We’re on to Week 6, and it’s all about the tush push …
• It sure feels to me like we’re past the point where the Brotherly Shove is a football play.
Just watching, it sure appears to have become a point of pride for the Eagles, and, with each time it’s called, a chance to tell everyone else where they can take their talk-show segments and social media arguments over it.
Author: Michael
Check out our fantasy football quarterback rankings for Week 6 of the 2023 NFL season!
The Falcons have traded for Rams wide receiver Van Jefferson, a source told ESPN’s Michael Rothstein.
Justin Jefferson, De’Von Achane and James Conner all suffered multi-week injuries in Week 5. That doesn’t need to derail your fantasy roster thanks to our advice on key pickups.
If you still think of Purdy as the last pick in the 2022 draft or as a guy being carried by his talented teammates, you need to think again. It’s high time for a whole new assessment.
Yes, the 49ers’ roster is a juggernaut. Yes, Kyle Shanahan is a really good coach. But sometimes the best evaluation doesn’t come from one of football’s millions of data points. It comes from people who usually know better.
LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman stands on the first tee during the final round of LIV Golf – Bedminster. | Photo by Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
The Official World Golf Ranking board has denied LIV Golf’s application after it was under review for over a year.
Players competing in LIV Golf events will not receive Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) points in 2024.
The OWGR board has denied LIV Golf’s application to the OWGR, according to Doug Ferguson of the Associated Press.
Andrew Luck still casts a giant shadow over the Indianapolis Colts and anyone such as Anthony Richardson who tries to play the quarterback.
And it may not be fair. And it may not even make sense.
Because the connection of a quarterback who started his career in 2012 and hasn’t played since 2018 shouldn’t matter in 2023.
But it does. It does because people haven’t forgotten Luck and those who have got a reminder he’s still around when he showed up on the sideline of a nationally streamed game wearing the gear of his social media parody civil war Capt. Andrew Luck.
Jim Caple had abibliophobia, the fear of having nothing to read, and kept three books in his computer bag as a remedy, so that no matter where he was in the world, he would never run out of words. Near the end of his remarkable life, cut short this month by dementia and Lou Gehrig’s disease, the sportswriter’s expansive vocabulary had contracted, and he seemed to lean on the same three utterances, repeated often: “Willie Mays,” “Novak Djokovic” and—in heaviest rotation at his house outside Seattle—“Sue Bird.”
But for most of his 61 years, he was never lost for words.
Barry Melrose’s time at ESPN has been put on indefinite pause as he battles Parkinson’s disease.
John Buccigross, a fellow hockey fanatic and ESPN employee, released a video Tuesday afternoon announcing to the world that Melrose “is stepping away from our ESPN family to spend more time with his family” as he battles the disease.
“I’ve worked with Barry at ESPN for over a quarter century. Cold beers and hearty laughs in smokey cigar bars. A razor sharp wit, he was always early & looked like a million bucks. I love him.