
Jones reacts to Barkley hurdle on Madden cover

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Yahoo
5 hours ago
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Cowboys Insider Questions Mike Florio 'Rumor Logic' on Brian Schottenheimer
Cowboys Insider Questions Mike Florio 'Rumor Logic' on Brian Schottenheimer originally appeared on Athlon Sports. FRISCO - Are the Dallas Cowboys going to fire new head coach Brian Schottenheimer after this season? Advertisement Fox Sports 1's Colin Cowherd yells "yes.'' Mike Florio hints 'maybe.'' Cowboys insider Mike Fisher, with 36 years on the beat, says ... "What the heck are we doing here?'' It's Cowherd who got this ball rolling. "Brian Schottenheimer is a one and done," Cowherd proclaimed, adding that he thinks this is his "least surprising prediction.'' "Jerry will know by Thanksgiving he made a huge mistake. Forget the fact that Philadelphia and Washington will probably blow them out in the division twice. 'One and done' happens all the time now. "I think Dallas is going to be humiliated on a lot of Sundays." Advertisement And now to follow up, Florio has placed Schottenheimer on his five-man coaches hot seat for 2025. And while that makes little sense to Fish - Jones has never fired a coach after a single season - our insider sounds befuddled as to Florio's logic. Florio writes, "The key to knowing Schottenheimer's job security is to know whether and to what extent he has guaranteed money beyond 2025. ... Schottenheimer came cheaper. How cheap? So cheap that there would be no buyout if he's fired after one year? "If so, Schottenheimer could need to do enough in 2025 to earn his employment for 2026.'' Counters Fish: "I don't get it. Florio thinks Schottenheimer's contract (however affordable it might be) features no standard buyout guarantees after 2025? He thinks Jerry would keep him if he does a bad job because the coach came cheap? Wouldn't that be a reason to not keep him? Advertisement "This - unless Florio has some secret insight that I'm unaware of - feels like a national media outlet is just starting a nasty (and confusing) rumor about money in order to justify putting the Cowboys coach on a list that we all logically know he doesn't belong on.'' Fish has more on "Schottenheimer will be fired'' reporting below inside the Fish Report ... Related: AFC Team Reportedly 'Eyeing' Micah Parsons Trade With Cowboys Related: Cowboys' George Pickens Offers Laughing Review of 'Beautiful' Steelers Trade Dig in, Cowboys Nation! This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 1, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
New layer to Shemar Stewart, Bengals drama possibly emerges
When it comes to the Shemar Stewart contract standoff with the Cincinnati Bengals, there are layers…to say the least. Layers, like the many reported instances of Stewart and his camp being asked by the Bengals to accept being the first to reset their contractual language when it comes to voidance of guarantees. Advertisement As it turns out, there's another layer: The possible reason Stewart didn't sign standard injury waivers like other unsigned draft picks around the league and practice with his team is due to Cincinnati's participation agreement. RELATED: Cincinnati Bengals' 53-man roster projection following 2025 offseason Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk compared the Bengals' contractual language about participation agreements to that of one other team and came away unimpressed: 'In Stewart's case, a participation agreement that would have more clearly promised to give him the financial package he would have gotten without the injury would have gotten him on the field for the offseason program — and it would have deferred the thornier issue of working out final contract language until training camp.' Advertisement Some of the very specific languages comes down to ambiguity and it is an incredibly small sample size. That said, on one hand, it's easy to see why an agent could balk at the language. On the other, it hasn't seemed to be a red flag for other Bengals rookies historically (provided it's not also brand new). Regardless of the reason, Stewart choosing not to participate while attending spring work when many rookies in similar positions did around the league was a risky roll of the dice given the developmental reps needed after entering the NFL perceived as a project. RELATED: Joe Burrow feelings on Trey Hendrickson contract standoff revealed This article originally appeared on Bengals Wire: New layer to Shemar Stewart, Bengals drama possibly emerges


USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Jaguars' Tony Khan weighs in on what Travis Hunter's playing time may look like
The Jaguars' Tony Khan recently discussed Travis Hunter and his potential playing time on offense vs. defense this season. On a recent appearance on 'The Rich Eisen Show,' Jacksonville Jaguars' Chief Football Strategy Officer Tony Khan was asked about Travis Hunter, specifically what his workload on both offense and defense could look like this season. Like GM James Gladstone, Khan said that the game flow is going to be a key factor in determining what Hunter's workload looks like each week. "I think there's going to be a different game flow," Khan told Eisen. "You know very well that different games have different flows. He's going to contribute and play a lot of snaps on both sides of the ball. It's going to be really great for the Jags. I think we have such a great group of young players and a great young core, and now to be able to add a player like Travis Hunter, it's really exciting." Hunter has been learning both the offensive and defensive playbooks and terminologies since he arrived in Jacksonville, but on the practice field during offseason programs, he spent more time at wide receiver, which was the plan from the start. The reason for this, as Gladstone explained recently, is that the Jaguars view cornerback as Hunter's more natural position, so they wanted him to have more reps at wideout early on. The next step for Hunter in his development plan will be routinely operating on both the offensive and defensive sides of the ball within the same practice--something we will see in training camp. Throughout OTAs and minicamp--outside of the final drill during the final minicamp practice--Hunter practiced on only offense or defense, depending on what the specific day called for. "Liam's got a good plan," added Khan, "and he's been pretty open about it, that he believes Travis can get involved as a top player on both sides of the ball."