawn to gambling during the online poker boom of the early aughts and the ubiquity of fantasy sports. He said he first experienced the rush of gambling on a cruise trip to the Bahamas the summer before he left for college. The cruise featured a poker tournament and, though his mom forbade him to enter because he had previously squandered money on online poker by using her credit card, his stepfather slipped him a $100 bill.

    A crowd formed around the poker table and he was in the middle of it all, winning the tournament and a $2,000 prize. He paid his mother back for a portion of the cruise and bought his then-girlfriend a necklace. He later posed for a picture with the money splayed out on a table and made that his Facebook profile avatar.

    Patel enrolled at Florida State in 2010 but said the combination of partying and gambling led him to switch from his major of choice (engineering) to something more manageable (accounting). Poor grades prompted his transfer to Flagler College as he prioritized gambling over all else. He took a bus to an in-person poker tournament at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel in Hollywood, Florida, where he finished 15th out of about 1,500 entrants, winning almost $7,500. But he was able to return to FSU for an MBA. Out of college, he went to work for Deloitte, and while there he used his corporate credit card to fund his gambling habit. But he avoided trouble because his brother helped him pay it off.

    In 2018, he landed his dream job with the Jaguars, a team he grew up supporting. By that point, he’d progressed from playing fantasy football to betting on baseball via offshore accounts to placing wagers on essentially anything he could. “You wake up in the middle of the night and you’re betting on Turkish women’s volleyball,” he said.

    He’d ignore his mom’s calls, forget to brush his teeth, stay up late into the night, constantly refreshing his phone for scores and highlights while his girlfriend slept next to him. Once, in Las Vegas, he drove to the Nevada/Arizona border just so he could place a daily fantasy sports bet, which isn’t permitted in Nevada. When his bank account was low, he’d sell personal items, donate plasma, take out payday loans or rustle up work doing cell phone repairs. There were times he’d visit the ATM multiple times in a day, depositing and depleting.

    “The worst part is there’s always a win around the corner,” Patel said. “And so that’s what you’re always chasing.”

    In September 2019, Patel, then a mid-level employee with the Jaguars, was in the hole from gambling losses, his credit card maxed out. He was drunk, trying to think of a way to dig himself out of debt and feeling the “itch.” That’s when he allowed himself to consider using funds from the company VCC program he managed.

    “I mean, the devil inside me is like let me just deposit $25,000 from the card. I’ll turn it into $50,000. I’ll put the $25,000 back,” Patel said.

    Given the level of attrition and lack of oversight within the Jaguars’ depleted accounting and finance department, the prospect of getting caught seemed low. In corporate finance, there is a concept called the fraud triangle: Opportunity. Incentive. Rationalization. Patel had all three.

    The hole deepened as Patel’s gambling losses mounted. And so he continued using funds obtained from the Jaguars VCC program to place astronomical bets via FanDuel and DraftKings in hopes that he’d win big and save himself. Patel said his VIP rep at FanDuel would add 10 percent to his account for every $600,000 he spent, in addition to entry fees that were refunded and travel perks he was comped. A spokesperson for FanDuel declined to comment as the company still considers the situation an “ongoing matter.”

    In the early days of the scheme, Patel would see an unannounced meeting placed on his calendar and believe the team had figured out his subterfuge. As the years passed and his actions went undetected, that fear never abated, he said, but he just couldn’t stop.

    He’s not sure what tipped off NFL security early in 2023. (Employees of NFL teams are forbidden from betting on games.) But he recounted some brazen moves he made in the months before his termination. Twice, he bet on the Jaguars – once while he was in Kansas City for a game against the Chiefs — an $18,000 six-way parlay involving five UFC fights and the Jags covering the spread. (The five fights went his way, he said, but the Jags didn’t cover.) Later, he said he bet “a few hundred thousand dollars” on a Jaguars-Titans game, another loss. He also tried to withdraw money from a wire to place bets through FanDuel, which triggered a notification from the anti-money laundering team at the site. (He said his account was suspended after he unsuccessfully answered questions about the source of his funds.)

    “I was so far in the hole I was like ‘Maybe I can win a million really quick on this game and pay them back,’” he said. “I was desperate.”

    In the immediate aftermath of getting fired by the Jaguars, Patel did not stop gambling. Instead, he continued scrambling to try to win and pay the team back. An absurd idea, he recognizes now, considering the sum he owed.

    Patel was in rehab by the time the FBI got involved. His attorney referred him for alcohol and drug abuse, as well as gambling addiction. He cooperated with the government’s investigation and in December 2023 pleaded guilty to charges of fraud and an illegal monetary transaction.

    In the 99 days he spent in rehab, Patel said he felt guilt and shame for the pain he caused his loved ones, friends and coworkers. But he also felt grateful. “I was so glad to be out of that torturous, endless cycle in my head,” he said.

    Gambler’s Anonymous works similarly to Alcoholics Anonymous. You work the 12 steps. Identify the “character defects” that contribute to addiction. Patel still battles those, with perfectionism and ego surfacing more prevalently than he would like.

    He bristled at the suggestion that he was a neophyte and historically bad gambler, as one report suggested. He was bothered by news accounts that only one person attended his plea hearing in his defense. (He told friends and family not to attend, he said.) And he pushes back on the government’s assertion that he was driven solely by greed.

    He contends that he bought some luxury items to flip for profits to subsidize his gambling, while also acknowledging that he was frittering away money on a country club membership, spa services and more. Though the majority of the money he stole from the Jaguars ended up with FanDuel or DraftKings, the government contends that Patel transferred over $5 million to his PayPal and other financial accounts.

    He admits he enjoyed the trappings that came with having access to millions of dollars but said the cost of certain trips and events were reimbursed by the online betting sites, an incentive for him to continue spending with them: “They just give you this illusion that you’re winning because they’re just making so much money off of you that they need to keep you happy and keep you gambling,” he said.

    Patel said he still has urges to gamble — the most recent one came a few months ago when he got an email from the Hard Rock Hotel Casino group, commemorating the opening of its new sportsbook. Patel talked about it in the GA meeting he organized; the group now meets regularly in a local church.

