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Kelly Clarkson Roasts the NFL’s Elite in Opening Monologue | 2023 NFL Honors – NFL

  1. Kelly Clarkson Roasts the NFL’s Elite in Opening Monologue | 2023 NFL Honors NFL
  2. 2023 NFL Hall of Fame Class to Be Announced, Kelly Clarkson Makes History as First Female Host NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
  3. Kelly Clarkson Masters Sporty Glamour in Velour Adidas x Gucci Dress at NFL Honors Red Carpet 2023 Footwear News
  4. Kelly Clarkson wears dress honoring the Dallas Cowboys during NFL Honors monologue Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  5. Watch The Kelly Clarkson Show – Official Website Highlight: Michael Irvin Previews NFL Honors With Host Kelly Clarkson NBC Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Winners and Losers of the NFL’s Conference Championship Games

Every week this NFL season, we will celebrate the electric plays, investigate the colossal blunders, and explain the inexplicable moments of the most recent slate. Welcome to Winners and Losers. Which one are you?

Winner: MVP Mahomes

Steven Ruiz: The Bengals defense had everything covered. Two defensive backs bracketed Travis Kelce, the cornerbacks had the Chiefs receivers blanketed across the field, and Cincinnati’s pass rush had put a gigantic dent in the pocket. With the game and a trip to the Super Bowl on the line, Cincinnati’s defense had done everything right … it just didn’t matter.

On third-and-4, with 17 seconds left in regulation of a tied AFC title game, Patrick Mahomes, playing on one good ankle, made the play his team desperately needed to make. Under immense pressure from the Bengals, the injured quarterback found an escape route to his right, beat Sam Hubbard to the corner, and picked up just enough yards for a first down before stepping out of bounds. Joseph Ossai’s late push drew a 15-yard penalty and set up the conference-winning field goal for Harrison Butker. And with that, Mahomes reached his third Super Bowl in four years.

It was a typical Mahomes scramble, but not one we necessarily expected to see this weekend after the 27-year-old QB had spent all week rehabbing a high ankle sprain suffered last week against Jacksonville. It’s the kind of injury that usually sidelines a player for at least three weeks, but Mahomes was out there eight days later, throwing the ball all over the field.

And he had to do it without three of his top receivers after JuJu Smith-Schuster, Mecole Hardman, and Kadarius Toney left the game early with various injuries. Kansas City’s WR5, Justin Watson, was ruled out of the game before kickoff. So Mahomes had to go at this Bengals defense that has given him so many problems in the past without most of his receiver corps. But he had Kelce and just enough mobility to make things work when Cincinnati sold out to stop the star tight end. If that meant making second-reaction throws to someone named Marcus Kemp or throwing heat-seeking missiles to Marquez Valdes-Scantling under duress, so be it. Mahomes was going to make the play.

And while it isn’t surprising to see one of the league’s greatest talents perform well on this stage, Mahomes hasn’t always played his best when good opponents have forced him to put on a one-man show. Bengals defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo has been better than most at doing that to Kansas City’s franchise QB, and on Sunday, Anarumo was able to create the same environment that had frustrated Mahomes into the worst half of football we’ve ever seen from him a year ago in the AFC title game. But this year’s version of the soon-to-be two-time MVP is a more mature passer; he didn’t fall into the same traps Anarumo has laid for him in past meetings. Mahomes was more patient while still playing with a sense of urgency. He didn’t desperately hunt for big plays but took chances downfield when called for. And he mostly avoided risky plays—save for an unforced fumble where Mahomes let the ball slip out of his hand on a run-pass option throw.

Mahomes’s stat line from the box score of this game is forgettable, by Mahomesian standards at least—326 passing yards, two touchdowns—but this will be a game that will add to his lore. A lot of quarterbacks would have collapsed under the immense weight put on his shoulders on Sunday. On a day when the Chiefs needed Mahomes to be the best quarterback on the planet to stand a chance, he answered the call.

Loser: Joseph Ossai

Riley McAtee: The Bengals didn’t lose the AFC championship game because of defensive end Joseph Ossai. There are plenty of other places to point the finger: The team’s relatively anemic passing offense, Joe Burrow’s two interceptions, a number of other untimely penalties (some of which were legit, like the intentional grounding on Burrow, while others were quite questionable), and an inability to truly take advantage of a hobbled Patrick Mahomes. But boy, Ossai is going to remember this play for a long time:

Ossai was flagged for a late hit on Mahomes, putting Kansas City well within Harrison Butker’s field goal range in the final minute of regulation. On the next play, Butker knocked through the go-ahead, 45-yard kick, and after a kickoff drained the final three seconds off the game clock, the Chiefs advanced to the Super Bowl.

In the celebration that followed, CBS couldn’t keep their cameras off of Ossai, who was sobbing, head in hands, on the bench for minutes after the game. This must be in the running for the worst moment of Ossai’s life, because not only did his penalty effectively end Cincinnati’s chances of returning to the Super Bowl, but he also appeared to suffer an injury on the play, immediately grabbing his knee as he collapsed on the sideline.

Ossai, whom the Bengals drafted in the third round in 2021, missed his entire rookie season because of a left knee injury. After this play, he was holding his right knee, so he at least didn’t reinjure the same knee, but that is little consolation for Ossai while we await information on how badly he injured himself on this play. In one boneheaded move, Ossai cost his team their remaining (slim) chance at a Lombardi Trophy and hurt himself in the process. It’s a lowlight for the ages.

