Author: rb809rb

  • Chargers fire OC Greg Roman, OL coach Mike Devlin after wild-card exit, playoff struggles

    The Los Angeles Chargers have fired offensive coordinator Greg Roman and offensive line coach Mike Devlin, the team announced Tuesday. The Chargers will be looking to hire their fifth offensive coordinator in the last six years.

    The Chargers’ offense has struggled under Roman in the postseason since he became the team’s offensive coordinator in 2024. The Chargers’ offense was held to three points in their loss to the New England Patriots in the wild-card round of the playoffs.

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    In the Chargers’ playoff games the last two seasons, they scored one touchdown on 22 possessions, with both games ending in wild-card losses. After the Patriots game, head coach Jim Harbaugh was noncommittal about bringing back Roman next season.

    [Get more Chargers news: L.A. team feed]

    “We’re gonna look at that and everything,” Harbaugh told reporters after being asked whether Roman is the right play-caller for the Chargers. Roman was also the offensive coordinator under Harbaugh at Stanford and with the San Francisco 49ers.

    After the wild-card game, Patriots linebacker Robert Spillane indicated that the Chargers might’ve been underprepared.

    “After the game, talking to a few of the guys on the other team, they had no clue what we were doing,” he said. “They came up and said that.”

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    Roman’s postseason struggles go back to his time as the Ravens’ offensive coordinator, where he went 1-3 in the postseason before he resigned from the team in 2023.

    While the Chargers flamed out in the postseason, their offensive plateau started in the regular season. While the 11-6 season looks good on paper, defensive coordinator Jesse Minter deserves a lot of the credit. The Chargers’ defense ranked fifth in yards allowed per game.

    While the defense was flourishing, the offense declined. The Chargers dropped to 22nd in points this season after ranking 11th in Roman’s first season.

    Injuries were also part of the Chargers’ regression on offense. Herbert battled a hand injury late in the season, and the team lost rookie running back Omarion Hampton and offensive linemen Joe Alt and Rashawn Slater for most or all of the year.

  • 2026 Fantasy Football: Early breakout candidates for each NFC East team

    NFL Free agency and the 2026 NFL Draft will completely shake up the fantasy football landscape in the coming months. 

    Before the roster movement begins, Justin Boone is identifying one fantasy-relevant player from every team who’s most likely to break out during the 2026 season. 

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    Early Breakout Candidates

    Early NFC East Breakout Candidates

    Dallas Cowboys – Jaydon Blue, RB

    The Cowboys have stars and capable veterans at every skill position, except for running back. That’s because Javonte Williams is set to be a free agent after signing a one-year deal last offseason.

    Dallas got incredible value from the 25-year-old Williams, including the ninth-most rushing yards (1,201) and the eighth-most rushing touchdowns (11), as well as 35 receptions for 137 yards and another two scores. The end result was the RB12 overall with 14.1 fantasy points per game.

    Stephen Jones has already said bringing back Williams is at the top of his offseason list, but it will take far more than the one-year, $3 million contract he played on in 2025. That leaves the door open for Dallas to take a more cost-effective approach, like it did last season.

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    While Blue didn’t see the field much as a fifth-round rookie, he did finish the season strong in Week 18 by playing 60% of the snaps and leading the backfield with 64 yards and a TD on 16 touches while showcasing his explosive playmaking on multiple occasions versus the Giants.

    “That was a preview of next year,” Blue told team writer Patrik Walker after the game. The rookie also admitted what a learning experience his first season was and how he now understands the importance of proper practice, preparation and consistency.

    Blue is far from a guaranteed breakout candidate in 2026. However, if Williams doesn’t return there will be an opening for Blue to take on a much bigger role during his sophomore campaign.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★☆☆

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    New York Giants – Cam Skattebo, RB

    Skattebo was well on his way to a breakout season as a rookie before suffering a brutal injury that included a tibia fracture, ruptured deltoid ligament and dislocated ankle in October. He’s now facing a 4-6 month recovery timeline, which he’s attacking head on.