    “Not everyone will get addicted to gambling,” Patel said. “But everyone can get addicted.”

    Patel will continue treatment while incarcerated. He is slated to begin his sentence within the next 90 days. His attorney requested he be placed at the federal facility closest to his family in Jacksonville. When he gets out, he’ll be put on a payment plan – $250 a month directed to the Jaguars. Both the prosecuting attorney and the judge acknowledged he is unlikely to ever pay back the entire sum he stole from the NFL franchise.

    Said Patel: “I’ve just got to deal with these consequences and move on with my life and see how much I can use this to help a lot of other people.”

    (Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic; photos: Don Juan Moore, Julio Aguilar, Perry Knotts, Don Juan Moore / Getty Images; courtesy of U.S. Attorney)

    The New York Times

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  • Eagles-only 2024 mock draft, version 3.0, post free agency edition

    Eagles-only 2024 mock draft, version 3.0, post free agency edition

    As a reminder, the Eagles are currently projected to have 8 picks in the 2024 NFL Draft. While it’s likely that Howie Roseman will move up and/or down the board as he usually does, we’ll play it straight here and simply act as though the Eagles will stick and pick.

    You can find our Eagles-only mock draft pick, version 1.0, here, and version 2.0, here.

    DeJean can play outside corner, slot corner, safety, or linebacker. He was also one of the best punt returners in college football, and he’s an outstanding gunner. He is simply a ridiculous athlete and football player.

    In 2022, DeJean had 75 tackles, 5 INTs (3 pick-sixes), and 8 pass breakups. Here are all five of those picks:

    Round 2 (from New Orleans): Kingsley Suamataia, OT, BYU (6’5, 326)

    Suamataia came in at No. 3 on Bruce Feldman’s “Freaks” list this offseason, with the following glowing review.

    Coaches have always been great resources for this project over the years. That said, it’s been awhile since I stared at a response as long as I did the one I received from BYU offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick this month.

    “Kingsley Suamataia is the most athletic and violent OL I’ve ever coached. More athletic than Garett Bolles when I was at Utah. More athletic than Blake Freeland,” he wrote.

    Bolles was a first-round pick and has started all 82 games he’s played in the NFL, and the 6-8, 302-pound Freeland, BYU’s left tackle last year, lit up the combine last spring by running a 4.98 40, vertical-jumping 37 inches — a combine record for offensive tackles — and broad-jumping 10-0, which was 1 inch away from the combine record for that, too. More athletic than Freeland, especially in that Suamataia weighs 23 pounds more, seemed like a mouthful.

    The 6-6, 325-pound Suamataia didn’t allow a sack last season, a run of 361 pass plays.

    “Kingsley is off the charts,” BYU sports scientist Skyler Mayne says. “He’s faster than our linebackers. He’s just a Freak in the weight room. What makes it look different from Blake is that Kingsley just makes it look a little more effortless. Blake was a better jumper, but Kingsley was our fastest lineman by a good bit.”

    According to Mayne, Suamataia hit 21.5 MPH last year as a 318-pound freshman. That’s really good for a 218-pounder, much less an athlete 100 pounds more than that.

    “He’s so fluid and smooth,” Mayne says. “I think he could run in the 4.8s. He’s definitely a sub-5 guy (in the 40). He’s super explosive and can throw a ton of weight around. You watch him on the field throw a big defensive end around with one arm, and he doesn’t even break stride. If he wanted to be a tight end or fullback, because he’s so naturally gifted and has the agility, he could.”

    In addition to being a premier athlete, Suamataia also has plenty of nastiness in his game. 

    As an added bonus, he has experience playing both at LT and RT, which means that he could be a swing tackle off the bench early in his career before eventually taking over for Lane Johnson at RT. 

    Round 2: Payton Wilson, LB, NC State (6’4, 233)

    Let’s get Wilson’s downside out of the way first. He has torn his right ACL twice, he dislocated both shoulders in the same game in 2021 (necessitating surgery), and he’ll be 24 by the time he’s drafted. He’s older than every player the Eagles drafted last year, except Sydney Brown, who is older by a month. He’s two years older than Kelee Ringo and Moro Ojomo. Some teams — and some of my readers — are going to be out on him, and I get that.

    So why take him in the second round? Well, he’s a complete linebacker with size (6’4, 233) and speed (4.43 40) who can cover, who can play the run, who can get sideline-to-sideline, and who had outstanding production in 2023 (138 tackles, 17.5 for loss, 6 sacks, 3 INTs, 6 PBUs, 1 FF).

    The Eagles have been willing to take swings on injury risk players in the second round in the past, sometime with success (Landon Dickerson), sometime not (Sidney Jones).

    Round 4: Theo Johnson, TE, Penn State (6’6, 259)

    Johnson didn’t have eye-popping production at Penn State, as he had just 341 receiving yards in his best season in 2023. (He did have 7 TDs).

    However, he is thought of as a very good blocker, and he has outstanding athleticism. 

    Johnson did a nice job creating separation and making a lot of hands catches in Senior Bowl practices. He could be an out-of-the-box TE2 for the Eagles, with upside to develop into a good receiving tight end. 

    Round 5: Zak Zinter, OG, Michigan (6’6, 309)

    Zinter was a First-Team All American at RG for Michigan this season, but he broke his fibula and tibia in a win over Ohio State, ending his season. They were “clean breaks,” so Zinter should be ready to go for training camp. He played his entire career at RG, and could be a reliable starter in the pros. He was a key piece on a great Michigan offensive line who is a brawler in the run game, and who has good length in pass pro.

    There are a couple knocks:

    • Zinter won’t remind anyone of Jason Kelce athletically. He’s just OK in that regard.

    • As noted above, his entire college career was spent at RG, so he’s lacking in versatility. If you draft him and slot him in at guard and he hits, cool. If he doesn’t hit as a starter, he won’t have much value as a backup either because he is probably a guard only.