Winner: Nick Sirianni

Ben Solak: Making it to the Super Bowl in your second season as a head coach is not easy—even if the guy before you did the exact same thing. But that’s what Nick Sirianni did: took over a 4-11-1 Eagles team transitioning off of a presumed franchise quarterback in Carson Wentz and experimenting with a young, developmental QB in Jalen Hurts.

And look at how well Sirianni has steered this ship. The Eagles have added tons of new players via free agency, the draft, and trades—A.J. Brown, James Bradberry, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, DeVonta Smith, Ndamukong Suh, Linval Joseph—and each has been integrated into the team more seamlessly than the last. The culture of growth, passion, and love championed by both Sirianni and Hurts rings through the entire Eagles locker room. Both of Sirianni’s top assistants, offensive coordinator Shane Steichen and defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, have interviewed for head-coaching jobs this year. Sirianni has this machine humming.

But perhaps most impressive about Sirianni is what he does during games: He constantly makes the right calls. The Eagles went for a fourth-and-3 on the 49ers’ 35-yard line on their first drive of the game on Sunday, converting on a deep catch-that-wasn’t-really-a-catch by Smith—but Smith called for a hurry-up play to beat the potential challenge, and the Eagles were ready to execute. After the 49ers tied the game up in the first half, the Eagles went for another fourth down—fourth-and-1 from their own 34!—and converted as part of a long touchdown drive.

The 49ers suffered backbreaking penalties that extended Eagles drives and kicked them out of field goal range; the Eagles didn’t. Kyle Shanahan didn’t use a single timeout all game—the Eagles used one to see if they could sneak a two-point conversion attempt in at the end of the first half. Sirianni is exactly what you want in a modern coach: intelligent on fourth downs and strong situationally, with a great energy for the young stars of this league. There are many reasons why the Eagles found themselves the top seed of the NFC and in the Super Bowl—he’s one of the big ones.

Loser: SkyCam

Danny Heifetz: I’m not typically a conspiracy guy. I roll my eyes when sports fans think there’s any kind of coordinated effort against their team. I usually attribute errors to incompetence, not malice. With that said, I am pretty positive there was a conspiracy with this SkyCam camera in the NFC championship game on Fox.

In the first half, an Eagles punt went just 34 yards and traveled precipitously out of bounds. Eagles players screamed that the ball had hit the SkyCam wire. On video, it does seem like the punt magically changed course in mid-air. But because there was no clear video of it hitting the wire, the referees claimed they couldn’t conclusively call for a redo of the play. It makes sense that Fox and the NFL don’t have any cameras pointing at their cameras. But what about, you know, the view from the camera attached to said wire? Wouldn’t the SkyCam angle show it becoming shaky during the punt? Oddly, Fox did not show the SkyCam angle of this play.

Perhaps everyone ran out of time. Perhaps there was nothing to see. Or perhaps Fox didn’t want to highlight that their wire messed up the game!

It wasn’t the first wire-related mystery of the season. Back in October, Patriots’ wire truthers swore that a ball thrown by Mac Jones hit SkyCam during a Monday Night Football game, though ESPN denied it. And during Jets-Bills in Week 9, the SkyCam fell down completely, delaying the game for 12 minutes so officials could ensure no one was endangered by the downed wire.

On Sunday, the SkyCam may have affected an actual play—when Brett Kern’s kick careened out of bounds, it set the 49ers up with good field position when the game was still close. That isn’t the end of the world—mistakes happen. And luckily for both the officiating crews and Fox, the game was a blowout, so the play didn’t matter.

But we’ve got three questionable SkyCam incidents this year, and we’re going the wrong direction on transparency. It’s a fertile ground for conspiracy theorists. But the most absurd incident in the NFC title game came when the first-down chains broke and needed to be replaced for the second week in a row at Lincoln Financial Field. The chains have broken two weeks in a row at a stadium nicknamed “The Linc.” My inclination here is for conspiracy, but then I remembered the Eagles are a smart enough organization to make it to the Super Bowl, and the NFL makes $17 billion a year in revenue, but couldn’t get first-down chains replaced with a week’s notice for one of their three most important games of the season. So on second thought, maybe we should stick with incompetence over conspiracy.

Loser: The Empire State Building

Nora Princiotti: That’s right, the Empire State Building. It takes quite a bit for a 1930s Art Deco landmark to take one of the bigger Ls of championship weekend, but that’s what happened when the 102-story building lit itself up in midnight green and white after the Eagles’ NFC championship game victory.

The Philadelphia Eagles. The same Philadelphia Eagles that just last weekend knocked their division-rival Giants out of the playoffs. The New York Giants. New York being, you know, where the Empire State Building is. Not since the Trojan War has a construction project been so disloyal. What, did you lose a bet to the Liberty Bell? The Empire State Building probably eats pizza with a fork and knife. Have some self-respect.

To make matters worse, green and white are Jets colors, though admittedly that probably means the ESB has had them on ice for quite some time. The move went over badly with quite a few New Yorkers, including former Jets center Nick Mangold and the back page designers at the New York Daily News:

The Empire State Building tried to claim (and yes, I know the Empire State Building is a building but I’d rather personify a treasonous skyscraper than vilify whatever intern was at the control desk on Sunday evening) that it plans these things in advance, would have lit up in the colors of any victor and always has. It tried to cover its tracks by later glowing red and gold after Kansas City won the AFC championship game.

But that’s too little, too late. The Q Train has a planned schedule too, and it certainly doesn’t feel any overwhelming need to abide by it. What’s next, Lady Liberty holding a cheesesteak with whiz? Shreve, Lamb, and Harmon are spinning in their graves right now. The Chrysler building would never pull this kind of stunt.