    The 23-year-old is already jogging and is expecting to return in time for training camp.

    “I’m going to be back,” he told ESPN’s Jordan Ranaan. “I played seven games in the NFL and I got hurt. There’s a long road ahead, but that is not going to stop me.”

    There’s plenty of reason to be excited about what a healthy Skattebo could do next season. Prior to the injury, he was the RB6 in FPPG over his last six appearances and saw bell-cow usage with 22 touches per game over his final four starts. On the season, the only running back to average more than 22 touches per contest was Christian McCaffrey.

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    While many of the players featured in this series will be depth pieces that could step into more opportunity moving forward, Skattebo is one of the few who seems destined for fantasy stardom.

    As long as he can get back to full health — which I believe he will — Skattebo has a clear path to being a fantasy RB2 with an RB1 ceiling.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★★★

    Philadelphia Eagles – Darius Cooper, WR

    The Eagles are a team that doesn’t have many holes among their skill position talent, but looking ahead, this offense might undergo a lot of change this offseason.

    Given Philadelphia’s inability to recapture its Super Bowl form this year and the ongoing displeasure expressed by A.J. Brown, it seems like a divorce might be coming for the Eagles and their star receiver. Contracts are also ending for Dallas Goedert, Grant Calcaterra and Jahan Dotson.

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    If none of those players return in 2026, the team will obviously make a move to add more pass-catchers to pair with DeVonta Smith, but we could see Cooper move into a more prominent position in the pecking order.

    As an undrafted rookie playing on an established depth chart, Cooper didn’t earn many opportunities until late in the season and finished with just nine receptions for 92 yards on 11 targets.

    However, Cooper made his biggest impact as a blocker, helping break several big runs like this 52-yard TD by Saquon Barkley against the Chargers in Week 14.

    There’s no doubt the coaching staff will take notice of his effort, which should lead to more playing time and possibly more passes thrown his way.

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    Though he’s more of a sleeper than a true breakout candidate, Cooper should be someone you monitor or stash in deeper leagues and dynasty formats.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★☆☆☆

    Washington Commanders – Jacory Croskey-Merritt, RB

    Even though Croskey-Merritt was a seventh-round pick, his rookie season ultimately feels like a disappointment after he failed to break out despite Brian Robinson Jr. being traded before Week 1 and Austin Ekeler suffering a season-ending injury.

    What developed was a three-way committee with Chris Rodriguez Jr. and Jeremy McNichols that limited the fantasy ceiling of each back.

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    It’s worth noting that Rodriguez only topped 70 scrimmage yards twice and never went over 85 yards in a single game. And McNichols was a distant third in terms of touches and production.

    Meanwhile, JCM went over 70 scrimmage yards four times, including twice during the final month. Fantasy managers will remember his contributions well, since he was the RB10 in FPPG during the fantasy playoffs, topping 95 yards on two occasions and scoring four touchdowns over that stretch.

    The Commanders have plenty of things to figure out this offseason, starting with a new offensive coordinator to replace Kliff Kingsbury. Regardless of who takes over play-calling, Croskey-Merritt will have a chance to earn the starting job in 2026 and he’s already given us a glimpse of what he can do with the lead-back role.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★★☆

    Early Breakout Candidates

  • Transfer portal quarterback dominoes fall + how schools are navigating the NIL “cap”

    We are less than a week away from the National Championship game, but just because there are only two teams left playing does not mean there is a lack of news coming from the teams that are already in their offseason. In fact, it is quite the opposite as the transfer portal is in full swing, and it is chaotic, as usual. Players are transferring left and right, and two premiere quarterbacks have come off of the board. Sam Leavitt has committed to LSU and Dylan Raiola has committed to Oregon. Andy Staples, Ross Dellenger and Steven Godfrey discuss both of these quarterbacks. They give their thoughts on what the pairing of Sam Leavitt and Lane Kiffin could be. They also discuss the shift with Dylan Raiola. There has still been no word, at the time of this taping, if Dante Moore is returning to Oregon. If he does, that would mean Raiola would be sitting behind Moore for a year. The guys talk about what impact this could have on Raiola’s future.