    For the Eagles’ purposes, with Jason Kelce retired and Cam Jurgens moving to center, the Eagles have an opening at RG. Depending on what they think of Tyler Steen, they may or may not be looking for a starting guard. If Zinter can be had at a discount in the draft because of his injury and his lack of versatility, then he would make sense on Day 3.

    Round 5: James Williams, S/LB, Miami (6’4, 231)

    Williams was a downhill, big-hitting enforcer in Miami’s defense. Fun highlight reel:

    In 2023, Williams has 73 tackles, an INT, 5 pass breakups, and 2 forced fumbles. 

    The Eagles seem to be into hybrid players this offseason. They signed safety / slot corner hybrid Chauncey Gardner-Johnson and edge rusher / off-ball linebacker hybrid Zack Baun in free agency. Williams is a safety / linebacker who would make sense in a sub-package role.

    Round 5: Javon Baker, WR, UCF (6’1, 202)

    The highlight of Senior Bowl practices was when an unsuspecting Baker took a Michael Penix laser off the side of his head on a crossing route. I think (?) Baker thought the play was over and stopped paying attention, and… WHAP. You could hear it from 50 yards away lol.

    But also, I was impressed by Baker’s ability to create separation, and when I looked up his numbers I discovered that he averaged 21.9 yards per reception in 2023 for UCF. 

    Howie Roseman likes taking shots on Day 3 deep threats with high yards per catch averages, like Shelton Gibson, John Hightower, and Quez Watkins. The Eagles haven’t yet hit a home run on a guy like that, but I respect the approach, and Baker makes sense as that kind of guy.

    Round 6: Jalen Green, Edge, James Madison (6’1, 245)

    Green’s season ended early after he suffered a non-contact injury against Georgia State in early November, but before he went down he was leading the nation in sacks (15.5) and tackles for loss (21) in just 9 games. Had he stayed healthy, Green had a chance of breaking Elvis Dumervil’s record of 20 sacks during the 2005 season. 

    Green also had 50 tackles, 2 forced fumbles, and an INT that he returned for a TD. Monster season: 

    Because of his lack of ideal size and his injury, Green will likely go late on Day 3. I like his fit at the SAM spot in the Eagles’ defense, and if the Eagles are going to move on from Haason Reddick and Josh Sweat by 2025 they’ll need more developmental edge rushers in the pipeline.


    Follow Jimmy & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @JimmyKempski | thePhillyVoice

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    Jimmy Kempski

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  • Here Comes the Sun: Charles Melton and more

    Here Comes the Sun: Charles Melton and more

    Here Comes the Sun: Charles Melton and more – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Actor Charles Melton sits down with Tracy Smith to discuss his latest film, “May December.” Then, Conor Knighton travels to Las Vegas to attend The World of Concrete’s annual convention. “Here Comes the Sun” is a closer look at some of the people, places and things we bring you every week on “CBS Sunday Morning.”

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  • Aaron Donald announces his retirement after a standout 10-year career with the Rams

    Aaron Donald announces his retirement after a standout 10-year career with the Rams

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Aaron Donald spent 10 years flattening quarterbacks, crushing ball-carriers, fighting through perpetual double-teams and generally wrecking NFL offenses. He was relentless, reliable and infinitely resourceful while he led the Los Angeles Rams all the way to a Super Bowl championship.

    And on Friday, Donald decided a decade of dominance was enough.

    The most accomplished defensive lineman of his generation has retired after a stellar 10-year career.

    Greg Beacham | The Associated Press

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  • From unknown to underdog: Qwan’tez Stiggers’ storybook rise as an NFL Draft prospect

    From unknown to underdog: Qwan’tez Stiggers’ storybook rise as an NFL Draft prospect

    Qwan’tez Stiggers sat alone in a dark hotel room, a thousand miles from anything familiar. He drew the curtains tight to block out the world so he could focus on the avalanche in his head.

    It was spring 2023, and two weeks earlier, he’d left his fiancee and family in Atlanta and flown to Canada for an opportunity he never saw coming — the one where he was going to get it all back.

    Stiggers’ mind fixated on the clock and the telephone. The former kept ticking. The latter stayed silent. He missed home. He worried this entire thing was foolish. “You don’t get do-overs in life,” he thought. Sometimes, it’s just too late.

    “They forgot about me,” Stiggers told himself. “Again.”

    The football world did forget about Stiggers. It also rediscovered him — but not before he rediscovered himself. Now, with Stiggers on the edge of a potential spot in the 2024 NFL Draft, his story reads like a major motion picture with all the bells and whistles.

    GO DEEPER

    2024 NFL Mock Draft: Trades shake up Round 1; QBs, WRs dominate early

    In that room, though, it was just dark.

    The call Stiggers was waiting on was from the Toronto Argonauts. When Toronto’s coaches got their 2023 camp tryout roster, they asked one another why the kid from Georgia had no college next to his name. They’d soon learn their new DB did receive a football scholarship out of high school, but he walked away from it, crushed beneath the weight of depression and tragedy.

    When Stiggers got to camp, he figured he’d be the first guy cut. He’d made two friends in practice, both of whom had played in the NFL; neither made the team. Stiggers was done waiting. He put the lights on, grabbed some shoes and headed to the coaches’ room.

    “What’re you doing here?” a puzzled coach asked when he arrived.

    “What’s going on?” an annoyed Stiggers replied. “Nobody called me.”

    The last three years of his life had been a whirlwind. He’d gone from a heartbroken college dropout driving for DoorDash and washing trucks to the edge of professional football in the blink of an eye, all without ever having played a snap in college. Before he got on the plane to Canada for his tryout with the Argonauts, Stiggers told his boss at the truck wash to clock him out, figuring he’d need another shift upon return. The GM of the team had first reached out to him via Instagram.

    This couldn’t be real. They’d forgotten about him. Just like everybody else.

    Except …

    “We don’t call you,” the coach replied, “if you’ve made the active roster.”