This is what happens when you elect a mayor from New Jersey—iconic architecture starts simping after division rivals from Acela corridor cities with lesser bagel water. Pizza Rat was the last great New Yorker.

Winner: Chiefs Closer Chris Jones

Gayle: Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones was simply unblockable on Sunday. It was like he took a baseball bat to every important Bengals play, and Cincinnati, down three starting offensive linemen, could do nothing to stop him. No amount of double teams on the interior or extra attention from running backs and tight ends on the edge could keep him from getting into the backfield.

Jones, announced last week as a finalist for the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year award, literally threw two Bengals offensive linemen en route to the quarterback on a play before the end of the half that forced Cincinnati to kick a field goal. Both of his sacks came on third downs, including one with less than a minute to play in the game that gave Mahomes the ball back with just enough time to help the Chiefs win the game in regulation. All of the superlatives we use for Mahomes weekly should be poured on Jones as well. He was the best defensive tackle in the NFL this season and still managed to elevate his game in the AFC championship, as he made sure no one will ever call it Burrowhead Stadium again.

Loser: Officiating

Lindsay Jones: It’s exhausting to complain about officiating. It’s also exhausting to watch NFL games for 20 straight weeks and constantly find new and maddening reasons to have to complain about officiating. So here we are, wrapping up what should be the best single day of professional football of the year with an airing of officiating grievances—all the things Cincinnati coach Zac Taylor was too polite (or too scared of fines) to say.

The Bengals entered the AFC championship game playing the “no one wants us here” card. They used it as motivation last week against the Bills because the NFL had begun selling tickets to a potential neutral-site AFC championship game before their divisional-round game kicked off.

But the Bengals (and their unhappy fans) will surely lean on that mantra after a handful of head-scratching calls that certainly seemed to go in favor of the top-seeded Chiefs.

There was the bizarre third-and-long play that was blown dead in the fourth quarter, following a clock malfunction after a second-down incompletion—but no one seemed to hear a whistle to stop play, so the referees waved a play off and gave the Chiefs a redo. (That redo resulted in a sack … but that play was wiped off by a holding call on Cincinnati corner Eli Apple.)

And then there was a ticky-tack pass interference call against Bengals corner Mike Hilton which enabled a Chiefs drive to stay alive, and then, an intentional grounding call against Joe Burrow on the Bengals’ final offensive possession. Burrow was swarmed and threw the ball away while under pressure, and the officials determined there wasn’t an eligible receiver nearby.

The final call against the Bengals was the most clear-cut: Patrick Mahomes was out of bounds when Cincinnati’s Joseph Ossai shoved him. But by then, Cincinnati was understandably aggrieved. It’s one thing for a team like the Bengals to create for themselves reasons to believe they’re an underdog; it’s a motivational tactic, one that happens all the time in sports. It’s another when the general NFL-watching public and NFL media starts wondering if there’s something more nefarious going on. But when Pro Football Talk tweets this to its 1.8 million followers, the NFL had better pay attention:

These issues in the AFC title game came after a few blunders in the earlier NFC championship matchup between the Eagles and 49ers, notably when officials missed that Philadelphia WR DeVonta Smith didn’t actually catch the ball to convert a fourth down that set up a first-and-goal and led to the Eagles’ first touchdown.

I won’t be naive to expect a cleanly officiated game in the Super Bowl in two weeks. Officials are human and make mistakes; this game is too fast and too complex for perfection. I just hope we can get better than what we saw out of the officials on Sunday.

Loser: Kyle Shanahan’s QB magic

Austin Gayle: Kyle Shanahan finally ran out of rabbits to pull out of his hat. Already without first- and second-string quarterbacks Trey Lance and Jimmy Garoppolo because of injuries suffered during the regular season, Shanahan watched his two other quarterbacks on the active roster fall to the same fate. Brock Purdy exited Sunday’s NFC title game with an injury to his throwing elbow on a Haason Reddick strip-sack that ended the 49ers’ opening possession. Purdy was replaced by Josh Johnson, who completed just 7 of 13 passes for 74 yards and lost a fumble before leaving the game with a concussion on the team’s first possession of the second half. Trailing 21-7 and without a third quarterback available, Purdy was forced back into the game but was clearly unable to throw the ball downfield. He threw just two passes for a combined -3 air yards upon returning, and the 49ers offense went into a one-dimensional shell. Even running back Christian McCaffrey tried to attempt a pass to jump-start the offense, to no avail.

The 49ers’ run to the NFC championship game might have been improbable, given their quarterback adversity this season, but it was still only possible because of Shanahan’s ability to orchestrate an efficient offense with even Mr. Irrelevant at quarterback. However, without Purdy, who easily outperformed his low draft status, or even a fourth-stringer like Johnson fully healthy, Shanahan ran out of options. The result was the lowest single-game EPA per pass average for the 49ers’ offense all season and another unfortunate exit for Shanahan’s 49ers deep in the postseason.

It’s unclear what more Shanahan and general manager John Lynch could have done, beyond conjuring a time machine to add another quarterback to the roster and have him active for the game, or rushing Garoppolo’s foot rehab so he could have dressed for this game as a third QB option. It will be interesting to see if the 49ers’ quarterback issues in this massive game make the NFL and NFL Players Association interested in revisiting the emergency-quarterback rule and allow teams to designate a third QB on game days who wouldn’t count toward the 48-player active roster. It wouldn’t have helped the Niners on Sunday: They had just Purdy and Johnson on their 53-man, and that’s it, and ultimately those injuries were too much to overcome, even for a schemer like Shanahan.