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    Then, they look at another quarterback who is potentially off of the board. Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson announced that he is leaving Alabama and entering the NFL draft. However, multiple schools are reportedly offering him lucrative NIL deals to stay in college for another year. Andy, Ross and Godfrey discuss this decision and how finances affect college athletes differently.

    Plus, the guys dive into the topic of navigating the NIL “cap”. Ross explains the impact that multimedia rights partners have in this situation. They then discuss how revenue sharing, multimedia rights and other NIL funds are used to circumvent the $20 million “cap.”

    Get caught up with all of the transfer portal drama with College Football Enquirer.

    Sam Leavitt to LSU, Dylan Raiola to Oregon

Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images

Photo by Steven Branscombe/Getty Images

    Sam Leavitt to LSU, Dylan Raiola to Oregon Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images Photo by Steven Branscombe/Getty Images

    (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images Photo by Steven Branscombe/Getty Images)

    0:00:00 – Transfer quarterbacks

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    2:55 – Sam Leavitt to LSU

    10:40 – How money impacts QB transfers

    15:54 – Dylan Raiola to Oregon

    24:00 – Will Ty Simpson enter the NFL or transfer?

    34:30 – Multimedia rights & navigating the “cap”

    Check out all the episodes of the College Football Enquirer and the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • Fantasy Football Wild-Card Takeaways: With Mike Tomlin stepping down, Steelers need to let it go after losing in playoffs

    The 2025 NFL Playoffs are underway and while the fantasy football season is over, we can still gather intel based off performances in the playoffs for 2026. Yahoo analyst Matt Harmon shares what each team eliminated in the Wild-Card round has to do this offseason to improve.

    [Team takeaways: Chargers | Eagles | Jaguars | Packers | Panthers | Steelers]

    Pittsburgh Steelers – No more half measures; let it go and rebuild

    The Pittsburgh Steelers have become a staple of the first edition post-Wild Card weekend in this “What’s next for the eliminated playoff teams” series I write every year during the playoffs. New year, same story; moderately different details. The Steelers find a way rearrange the deck chairs every offseason, only for their ship to sink in duplicative fashion.

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    Pittsburgh has now been outscored 131-58 over its last four playoff appearances. None of those four teams were any better than 10-7, no worse than 9-7-1 — but all were bounced in the Wild Card round.

    Exactly one year ago, in last year’s version of this column, I listed the Steelers’ primary offseason objective as “stare into the abyss,” a far cry from others’ checklist items, which contained more specific agenda items for improving the team.

    Pittsburgh’s groundhog day destiny in January is much more existential than any other near-annual playoff contender. It’s rather remarkable how little has changed when you revisit last year’s version of this article. Go ahead and swap out a few names, maybe alter some of the offensive metrics, but then tell me it doesn’t completely hold up:

    Just like before, there were moments of slight fun in Aaron Rodgers’ 2025 season with the team. You could find some brief respites during the season where he scratched the itch of nostalgia for millennials in my age bracket who grew up as football fans in the time when Rodgers was at the height of his powers. But the word “brief” is the key term here. Outside of the most diehard Black and Gold homers among mankind, we can all admit that the fate the Steelers suffered on Monday night was sealed long before they signed Rodgers; adding him didn’t change it, and even during those little junctures of fun, we all knew what was coming. And so, here we are.

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    I don’t really feel the need to eulogize Rodgers’ career at the moment, even though this might have been his final game in the NFL. For one, there are too many teams that will be desperate at quarterback — specifically, the Minnesota Vikings have a need, and there was a flirtation last season — while Rodgers is too well-known for dragging things out at this stage. Also, to me, he just can’t possibly be a part of the Steelers’ 2026 plans, no matter how much of a good time both player and franchise reportedly had together in the building during their one-year marriage.

