The New York Times – Sports:
Aaron Rodgers isn’t the only quarterback who is missing his former wideouts. Just the angriest.
The New York Times – Sports:
Aaron Rodgers isn’t the only quarterback who is missing his former wideouts. Just the angriest.
The New York Times – Sports:
Von Miller leads the Bills against the Rams, Tom Brady and Dak Prescott trade shots, and the Raiders and Chargers pick up where they left off. But do home teams have any edge in Week 1?
The New York Times – Sports:
The Broncos bet big on Russell Wilson, the Packers went all in on defense and Tom Brady endures. But did any N.F.L. team position itself to ascend higher than the Los Angeles Rams this season?
The New York Times – Sports:
The Green Bay Packers are the only N.F.L. team whose fans can buy an ownership stake. Their annual shareholders meeting is part pep rally, part window into the league’s finances.
The New York Times – Sports:
Teams that needed quarterbacks did not reach for them, the receiver market boomed and the N.F.L.’s talent-rich teams thumbed their noses.
The New York Times – Sports:
It was a big night for linemen, receivers, and the state of Georgia, but a very quiet one for quarterbacks. In surprising moves, A.J. Brown was traded to the Eagles and the Jets and Giants drafted prudently.
The New York Times – Sports:
The Jacksonville Jaguars select at No. 1 overall. Here’s a full list of the results as they happen.
The New York Times – Sports:
Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers and Russell Wilson all made decisions that shifted plans around the league and reinforced the value of having a franchise quarterback.
The New York Times – Sports:
The four-time most valuable player had been locked in conflict with the team over his influence in personnel decisions, a drama which amplified scrutiny of Rodgers’s tumultuous season and cast his future into doubt.