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Jaguars’ win after trailing 27-0 was NFL’s fifth-biggest comeback

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The NFL’s fifth-biggest comeback ever took place on Saturday night in Jacksonville, when the Jaguars fell behind 27-0 in the first half only to win 31-30 on a field goal as time expired.

Two of the NFL’s five biggest comebacks have happened in the last month: The biggest comeback in NFL history took place on December 17, when the Colts jumped out to a 33-0 lead over the Vikings at halftime, only to have the Vikings win 39-36 in overtime.

Prior to that Vikings-Colts comeback, the biggest comeback in NFL history was 32 points, when the Houston Oilers took a 35-3 win over the Bills in a playoff game on January 3, 1993, but the Bills came back to win 41-38 in overtime.

The NFL has also seen two 28-point comebacks: In a playoff game on January 4, 2014, the Colts fell behind the Chiefs 38-10 but the Colts came back and won 45-44. And in a regular-season game on December 7, 1980, Archie Manning and the Saints jumped out to a 35-7 halftime lead, but Joe Montana and the 49ers rallied to win 38-35.

Now the Jaguars’ comeback takes its place alongside those other games among the great comebacks in NFL history.

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Report: Indianapolis turns down NFL’s request to host AFC Championship Game if needed

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NFL owners on Friday approved a resolution that could result in the AFC Championship Game being played at a neutral site later this month. If any one of three scenarios happens, then NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell will choose the site of the game.

If it comes to that, the game won’t be played in Indianapolis.

The Indianapolis Business Journal reports that the city declined the NFL’s request to host the AFC Championship Game. It is not known whether Indianapolis was the NFL’s first choice or one of several possibilities.

Indianapolis has scheduling conflicts with the Indy convention center booked. A national volleyball tournament expected to draw as many as 30,000 visitors to town will take place at Lucas Oil Stadium. The city has peak hotel room occupancy exceeding 7,000 rooms that weekend.

Earlier this week, the league asked Colts executives about hosting the game on either Jan. 28 or Jan. 29, per the report, but Indianapolis quickly answered Lucas Oil Stadium is unavailable.

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Bengals coach Zac Taylor, RB Joe Mixon push back on the NFL’s postseason seeding solution

The fallout from Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin’s near-fatal medical emergency has had a major and unprecedented impact on the top of the AFC. With Thursday night’s announcement that the Bills’ Week 17 game against the Cincinnati Bengals would not be resumed, a resolution affecting AFC playoff seeding and home-field advantages was subsequently unveiled and passed on Friday.

As part of the arrangement, the Bengals will be the AFC North champions by virtue of their superior winning percentage, even though they will have played one less game than the Baltimore Ravens. However, should the Ravens beat the Bengals in their Week 18 matchup to give both teams 11 wins, and if the two teams meet again on Wild Card Weekend, the site of their playoff game will be determined by a coin toss supervised by Roger Goodell.

For the Bengals, the implication is that even with a division title in hand, there is a chance that they will be denied home-field advantage and have to travel to Baltimore to start the playoffs — a scenario that the club and its members did not hesitate to share their problems with.

In a Twitter post, Bengals running back Joe Mixon called out the NFL for not adhering to its own rulebook, specifically citing the “Competitive Policy for Cancelled Games” section of the league’s 2022 policy manual.

Mixon was far from alone in his grievances. According to ESPN, Bengals executive vice president Katie Blackburn — who is on the NFL’s competition committee — urged the committee to vote against the proposal on the basis of the timing of a move away from the standard of winning percentages outlined for the scenario the AFC now faces.

“The proper process for making rule change (sic) is in the off-season,” Blackburn wrote. “It is not appropriate to put teams in a position to vote for something that may introduce bias, favor one team over another or impact their own situation when the vote takes place immediately before the playoffs.”

Meanwhile, while Bengals head coach Zac Taylor stressed that the Bengals can control their own destiny and host a playoff game by winning this weekend, he likewise fumed at how the NFL’s resolution was reached and how it affected his team.

“As far as I’m concerned, we just want the rules to be followed and when a game is cancelled that you just turn to winning percentage to clarify everything so we don’t have to make up the rules,” Taylor said. “There’s several instances this season where the club is fined or people in our building are fined and we are being told to follow the rules. It’s black and white in the rulebook. 

“So now, when we point out the rules and you are told we are going to change that, I don’t want to hear about fair and equitable when that is the case … Opportunities lost for us that we had a chance to control that now we don’t, fine. But it seems like there are positives for a lot of teams and just negatives for us.”

In a statement by Goodell, the commissioner acknowledged that “there is no perfect solution,” emphasizing how their driving principles had been to limit disruption across the league and minimize competitive inequities.

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Cardinals’ David Blough to be NFL’s 64th starting QB in 2022

TEMPE, Ariz. — In a late-week twist, Arizona Cardinals quarterback David Blough will start on Sunday against the Atlanta Falcons in place of Colt McCoy, coach Kliff Kingsbury said Friday.

The decision to sit McCoy was done out of an “abundance of caution” after McCoy experienced additional concussion symptoms following Thursday’s practice.

Blough and the Las Vegas Raiders’ Jarrett Stidham will become the 63rd and 64th quarterbacks to have started an NFL game this season, tying a non-strike record set in 2007. The only other NFL season with more starting quarterbacks was the 1987 strike year, when there were 87 different starters.