    The more interesting part of ESPN’s broadcast was not their willingness to address the legacy of Rodgers if he retires, but that Troy Aikman and Joe Buck were speculating unprompted about a possible departure for Mike Tomlin, including the possibility that he takes a broadcasting gig this upcoming season. This is not a new or singular idea that Aikman and Buck pulled out of nowhere — in fact, Tomlin himself reportedly stepped down from his position as head coach on Tuesday. The Steelers are now entering the head-coach hunt.

    Let’s just say that this resignation is actually Tomlin pulling the same move Sean Payton did recently — “retire” from coaching, spend a year on TV and return to the game in short order as the belle of the coaching cycle ball, all in a nakedly transparent move to eject himself from a franchise stuck in a cycle of purgatory of which is in large part his creation — don’t allow yourself a second of shock.

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    Even with Tomlin exiting, it doesn’t change what must be done this offseason.

    It’s time to rebuild.

    Frankly, that goes for both sides of the ball. An aging defense that cost Pittsburgh more money than any other team in the NFL in 2025 is in dire need of a refresh. However, specifically on offense, there’s just no way the team can replicate anything close to the Frankenstein mashup of what Arthur Smith’s system blended with the preferences of his hyper-specific, far-past-his-prime veteran quarterback, as has been the case each of the previous two years.

    Pittsburgh has 12 picks in this year’s NFL Draft, including five in the top 100. It might not be the year to take a clear answer at quarterback with any of those selections but it can begin to restock the cupboard of a near-barren pass-catching corps and fortify a real offensive identity along an underrated offensive line. Then, perhaps next year, it can look to add the franchise successor it’s been wandering the wilderness without for years now.

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    That isn’t fun. It probably won’t result in a winning season in 2026 but it’s past time that isn’t the standard for success any longer. It’s enough already; accept the rebuild.

    Los Angeles Chargers – Structural offensive changes

    The Chargers’ offensive line has suffered enough injuries to the point that it’s a barely functioning unit. Justin Herbert didn’t have his best day in the 16-3 playoff loss to the Patriots. All of that can be true and we can still acknowledge that what we saw Sunday night was the latest confirmation that the structure of the offense isn’t good enough for this team to take the next step.

    It’s tough to lose both your starting tackles; most teams don’t just come back from that. However, if you’re one of the elite offensive minds in the NFL, you can at least adjust your approach to work around the loss of Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt. What we’ve seen from Greg Roman and this staff is a complete inability to adjust the unit to address the issues. In fact, on Sunday night, the protection plan up the middle of the line was a bigger problem than the play at tackle. The interior of the line was the trio of Zion Johnson, Bradley Bozeman and Mekhi Becton, the same group to start this season. That group couldn’t pick up a stunt or blitz to save their lives. Bozeman at center, who played under Roman in Baltimore, has been the biggest problem on the line all season and it was obvious that this would happen based on his play for the 2024 Chargers.

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    Personally, I don’t think Roman is an offensive play-designer or play-caller; he just clearly has limitations and when his offenses don’t feature a quality line, it’s over before it starts. That’s a theory that’s only been proven out more and more as this season came to an end for Los Angeles. The fact that this team was still running their top receiver, who is an A-tier separator, in Ladd McConkey on these long-developing intermediate and deep routes down the stretch, tells you all you need to know. Especially when getting the ball out of Herbert’s hands quickly was at a premium.

    I didn’t want to put a ton of effort and energy into theorizing what a coordinator change would look like for this team because I didn’t expect Harbaugh to have any appetite toward making the move to fire Roman. After all, these guys were together for years back at Stanford and San Francisco, Roman has worked for Jim’s brother John with the Ravens, and they even shot a buddy-buddy RV documentary-style video where they could be seen cheers’ing sodas about their reunion and shared offensive vision when Harbaugh hired Roman to be the offensive coordinator of the Chargers. My instinct was that Harbaugh’s long-time loyalty to Roman would win out.

    And yet, the head coach surprised me with this response when questioned about his play-caller’s status after Sunday’s loss.