    Every player’s path to the draft is unique, special and unforgettable. But for Qwan’tez Stiggers, the kid who went pro straight from high school (sort of), the journey — at least the part he’s in now — is an actual fairy tale.


    Kwanna Stiggers lost track of how many times she’d forged her son’s name on a sign-up sheet. At least a dozen. In late 2021, with the world starting to reopen post-pandemic, Kwanna spent hours online searching for anything football-related in the Atlanta area that could be attended in person.

    She didn’t care what it was — a camp, clinic, workout group, pickup game, fantasy league …

    If it had football in the name, she signed up Qwan’tez. “Whether he wanted to or not,” she recalls in that stern, caring tone of love and courage — the one reserved for mothers and their sons.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    What did we learn at the NFL combine about teams with top-10 draft picks?

    Qwan’tez Stiggers first fell in love with football at age 8. He and his older brother, Qwantayvious, played pee-wee ball for the Georgia Rattlers. Younger brother followed older brother to The B.E.S.T. Academy, a small, all-boys public middle and high school in northwest Atlanta.

    By Qwan’tez’s sophomore year, he was 5 feet 5. His only full-time role was as the kicker, one fast enough to chase down returners. He grew 4 inches ahead of his junior year and moved to defensive back. By his senior season, he was nearly 6 feet tall and starting to thrive on the field.

    Stiggers played for a tiny high school, limiting exposure, and caught a super late growth spurt, limiting it further. He still managed to garner attention from some small schools in the region, landing on Division II Lane College in Tennessee ahead of the 2020 season.

    Then, just before the world stopped in February 2020, Stiggers’ father, Rayves Harrison, was involved in a car accident that left him in a coma. Even as Stiggers headed to school in the fall, his father’s condition hadn’t improved. During a visit home in September, Stiggers was with his girlfriend (now fiancee), Cheyenne McClain, when Kwanna called with the message they’d all feared. Rayves, to whom Quan’tez referred as his biggest fan, had died.

    Football no longer mattered. Nothing really mattered. By the end of that weekend, Stiggers had decided to quit school and stay home to help his family.

    At least, that’s what he wanted to do.

    In reality, he couldn’t do anything.

    “I couldn’t focus,” he says. “It was like a period of time where I’d try to do something — anything — and then a picture of my dad would just pop up in my head. Didn’t matter what it was. And it would just shut me right down.”

    He began to drift. Stiggers worked for DoorDash and InstaCart before landing at a Blue Beacon truck wash near home. His depression deepened. There were times when he tried to play football again; he even reached out to schools, trainers, coaches — anyone he’d known from when he was recruited. No one had time.

    When it came to his place in the football world, Stiggers felt like a pebble at the bottom of the ocean. Anxiety, fear and grief had left him in a perpetual state of feeling stuck.

    Kwanna continued her search for anything that might reignite the smile football gave her son, serving as one half of a rock for Qwan’tez that never budged. Cheyenne formed the other half. Sadly, she understood everything Qwan’tez was going through.

    In October 2019, Cheyenne’s sister, Jessica Daniels, was murdered. After waking to the sound of gunshots outside her southwest Atlanta home, Jessica got out of bed to get on the ground and was fatally shot by a stray bullet. She was 18. Cheyenne’s world collapsed. PTSD, anxiety and waves of depression left her numb, a feeling that was still there the morning Kwanna called Qwan’tez to tell him his father had died.

    Depression can be like a deep hole with steep sides and no ladder. Sometimes, the only way out comes when someone else falls in. When Cheyenne saw that familiar pain begin to take over the person she loved, she started climbing.

    Motivated to help Qwan’tez battle the same type of grief she was still trying to process, Cheyenne began working with Kwanna to support him and help him find joy again. Which, for Qwan’tez, meant restarting his football career.

    Cheyenne told him to be brave and bold. “Never give up,” she’d say over and over when the idea became too difficult. They’d sit in the car every night and talk for hours — about his dad, about her sister, about their futures. In losing herself in the quest to help someone she cared about, Cheyenne began healing from her own loss.

    Qwan’tez says he’s like the male version of Cheyenne, and she the female version of him. Together they just fit. They’ve known each other forever. Everything she likes, he likes. His passions are her passions. He loves her, and she loves him. Unconditionally.

    How’d she manage to find the strength to pick herself up, almost in a blink, so she could help pick up Qwan’tez? She just did. Her person needed her. Sometimes, that’s all it takes.

    “Seeing him being strong made me sit back and think,” Cheyenne says. “(I was with) someone who was (handling this), and it was sort of me having to help him become strong. And that made me strong.”

    The small excuses stopped, and Qwan’tez became inspired again. He kept lifting and running. He called anyone he knew who might be able to help him train. If he couldn’t find anyone, he did it himself. One foot in front of the other, one day at a time.

    Then, after more than a dozen failed sign-ups, Kwanna finally found a winner while scrolling through Facebook: Fan Controlled Football (FCF), an indoor, semi-pro, seven-on-seven football league housed in Atlanta. It completed its debut season in 2021, and as the 2022 season approached, Qwan’tez Stiggers was back in playing shape.


    Qwan’tez Stiggers restarted his career by playing in the Fan Controlled Football league. (Jonathan Bachman / Fan Controlled Football / Getty Images)

    FCF was a long way from the NCAA or NFL, but it was football. And every time Stiggers buttoned his chinstrap, he felt like he could breathe again. There was no pressure, just a chance to play again. He made a team immediately and, as the youngest player in the league, returned a pick six in his first game. Quickly, he earned a rep as one of the FCF’s top defenders.

    One of the coaches involved with Fan Controlled Football in 2022 was longtime college and pro coach John Jenkins, who spent a large chunk of his five-decade career in the Canadian Football League. When Jenkins discovered Stiggers’ story, talent and age, he made a call and sent some tape to a contact in the CFL.

    Then, during a shift at the truck wash, Stiggers’ phone buzzed. It was an Instagram message from Vince Magri of the Toronto Argonauts, asking him for some basic information and a contact address. Days later, a tryout contract appeared in his mailbox. Stiggers sent it to everyone he knew, trying to confirm it was real. It was.