Only 11 of the NFL’s 32 teams have had one starting quarterback this season. On the opposite end of the spectrum, the Cardinals on Sunday will tie the Los Angeles Rams as the teams with the most starting QBs this season with four.

Blough, who was signed Dec. 14, found out Friday morning that he would get the ball in Atlanta over Trace McSorley, who started Sunday night’s loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Kingsbury said it would give him a chance to evaluate Blough before choosing between McSorley and Blough for the season finale against the San Francisco 49ers.

Blough said hearing that he was going to start was “maybe shocking.” He will be making his first start since 2019, when he went 0-5 with the Detroit Lions, and he hasn’t thrown a pass in a game since 2020.

“You never know how many opportunities you get in this league, and to be able to be standing here after getting here a few weeks ago, I’m excited to go cut it loose and give these guys everything I got,” Blough said.

When asked how McSorley took the news, Kingsbury said, “He’s a competitor.”

Blough said both co-pass-game coordinator and quarterbacks coach Cam Turner and Kingsbury have been working with him to teach him the offense and he feels “comfortable” going into Sunday’s game.

“He’s done a nice job picking up this week,” Kingsbury said. “So, we’ll make sure we tailor the script to stuff he feels good about and, um, let him go try to play fast and execute at a high level.”

Blough, who is from Carrollton, Texas, said he grew up watching Texas Tech run the Air Raid offense but hasn’t had a chance to play in it.

“As a backup in this league, you have to prepare yourself as if you’re gonna play and then you go and do your job,” Blough said. “Every stop along the way, I think somewhat of an opportunity like this has come along and you gotta prove that you’re ready and can handle these situations.”

Blough, however, might be without one of the Cardinals’ top targets on Sunday. Wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins left practice before the open portion was over with what Kingsbury called a “little bit of a knee issue.”

Arizona is expected to make a decision Saturday on whether Hopkins will play against the Falcons.

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On Christmas, the NFL’s average audience was five times larger than the NBA’s

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The NFL vs. NBA on XMA(s) was a TKO.

In the biggest test yet of pro football’s muscle on December 25, the league for the first time ever put three games up against a five-game, all-day slate of NBA action. The audience gravitated to the game played with the oblong ball.

The widely-circulated numbers paint a very stark picture.

Packers-Dolphins: 25.92 million viewers. (This was the only game of the day between a pair of playoff contenders.)

Broncos-Rams: 22.57 million viewers. (Both teams had been eliminated from the postseason, with the Rams winning 51-14.)

Buccaneers-Cardinals: 17.15 million viewers. (The Cardinals were starting a third-string quarterback in a game between two teams under .500.)

76ers-Knicks: 4.04 million viewers.

Lakers-Mavericks: 4.33 million viewers.

Bucks-Celtics: 6.03 million viewers.

Grizzlies-Warriors: 4.70 million viewers.

Suns-Nuggets: 2.49 million viewers.

That’s an average viewership of 21.88 million for the NFL, and 4.318 million for the NBA. The NFL drew an audience more than five times bigger than the NBA’s.

And remember — the NBA games weren’t televised only on ESPN. ABC simulcast each and every one of them, in an obvious effort to boost the ratings.

What does this mean for the NFL and the Nielsen ratings of Christmas future? Look for the NFL to constantly find a way to fill the day, regardless of the day of the week on which it lands.

In 2023, it will be easy. Play a full slate of games on Sunday, December 24, and play three on Monday, December 25.

In 2024, it gets a little more complicated. Thanks to the leap year, Christmas nudges to Wednesday. How will the NFL manage the schedule to put games on a Wednesday? The best (and perhaps only) option would be to give the six Christmas teams the prior Sunday off, giving them a very late bye week — but giving them basically two half-byes, with a 10-day break and then an 11-day break.

In 2025, Christmas lands on Thursday, just like Thanksgiving. In 2026, Friday. In 2027, Saturday. In 2028, Monday.

Given the performance of the NFL with the captive audience of Christmas, look for the NFL to find a way to keep stealing Christmas away from the NBA.

And imagine how big the NFL’s numbers will be if/when the games are more entertaining than this year’s trio was.

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NFL’s chief medical officer says Tua Tagovailoa showed ‘nothing that would have triggered’ concussion protocol

Tua Tagovailoa’s visit to the concussion protocol drew tons of controversy – and it seems like history is repeating itself.

The Miami Dolphins quarterback is in concussion protocol for the second time this season after Sunday’s game against the Green Bay Packers – however, the league is saying he showed no signs of such an injury during the game.

Tagovailoa reported symptoms the day after the game, but the league’s chief medical officer, Dr. Allen Sills, said Tuesday in an interview with NFL Network that he showed nothing “that would have triggered the protocol” during the game.

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Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa looks to the sidelines during the first half of an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Cincinnati. Tagovailoa suffered a second frightening injury in five days when he was carted off the field Thursday.
(AP Photo/Jeff Dean)

“What our spotters and our unaffiliated neuro doctors are looking for is any blow that transmits force to the head or neck area, followed by that injury behavior,” Sills explained. “And so, there are many blows to the head that occur during a game. We are always looking for the blow plus the injury behavior and obviously if we see any injury behavior, then there’s a call down made to evaluate that player. Also, if a player identifies any symptoms or a teammate, coach, official, anyone else identifies symptoms, that also initiates a protocol. So many people can initiate the protocol and in this game on Sunday, none of those factors were present. There were no visible signs present, even though there was a blow to the head and the player did not report any symptoms, despite being in contact with the medical staff throughout the game. So, there was nothing that would have triggered the protocol in the moment.”