    When Qwan’tez put pen to paper, Kwanna knew two things to be true: A mother’s drive remained undefeated, and her son was smiling again.

    “It was like, ‘OK, yes,’” Kwanna recalls. “He got his fight back.”


    There’s an old saying in football: If you’re good enough, they’ll find you.

    They might take a while, but they will find you. Qwan’tez Stiggers is living proof of it. He’s said people have told him he has “the perfect story,” an actual fairy tale of someone who was lost and found again.

    From a purely football sense, though, Stiggers’ story is not unlike that of a lot of kids living in large metropolitan areas. He was a good football player in high school, very good by his senior season, and talented enough to play at any college in the South. Recruiting, though, is a numbers game in more ways than one, and time does not wait for talent. It sounds illogical, but it’s true.

    If you play at a school the size of a needle in a football-crazed state the size of a haystack, your odds of getting lost increase. The churn of big-time football is grueling, and it forgets about people all the time.

    Then again, cornerbacks who’ve never played a snap of college football don’t usually show up at a CFL training camp — at age 20 — and pick off four passes in the first two days. Stiggers did. He moved from third-string to the starting lineup after a teammate suffered an injury in the first preseason game.

    “I never went back to the bench,” Stiggers says.

    A natural defensive back with fluid hips, burst in his lower half and terrific ball skills, Stiggers plays with confidence and patience in man coverage, and he’s big enough at 5-11 and 203 pounds to hit and instinctive enough to play multiple positions in a secondary. Argonauts coaches went from thinking this whole thing was some kind of joke to trusting the youngster as their top player on the back end.

    Stiggers played 16 games with the Argonauts last season, making 53 tackles and five interceptions, earning the CFL’s Most Outstanding Rookie award. The whirlwind ride led Stiggers to the door of agent Fred Lyles, who found the prospect through contacts with the Argonauts.

    Lyles, who now operates NZone Sports Management, has repped several talented corners over the years, players such as A.J. Bouye and Chris Harris Jr.

    “This kid,” Lyles says, “is as good as they were.”

    Lyles burned up the phones over the winter trying to get Stiggers more attention, which eventually led to an invite to the East-West Shrine Bowl. Stiggers spent a week in Dallas working out in front of the entire NFL, more than holding his own. By the time the game ended, he’d heard from all 32 teams.

    As of last week, Stiggers had seven formal pre-draft visits scheduled. He’s hoping to add more after his pro day at B.E.S.T. Academy on March 15, one that, again, will be attended by a gaggle of NFL scouts eager to learn the story of the kid who somehow skipped college football.

    He and his family, which now includes a son, Legend, can’t wait to tell it to them.

    When Stiggers called Cheyenne and told her he’d made the Argonauts, “I cried,” Cheyenne says. “It was overwhelming. We have a son, and it was just like, ‘OK, my son now has a role model to look up to.’

    “(Legend) loves sports, loves football. Every time he sees a football, he’s calling for Dada.”

    Stiggers’ return to competitive football brought him structure when he needed it. He has a hard time putting his excitement about everything that’s happened over the past two years into words, as he’s still in it.

    Life is still hard without his father — football and so many other things remind him of times spent with his dad. He’s still grieving that loss. He always will be. Only now, when the waves of sadness come, they serve as motivation to set a strong example for Legend, to make sure he cherishes every day spent with him and Cheyenne.

    Stiggers is excited about his draft prospects and hopeful to hear his name called this spring, perhaps earlier than some of the players who received an NFL combine invite over him. Mostly, though, he’s just hopeful.

    In some ways, he has football to thank for that. But in more ways, the thank-yous are reserved for the loved ones who continued to push him toward his destiny, even when it felt lost forever. It turns out, life does offer do-overs to those who work for them. There are ways out of that deep hole.

    And so long as you have people around you who are willing to help you up, hope can be everlasting.

    “I feel like he can help change the thought process of younger people,” Kwanna says. “No matter what your path is, whatever you choose to do in life … you can do it.

    “Nothing is ever too late.”

    (Top photo: John E. Sokolowski / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • Aaron Donald announces his retirement after decadelong career with LA Rams

    Aaron Donald announces his retirement after decadelong career with LA Rams

    Defensive lineman Aaron Donald has announced his retirement after a standout 10-year career with the Los Angeles Rams.The three-time AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year made his surprising announcement on social media Friday.The 32-year-old Donald spent his entire career with the Rams, who drafted him in the first round in 2014. He was selected for 10 Pro Bowls and eight All-Pro first teams, and he won the award as the league’s top defensive player in 2017, 2018 and 2020.Although smaller than many top defensive tackles, Donald used his extraordinary athleticism and game savvy to wreak havoc on offenses throughout his career. He was the cornerstone of every Rams defense during his career, drawing habitual double-teams away from his teammates and still racking up a franchise-record 111 sacks, third among active players.Donald reached the peak of his stardom after the Rams franchise moved from St. Louis back to Los Angeles in 2016. He had a career-high 20 1/2 sacks in 2018 on the way to his first Super Bowl appearance.He then played a major role in the Rams’ run to a Super Bowl victory three years later, most famously applying the pressure that forced Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow to throw incomplete at midfield on the Bengals’ final play of Los Angeles’ 23-20 victory.Related video above: NFL’s Top 20 players of 2023Lawrence Taylor and J.J. Watt are the only other players to win the defensive player of the year award three times.Donald was slated to make over $34 million this season under the terms of a contract that was renegotiated nearly two years ago. Although Donald had reportedly flirted with retirement for the past two seasons in private, the Rams and Donald hadn’t publicly acknowledged his departure was a real possibility.

    Defensive lineman Aaron Donald has announced his retirement after a standout 10-year career with the Los Angeles Rams.

    The three-time AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year made his surprising announcement on social media Friday.

    The 32-year-old Donald spent his entire career with the Rams, who drafted him in the first round in 2014. He was selected for 10 Pro Bowls and eight All-Pro first teams, and he won the award as the league’s top defensive player in 2017, 2018 and 2020.

    Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

    Aaron Donald #99 of the Los Angeles Rams reacts after a sack on Joe Burrow #9 of the Cincinnati Bengals during Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium on Feb. 13, 2022, in Inglewood, California.

    Although smaller than many top defensive tackles, Donald used his extraordinary athleticism and game savvy to wreak havoc on offenses throughout his career. He was the cornerstone of every Rams defense during his career, drawing habitual double-teams away from his teammates and still racking up a franchise-record 111 sacks, third among active players.

    Donald reached the peak of his stardom after the Rams franchise moved from St. Louis back to Los Angeles in 2016. He had a career-high 20 1/2 sacks in 2018 on the way to his first Super Bowl appearance.

    He then played a major role in the Rams’ run to a Super Bowl victory three years later, most famously applying the pressure that forced Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow to throw incomplete at midfield on the Bengals’ final play of Los Angeles’ 23-20 victory.

    Related video above: NFL’s Top 20 players of 2023

    Lawrence Taylor and J.J. Watt are the only other players to win the defensive player of the year award three times.

    Donald was slated to make over $34 million this season under the terms of a contract that was renegotiated nearly two years ago. Although Donald had reportedly flirted with retirement for the past two seasons in private, the Rams and Donald hadn’t publicly acknowledged his departure was a real possibility.

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  • Kirk Cousins inks 4-year, $180M contract with Atlanta Falcons

    Kirk Cousins inks 4-year, $180M contract with Atlanta Falcons

    Quarterback Kirk Cousins and the Atlanta Falcons have agreed upon a four-year contract. The deal is potentially worth up to $180 million. $100 million is guaranteed, with $90 million being paid in the first two years of the deal. There is also a $2 million incentive if Cousins leads the Falcons to a Super Bowl title.

    The maximum value of Kirk Cousins’s contract is potentially $188 million.

    Cousins’ move to Atlanta was first announced by his agent, Mike McCartney. Cousins played 12 seasons for the Vikings and Washington. He threw for 39,471 yards and 270 touchdowns. He was selected to play in 4 Pro Bowls. However, after suffering an Achilles’ injury, the Vikings allowed Cousins to test the free agency market. The Vikings were serious about bringing back the quarterback, however the Falcons were serious about bringing Cousins in the building.

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Russell Wilson has agreed to sign a 1-year deal with the Steelers, AP source says :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Russell Wilson has agreed to sign a 1-year deal with the Steelers, AP source says :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Russell Wilson is heading to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

    The nine-time Pro Bowl quarterback has agreed to sign a one-year deal with the Steelers, a person familiar with the details told The Associated Press on Sunday night.

    The person, speaking on condition of anonymity because the contract hasn’t been finalized, said Wilson will receive the veteran’s minimum of $1.21 million while the Denver Broncos pay the remainder of his $39 million salary.

    Wilson posted his intentions on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, saying: “Year 13. Grateful. (at)Steelers.”

    The 35-year-old Wilson was 11-19 in two seasons with the Broncos after being acquired in a trade from Seattle. He bounced back from a dreadful 2022 season and threw 3,070 yards, 26 touchdowns and only eight interceptions, but still lost his job to Jarrett Stidham after going 7-8 in coach Sean Payton’s first season last year.

    Wilson led Seattle to eight playoff appearances and a Super Bowl title in 10 seasons with the Seahawks.

    The Steelers lost a wild-card playoff game with Mason Rudolph as their starting quarterback. Rudolph went 3-0 after replacing Kenny Pickett, who was 7-5 before going down with an injury. Mitch Trubisky started the other two games and went 0-2.

    Pittsburgh is scheduled to play the Broncos in Denver this upcoming season — and the game could feature a return by Wilson. The NFL is expected to release its league schedule in May.

    Last week, the Broncos informed Wilson they’d release him when the new league year begins Wednesday — but gave him permission to speak to other teams.

    “We thank Russell for his contributions and dedications to our team and community while wishing him the best as he continues his career,” the team posted on its social media channels last week, adding, “We are excited to improve this offseason and will have the flexibility to get better through the draft and free agency.”

    After signing a nearly quarter-billion dollar extension before playing a down in Denver, Wilson contended the Broncos had threatened to bench him for the final nine games last season if he didn’t push back his $37 million injury guarantee in his contract.

    Wilson declined to adjust his deal and started seven more games before getting benched in what Payton insisted was a football move, not a financial one.

    AP Pro Football Writer Arnie Stapleton contributed.

    ___

    AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

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  • Russell Wilson planning to sign with Pittsburgh after release from the Broncos

    Russell Wilson planning to sign with Pittsburgh after release from the Broncos

    Russell Wilson may play at Empower Field in 2024 after all.

    It would just be in the black and gold.

    Wilson, who has not even been formally released by the Broncos but is set to be later this week, announced Sunday night that he plans to sign with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Multiple outlets have reported that the sides have an agreement on a one-year contract.

    Wilson will likely play at the veteran minimum of $1.21 million because he has $39 million in guaranteed salary from Denver for the 2024 season. The Broncos will pay all of that amount except for Wilson’s salary with a new team, so there’s little incentive for the Steelers to pay him more than the minimum.

    The Broncos still must actually release Wilson, which they will do sometime between the start of the 2024 NFL league year at 2 p.m. Wednesday and March 17. After they informed Wilson of their intent to release him a week ago, Denver allowed Wilson to begin speaking with other teams as if he were already a free agent.

    When they do process his release, Denver will have to account for $85 million in dead salary cap charges over the next two seasons. The Broncos will decide whether to take $35.4 million in 2024 and $49.6 million in 2025 or $53 million in 2024 and $32 million in 2025.