Tua Tagovailoa #1 of the Miami Dolphins takes the field prior to a game against the Green Bay Packers at Hard Rock Stadium on December 25, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Florida.
(Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

AARON RODGERS THINKS DOLPHINS SHOULD CONSIDER SHUTTING TUA TAGOVAILOA DOWN FOR REST OF SEASON

It’s unknown when exactly Tagovailoa suffered the concussion, but it’s widely regarded he suffered it after he shoveled a pass to tight end Durham Smythe and was tackled from behind in the second quarter, resulting in his head smacking the grass at Hard Rock Stadium on Christmas Day. 

Tagovailoa remained in the game but it wasn’t pretty, as he threw three straight interceptions on Miami’s final three drives while the Packers scored 16 unanswered points to win 26-20 on the road to keep their playoff hopes alive.

That tackle was eerily similar to the hit he took in Week 3, where he was wobbly post-hit but played just three days later, then suffered a concussion that sent him to the hospital and forced the NFL to make changes to its protocol.

The hit to the head was so bad that Tagovailoa’s hands curled up on the field. Many speculated that he should’ve been in concussion protocol after that hit against the Bills. 

Instead, he practiced like normal leading up to the early game of the week.

Tua Tagovailoa #1 of the Miami Dolphins looks to pass against the Detroit Lions during the first quarter at Ford Field on October 30, 2022, in Detroit, Michigan.
(Rey Del Rio/Getty Images)

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Tagovailoa finished Sunday’s loss to the Packers 16 of 25 for 310 yards, one touchdown and three interceptions. He surpassed 200 yards in the first half alone after some long completions, including an 84-yard touchdown catch-and-run to Jaylen Waddle.

The 8-7 Dolphins currently sit as the seventh seed in the AFC playoff picture, but they have lost each of their last four games.

Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

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NFL’s Tennessee Titans delay game one hour as state deals with rolling power outages



CNN
 — 

The NFL’s Tennessee Titans delayed its scheduled noon CT game by an hour due to rolling blackouts in the region, which have since ended, stemming from the winter storm and brutal cold.

“Due to the extreme weather and power outages affecting our region, kickoff for today’s game has been postponed one hour to 1 p.m. CT,” the Titans said in a statement.

“This decision was made in partnership with the NFL, Office of Emergency Management, Nashville Electric Service and the Mayor’s Office in an abundance of caution to ensure that the game would not negatively impact our community in any way. We are exploring every possibility to minimize non-essential power around the stadium.”

The Titans (7-7), losers of four straight games, began their game against the Houston Texans (1-12-1) at Nissan Stadium in Nashville at 1 p.m. CT. The temperature was 22 degrees at kickoff, making it the coldest game in Nissan Stadium history, according to the CBS broadcast.

The Tennessee Valley Authority, the federally owned electric utility company that powers seven states in the region, had directed local power companies to reduce their power load for periods on Friday and Saturday due to weather-related record-high demand and power generation issues.

Chief Operating Officer Don Moul said the agency “lost some generation” due to the extreme cold and high winds, and the authority urged residents to conserve power. Still, the TVA said Saturday it supplied more power in the past 24 hours than at any other time in its history.

The authority ended the rolling blackouts midday Saturday after temperatures rose slightly and the power system’s conditions improved, the TVA said.

“We recognize that these planned temporary disruptions are a challenge, but it was needed to maintain grid stability for 10 million people across seven states,” the authority said. “Thank you for doing your part, conserving energy, and helping us manage this extreme weather event.”

On Saturday morning, local power companies said that they were directed to interrupt power for short spurts. CDE Lightband, a power company out of Clarksville, Tennessee, said the TVA told it to interrupt power in 15-minute intervals.

Similarly, the Nashville Electric Service told customers Saturday morning to expect “rotating, intermittent power outages” in about 10-minute increments every one-and-a-half to two hours.

Amid the blackouts, Nashville Mayor John Cooper had urged the Titans to postpone their game, saying that “all non-essential businesses should reduce power usage.” He issued a follow-up tweet saying he appreciated the decision to delay the game an hour.

In general, prolonged cold snaps can overwhelm the power grid by simultaneously knocking out power supply and causing a sharp increase in demand as residents turn up the heat. For example, in Texas in February 2021, a winter storm and lengthy cold period caused mass outages in areas served by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, leaving millions of residents in the cold and dark for nearly a week.

The TVA informed residents on Friday there would be rolling blackouts due to the winter storm, though that directive was later rescinded.

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland told CNN on Friday hospitals and medical offices were exempt. The TVA did not anticipate the extent of the situation prior to the storm, he said.

“This is a real struggle. This has never happened in my lifetime, this hasn’t happened in Memphis in at least 50 years,” Strickland said Friday.

On Saturday morning, he said the rolling blackouts across Memphis impacted more than 50,000 people for about 30 to 60 minutes at a time, likely two to three times per day.

“TVA has always prided itself on reliability. This is the first time TVA has required rolling blackouts,” Strickland told CNN. “It’s going to take a deeper dive into the reasons this happened.”

Strickland said that temperatures are not expected to rise above 32 degrees Fahrenheit for at least the next two days.

The outages and rolling blackouts have affected much of the US, particularly the Southeast.

As of 11 a.m. ET Saturday, Tennessee has about 250,000 customers without power, and North Carolina has over 380,000 customers without power, according to the website PowerOutage.US. In Davidson County, Tennessee, which includes Nashville, more than 60% of customers were without power, the site says.