    Parker Gabriel

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  • UFC 299 Preview, Jake Paul Vs. Mike Tyson, Second-Generation Athletes, and Academy Award Picks

    UFC 299 Preview, Jake Paul Vs. Mike Tyson, Second-Generation Athletes, and Academy Award Picks

    Tate and Chuck preview the biggest fights of UFC 299, including O’Malley-Vera 2 and Poirier-Saint Denis, and then they discuss the underwhelming UFC 300 card and expectations for Jake Paul vs. MIKE TYSON! Plus, Bryan Curtis joins Tate to break down second-generation athletes like Bronny James and Arch Manning, the latest NFL free agency news, their picks for the Academy Awards, and the best sports movie ever.

    Host: Tate Frazier
    Guests: Chuck Mindenhall and Bryan Curtis
    Producers: Tucker Tashjian and Mark Panik

    Subscribe: Spotify

    Tate Frazier

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  • Houston Texans Re-Sign Kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn to Three Year, $15.9 Million Deal

    Houston Texans Re-Sign Kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn to Three Year, $15.9 Million Deal

    Thus far, if we’ve learned anything since the Texans returned from the NFL Scouting Combine last week, it’s that the team is heavily focused on bringing back some fo their veteran free agents who would be hitting the open market next week. On Tuesday, it was tight end Dalton Schultz re-upping with the Texans on a three year, $36 million deal.

    On Wednesday, it was kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn, signing a three year, $15.9 million deal to return to the team in 2024 and beyond, as first reported by ESPN.com’s D.J. Bien Aime:

    A few thoughts on the Texans checking off an important box on their offseason to-do list:

    Fairbairn is getting paid like one of the best, because he’s been one of the best
    The $5.3 million annual salary puts Fairbairn fourth on the list of kickers in the NFL, with Justin Tucker of Baltimore l leading the way at $6 million per year. The money for Fairbairn is well deserved. He converted 27 of 28 field goal attempts in 2023. Fairbairn missed five games with a  quad injury, but returned strong, and went 9 for 9 to close out the regular season. He went 2 for 3 in the playoffs. Fairbairn’s career field goal percentage of 87.1 percent ranks third among all kickers with at least 100 games played since 2017, and his 94.9 percent field goal conversation rate since 2020 ranks first among kickers who’ve played in at least 25 games. On kickoffs, he is a practically automatic touchback kicker. In short, Fairbairn has been excellent.

    Fairbairn’s injury in 2023 may have actually helped him get this deal done
    If there is one concern, though, it would be injuries. In the last three seasons, Fairbairn has missed nine games — four in 2021, and five in 2023. Ironically, though, Fairbairn’s missing games in 2023 may have actually helped the case to pay him, as the experience of trotting replacement kicker Matt Ammendola out there for each kick was a harrowing adventure. Absence certainly made the heart grow fonder of Fairbairn, and I would say the same thing about punter Cam Johnston, also a free agent, and how it felt trotting Ty Zentner out there for four games to start the 2023 season, while Johnston convalesced from a leg injury.

    Special teams is clearly a priority for the Texans
    While $5.3 million for a kicker may sound pricy, it does line up with the way the Texans prioritize special teams. They were among the highest spenders in the NFL on specialists in 2023, and if they re-sign Johnston, they likely shoot to the top of the list. The results, though, have been worth it, as Fairbairn and Johnston have been key contributors to some of the best special teams units in the league over the last few seasons. Spending in areas like the kicking game will likely always be a thing under GM Nick Caserio.

    The strategy is simple — we trust the ones we know
    DeMeco Ryans said it at the combine last week — the Texans place a heavy value on knowing players as PEOPLE, knowing how they react to adversity, and knowing how they fit in the team’s locker room. As a result, they will attempt to bring back as many GOOD players as they can. The re-signing of Fairbairn clings with this strategy. The question now is “Who’s next?”

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

    Sean Pendergast

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  • NFL’s worst quarterback trades: Where does Broncos’ Russell Wilson deal rank?

    NFL’s worst quarterback trades: Where does Broncos’ Russell Wilson deal rank?

    The Denver Broncos’ announcement Monday that they would release Russell Wilson next week was an official admission of the disastrous decision they made in 2022 to trade for the former Super Bowl-winning quarterback.

    After giving up five draft picks and three players to acquire Wilson from the Seattle Seahawks, the Broncos awarded the quarterback a massive five-year, $242.6 million contract extension before he had even taken so much as a practice snap. In two seasons, Wilson appeared in 30 games and went 11-19, never reaching the playoffs. He was benched in late December in part because of poor performance, but also because of the financial implications and the fear Wilson would get injured and trigger 2024 guarantees.

    The Wilson acquisition and ensuing extension will forever rank as one of the worst trades for a veteran quarterback in NFL history. The Broncos, in releasing Wilson, will suffer a dead-cap hit of $85 million split between this year and next year.

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    But NFL history is full of cautionary tales of historically bad quarterback moves.

    The Dolphins’ failed Daunte Culpepper experiment in 2006 always comes to mind. That error in judgement was exacerbated by Miami’s decision to acquire Culpepper from Minnesota for a second-round pick, banking on the quarterback recovering from knee surgery more effectively than free agent Drew Brees would from shoulder surgery. Culpepper played only four games before clashing with head coach Nick Saban and succumbing to injury. Brees signed with the Saints and became a future Hall of Famer.

    Venturing dangerously close to regrettable territory are the Browns, who enter Year 3 with Deshaun Watson. They’re still waiting for him to deliver a return on their investment of three first-round picks, two seconds, a fourth-rounder and an unprecedented $230 million fully guaranteed contract. Can Watson change the narrative? The 2024 season could determine that answer.

    But with the book now closed on Wilson and the Broncos, let’s rank the 10 worst trades for a veteran quarterback in the last 35 years. (We’ll save draft-day deals for college stars-turned-NFL busts for another day.)

    10. Carson Palmer to Raiders for a first- and second-round pick (2011)

    When the Bengals decided to end the Palmer era and turn to Andy Dalton, Palmer’s former Bengals assistant-turned-Raiders head coach Hue Jackson and his team were buyers. Palmer had two forgettable years in Oakland, however. He played in just nine games in 2011, going 4-5, and then went 4-11 as a starter in 2012. Palmer did resurrect his career with four solid seasons in five years with Arizona, including a 13-3 Pro Bowl campaign in 2015, but there were no vintage performances for the Raiders.