Duke Energy, the electric power company headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Saturday morning announced “emergency outages” as extremely cold temperature drive unusually high energy demand across the Carolinas.

“We have begun short, temporary power outages. These emergency outages are necessary to protect the energy grid against longer, more widespread outages. We appreciate your patience,” the energy provider said in a tweet.



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Bill Belichick is figurehead in some of the NFL’s most famous moments from Raiders debacle to Tom Brady’s rise

Bill Belichick was left with only a few words to describe the New England Patriots’ loss to the Las Vegas Raiders on Sunday as Chandler Jones intercepted a terrible lateral toss and ran it back for a game-winning touchdown.

The play shocked the NFL world and left fans dumbfounded as they were left to wonder what Jakobi Meyers was doing and why Mac Jones just didn’t throw a Hail Mary in a tie game that everyone thought was going to overtime anyway. Instead, the Raiders pulled off a miraculous comeback victory.

But regardless of whether it’s on the positive or negative side, Belichick has had a knack for always being caught up in some of the most historic moments in football history. It could be the Patriots losing the way they did against the Raiders or guiding Tom Brady to six Super Bowl championships.

Over the last nearly three decades, Belichick has been a figurehead in some of those top moments. Here are some of them that came before Sunday night’s debacle.

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2022: Tom Brady steps away

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady warms up before an NFL preseason football game against the Carolina Panthers, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2019, in Foxborough, Mass.
(AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

The seven-time Super Bowl champion announced his departure from the Patriots after 20 seasons in March 2020, and in February 2022, he decided to step away from football. His initial announcement, which didn’t mention the word retirement, thanked the fans, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and his camp for the years of dedication. He would later write “Love you all” after a message from owner Robert Kraft. 

Brady wouldn’t be away from football for long as he would announce his return in March 2022.

2019: The last Super Bowl

Head coach Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots celebrates his 13-3 win over Los Angeles Rams during Super Bowl LIII against Los Angeles Rams at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on February 03, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. 
(Al Bello/Getty Images)

Brady and Belichick didn’t lose in the Super Bowl often together. Their three Super Bowl losses came from the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles. Their final win came against the Los Angeles Rams – the organization they beat to help launch their dynasty.

The Patriots only needed 13 points to get past the Rams. Brady had 262 passing yards in the game as he and Belichick secured their sixth title and their second in three years.

2018: Miracle in Miami

Before there was whatever happened in Las Vegas on Sunday night, the Miami Dolphins pulled off one of the most shocking plays in recent memory. 

The Dolphins were down five points with 7 seconds left when then-quarterback Ryan Tannehill threw a pass to Kenny Stills down the middle of the field. Stills would flip the ball to DeVante Parker who then tossed it to Kenyan Drake. The running back then got a good angle and beat Rob Gronkowski to the goal line for the touchdown.

Miami won, 34-33.

2018: Brady’s offensive onslaught

The Eagles may have gotten the best of Belichick and Brady in Super Bowl LII, but it wasn’t for lack of trying. Between a Philly Special and a lot of pressure on the quarterback, Belichick still managed to engineer an offense that saw his quarterback throw for a Super Bowl-record 505 passing yards.

The Eagles won the game, but it wouldn’t be the final time the two legends made an appearance in the Super Bowl.

2018: Patriots QB conundrum

Head coach Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots speaks to Julian Edelman #11 in the first half against the Denver Broncos in the AFC Championship game at Sports Authority Field at Mile High on January 24, 2016 in Denver, Colorado.
(Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Tom Brady was suspended for four games during the 2016 season over the Deflategate scandal during the 2014-15 AFC Championship Game, which led to Jimmy Garoppolo and Jacoby Brissett starting some games and playing fairly decent in Brady’s absence.

ESPN released a bombshell report in 2018 over the internal power struggle between Kraft, Brady and Belichick and whether the organization should move on from the legendary quarterback. Garoppolo would eventually get traded to the San Francisco 49ers, but the story illustrated some of the cracks in the relationship among the three giant pillars of the Patriots organization.

2017: Brady’s comeback

Belichick was on the sideline to guide the Patriots back from a 28-3 deficit against the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI. James White had three touchdowns, including the game-winner in overtime to win the Super Bowl. It was one of the most improbable comebacks that was also sparked by a ridiculous Julian Edelman catch.

Super Bowl LI will forever be remembered, especially if Matt Ryan keeps blowing leads.

2012: The Butt Fumble

New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez #6 fumbles in the first half when the New York Jets played the New England Patriots. Sanchez smacks into lineman Brandon Moore’s rear end and fumbles, leading directly to New England TD, part of 35-point 2nd quarter for the Patriots.
(Robert Sabo/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

Obviously, Belichick wasn’t directly involved with the infamous Mark Sanchez play when the New York Jets took on the New England Patriots on Thanksgiving night in 2012. But he was on the sideline coaching the Patriots in the lopsided affair.

Sanchez scrambled and ran into the butt of offensive lineman Brandon Moore, causing the fumble. Patriots safety Steven Gregory picked up the ball and scored a touchdown. The Jets lost three fumbles that night.

The play will forever go down in history as one of the biggest head-scratchers in NFL history.