    9. Brad Johnson to Washington for a first, second and third (1999)

    After swinging-and-missing on Heath Shuler and enduring a brief Gus Frerotte/Trent Green carousel, Washington thought it found its man in Johnson, Warren Moon’s backup in Minnesota. Johnson did have a Pro Bowl first season in Washington, but Dan Snyder played fantasy football the next offseason and wanted Jeff George to be the guy. Johnson was out after just two years and went to Tampa Bay, where he helped win a Super Bowl. Minnesota used that first-round pick to draft Culpepper, who before suffering a devastating knee injury was an MVP candidate. Washington still hasn’t found a franchise quarterback.

    8. Carson Wentz to Colts for a conditional second, third (2021)

    Philadelphia’s prized quarterback was an MVP candidate in 2017 until he blew out his knee late that season, and Wentz never got his groove back after watching Nick Foles lead the Eagles to a Super Bowl victory. His erratic play upon his return didn’t scare off the Colts, though. They thought a reunion with former Eagles offensive coordinator Frank Reich, then Indianapolis’ head coach, would help Wentz return to form. But modest production during a mediocre 9-8 campaign in 2021 caused owner Jim Irsay to sour on Wentz after one season. The Colts did talk Washington into giving up two third-rounders and a swapped second-rounder for Wentz in 2022. But they sure could have used the picks that netted the Eagles DeVonta Smith, A.J. Brown and Jalen Carter.

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    7. Drew Bledsoe to Bills for a first (2002)

    Tom Brady’s meteoric rise made Bledsoe, the No. 1 pick in 1993, expendable in the 2001 offseason. In a display of hubris, Bill Belichick traded Bledsoe within the division, and the Bills eventually found out why. Bledsoe went 8-8, 6-10 and 9-7 as their starter while throwing 55 touchdowns and 43 interceptions, with no playoff appearances.

    6. Rob Johnson to Bills for a first and fourth (1998)

    The Bills’ decision to trade for Bledsoe was an attempt to atone for a previous transgression — the decision to send a first- and fourth-round pick to Jacksonville for Johnson, a 1995 fourth-round pick who went 1-0 as a starter for the Jaguars while appearing in just eight games. Johnson was named the starting quarterback for Buffalo after signing a five-year, $25 million contract, but he went just 9-17 in four seasons.

    5. Brett Favre to Packers for a first (1992)

    Unlike the previous deals cited here, in which teams gambled foolishly and paid dearly for bad trades, this is an example of a team not understanding the talent it had in hand. The Falcons drafted Favre in the 1991 second round, much to the dismay of then-head coach Jerry Glanville. Favre’s first NFL pass went for a pick six and he attempted only three other passes the rest of his rookie season. The Falcons then shipped the future Hall of Famer to Green Bay for the 17th pick of the 1992 draft, and the rest is history.


    Rick Mirer was a Notre Dame star but NFL bust at quarterback. (Scott Halleran/Allsport)

    4. Rick Mirer to Bears for a first (1997)

    The second pick of the 1993 draft, Mirer sorely disappointed in Seattle, going 20-31 while throwing 41 touchdowns and 56 interceptions in four seasons. For some reason, Chicago thought the former Notre Dame star was worthy of a first-round pick in 1997. But Mirer went 0-3 as a starter after throwing zero touchdowns and six interceptions. The Bears granted his request for a release the following offseason.

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    3. Chris Chandler to Buccaneers for a first (1990)

    The Buccaneers made the regrettable decision to essentially give Steve Young to the 49ers in 1987 and drafted his replacement, Vinny Testaverde, first overall. But after just two seasons, the Bucs sent the second pick to Indianapolis for Chandler, who had gone 10-6 in two seasons with the Colts. Chandler wound up going 0-6 in two seasons with the Buccaneers.

    2. Jeff George to Falcons for two firsts and a third (1994)

    Drafted No. 1 by Indianapolis in 1990, George boasted a big arm but posted a 14-35 record while throwing 41 touchdowns and 46 interceptions in four seasons. Convinced a bad Colts roster was to blame, the Falcons shipped a boatload of picks to Indianapolis in 1994, two years after trading Favre. George did help Atlanta end a four-year playoff drought in 1995. But he clashed with head coach June Jones and went 16-19 with 50 touchdowns and 32 interceptions before signing with Oakland following the 1996 season.

    1. Russell Wilson to Denver for two firsts, two seconds, a fifth and three players (including QB Drew Lock) (2022)

    Believing they had a Super Bowl-caliber roster that lacked just a quarterback, the Broncos mortgaged the future with draft picks, players and obscene cap space to get Wilson, a nine-time Pro Bowl selection with a Lombardi Trophy to his name. Then-head coach Nathaniel Hackett — Aaron Rodgers’ former offensive coordinator in Green Bay — was supposed to help Wilson extend his career.

    But Wilson’s best days clearly are behind him. In 2022, he completed a career-worst 60.5 percent of his passes and threw just 16 touchdowns and 11 interceptions as the Broncos went 5-12. Hackett was fired after 15 games. Sean Payton landed the Broncos head coaching job in February 2023, and brashly pinned the blame for Wilson and the Broncos’ struggles on the departed Hackett. But midway through the season, Payton had soured on Wilson and he and the Broncos threatened to bench the quarterback if he didn’t agree to rework his contract. Wilson refused and remained the starter until the final two weeks of the season.

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    He did post a better record in 2023 (7-8) and completion percentage (66.4), but it wasn’t until Payton switched to a run-heavy attack to reduce Wilson’s workload that Denver’s offense started to improve. Wilson finished the season with a career-low 3,070 passing yards to go with 26 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Now he’s looking for another fresh start, and the Broncos will try to rebuild without premium draft picks and limited cap space.

    (Top photos of Carson Palmer, Russell Wilson and Carson Wentz: Streeter Lecka, Dustin Bradford and Andy Lyons / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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