MARK SANCHEZ LEADS ‘BUTT PUNT’ JOKES AS DOLPHINS MANAGE TO SURVIVE LATE-GAME DEBACLE

2012: Mario Manningham Super Bowl catch

New York Giants wide receiver Mario Manningham (82) makes a catch defended by New England Patriots free safety Patrick Chung (25) and New England Patriots free safety Sterling Moore (29) as the Patriots take on the Giants at Super Bowl XLVI at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, IN.
(Nancy Lane/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images)

Four years later, the Patriots went 13-3 and found themselves facing the New York Giants in the Super Bowl. Manning again would need to bring some magic to beat the Patriots and did just that.

Mario Manningham had one of the most spectacular catches in the Super Bowl, and adding insult to injury was a Wes Welker drop that would’ve put pressure on New York in the fourth quarter.

The Giants held off the Patriots’ final drive and won the game, 21-7.

2008: David Tyree helmet catch

New York Giants’ wide receiver David Tyree pins the ball to his helmet as he catches a 32-yard pass late in the fourth quarter of Super Bowl XLII against the New England Patriots at the University of Phoenix Stadium.
(Ron Antonelli/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

One Giant loss may not have been without some improbable plays. Eli Manning’s pass with a handful of Patriots defenders on him to David Tyree was one of the more spectacular plays in Super Bowl history. And Belichick was there watching it all.

Tyree managed to bring the ball back down over Rodney Harrison and Manning followed up with the go-ahead touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress.

The Patriots nearly won the game on the following drive. It was the first loss in a Super Bowl for Belichick and for Brady.

2007: Patriots undefeated regular season

There have only been two undefeated regular seasons in NFL history – the 1972 Miami Dolphins and the 2007 Patriots. Belichick’s team had a potent offense behind Brady and Randy Moss and finished the season first in points scored and yards gained. 

The Patriots looked unstoppable until they ran into the New York Giants in the Super Bowl. Though the Dolphins are the only team to finish an entire season without a blemish on their record, the Patriots completed their feat with more teams and more parity in the league as a whole.

They are the last team to accomplish the feat.

2007: Spygate

The Spygate cheating scandal appeared to be a blemish on Belichick’s resume – but that was also about 15 years ago. The Patriots were caught videotaping Jets coaches’ defensive signals from an unauthorized location during a 2007 game.

Belichick received the largest fine ever levied on a coach in history — $500,000. And the team was fined $250,000 as well as getting a draft pick taken away.

2004: Patriots dynasty

Belichick would win three of his six Super Bowl titles within the first five years at the helm. With Brady, an all-time great defense and solid receivers, New England managed to knock off the St. Louis Rams, Carolina Panthers and Philadelphia Eagles to win those titles.

Belichick was on top of the world and already considered to be an NFL coaching legend.

2002: Tuck Rule Game

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady takes a hit from Charles Woodson of the Oakland Raiders on a pass attempt in the last two minutes of the game in their AFC playoff January 19, 2002 in Foxboro, Massachusetts.
(MATT CAMPBELL/AFP via Getty Images)

In the middle of a driving snowstorm in Foxborough, Belichick again would be involved in some major history on his way to his first Super Bowl title.

Brady would be hit hard by Oakland Raiders cornerback Charles Woodson and the ball would be jarred loose and recovered by Raiders linebacker Greg Biekert. However, the rules at the time determined that Brady was trying to tuck the ball back into his body and the play was ruled as an incomplete pass.

New England moved into field goal range and Adam Vinatieri would kick the game-winning field goal to send the Patriots to the AFC Championship Game.

2001: Brady for Bledsoe

Patriots Tom Brady getting some pre-game advice from Drew Bledsoe at the RCA Dome.
(Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

The Patriots were 5-11 in their first season under Belichick. Drew Bledsoe already knew what it took to get to the Super Bowl, having been there during the 1996 season, losing to the Green Bay Packers. But in the 2001 season, he was hurt and sidelined in the second week. Brady would be thrust into the starting role.

Brady and New England went 11-5 and won the Super Bowl over the St. Louis Rams — who were known at the time as the “Greatest Show on Turf.” It was the first of three Super Bowl titles for the Belichick and Brady dynasty from 2001 to 2004. The team wouldn’t win another until the 2014 season.

The decision to stick with Brady altered the trajectory of all parties involved in the NFL as a whole.

2000: Belichick snubs Jets

Head coach Bill Belichick of the New York Jets resigns from the job at a press conference just one day after accepting the position at Hempstead, New York, on January 4, 2000.
( Al Pereira/Getty Images)

Belichick was initially named the interim head coach of the Jets while the team negotiated a way to get Bill Parcells over from the Patriots in 1997. Once the deal was completed, Belichick stepped aside for Parcells and became the team’s assistant head coach and defensive coordinator.

Parcells stepped down after the 1999 season with Belichick already slated to become the next head coach of the Jets. He would be announced as the next Jets head coach in January 2000 but a day after he would resign.

Belichick turned around was named the next head coach of the Patriots and received a ton of control over the roster and his coaching staff.

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1996: Last coach of the old Browns

Head coach Bill Belichick of the Cleveland Browns looks on from the sideline during a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium on November 13, 1995 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
(George Gojkovich/Getty Images)

Belichick served under Parcells with the Giants for several years before he was awarded the position of head coach of the Cleveland Browns. He was the coach of the Browns from 1991-1995, leading them to one playoff appearance at the time.

Then-owner Art Modell moved the team to Baltimore and became the Ravens before the 1996 season. The move sent shock waves across the NFL, drawing so much ire that the Ravens franchise had to leave their past behind in Cleveland and start anew.

Modell fired Belichick in February 1996. Peyton Manning would later detail what Belichick did to try and get back at Modell.

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