    I read that quote and thought, “It’s over.” You don’t say that unless you’re at least contemplating a change, and if you’re thinking about it, you’ve already set the future in motion. And I was right. The Chargers reportedly parted ways with Roman on Tuesday.

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    Jim has clearly reached the same conclusion as his brother once did about Roman’s offense: it’s good enough to get you to a certain point and might even be helpful in setting a quarterback on the right path. Herbert was more experienced than Lamar Jackson was when the latter worked under Roman but he also had some bad habits to work through brought on by his previous coaching staff. Credit to Roman, he got Herbert less check-down happy, more willing to push the ball down the field and take off as a scrambler. But just like in Baltimore, the Chargers have reached a stumbling block that Roman can’t navigate them through. Big games and playoff contests just make it obvious.

    I’m not saying that Herbert was perfect in Sunday’s loss, and no blame can be laid at his feet. That’s not what this is about. We’re looking forward, not backward. The reality is that this team is simply too talented both at quarterback and in the skill-position department to be as lifeless as it was late this season. Harbaugh, who makes no reservations about his affinity for Herbert as a quarterback, knows it and is ready to choose that player’s potential over loyalty to a friend.

    Now that the play-caller change is made, there will be even more reason to believe that this is one of the best bounce-back offensive ecosystems to invest in for fantasy football next season.

    Philadelphia Eagles – Scrap the entire offense

    I don’t really root for game outcomes in my line of work. That being said, I’m pretty pleased that as a result of Sunday’s loss, I will never have to talk about the 2025 Eagles offense ever again. My guess is that there are no Eagles fans on Earth who would disagree with that sentiment.

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    I’m also completely convinced that there is no way Philadelphia can run it back from what they offered in 2025 and expect to be taken seriously. This is a unit to completely scrap and start over from a structural and design standpoint.

    Yes, that begins with moving on from Kevin Patullo as the offensive coordinator. It’s been clear all season that the design of this offense wasn’t weaponizing the players and conceptually wasn’t creating any schematic advantages. That doesn’t excuse some players from a lack of execution, either on Sunday or in other moments this season, but you can’t expect your players to be perfect every single snap. You have to make their lives easier at some point and that never once happened for this Eagles offense.

    You’re kidding yourself if you think that’s the cure-all move.

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    This 2025 Eagles offense has been the worst-designed unit in the Nick Sirianni and Jalen Hurts years, but all of the units from 2021 to now have generally lived in the same zip code. They don’t get under center much, their use of motion is minimal and they prefer to attack outside the numbers rather than over the middle of the field. Much of that is because it plays to the strengths and likely preferences of the quarterback. There’s nothing wrong with that but it just limits your menu. When this offense has had play-callers and designers like Shane Steichen and Kellen Moore, who are without question above the 80th percentile of NFL play-callers and designers, they can add enough wrinkles to dress up the operation and weaponize it. When they have had other offensive coordinators below that threshold, you get outcomes like the 2023 and 2025 seasons.

    If this team retains Sirianni and the front office and ownership pick the play-caller again, as they have prior to 2025, there are options available who could construct an offense around Hurts. However, there will also be a handful who just won’t fit. That’s the reality of the world Philly lives in with Hurts entrenched as the starter on a mega-deal and it can all work out with an All-Star cast around the quarterback.

    The deeper question this team has to ask itself is how long that final variable lasts. Saquon Barkley and A.J. Brown both turn 29 this offseason. Forget about Brown’s current lack of content with the team, coaching staff, whatever it is; neither player put the same elite film of season’s past out in 2025, even when you consider factors outside of their control that hampered their production. Right tackle Lane Johnson’s absence was felt in the back-half of the season and on Sunday but he’ll turn 36 years old in May and has been fighting through injuries more as the years go on. It is past time to consider a succession plan for one of the best right tackles in the history of the sport and that’s even more pressing after a disappointing showing from the interior offensive line this season. Dallas Goedert just turned 31 and will be a free agent this offseason after a strong campaign that came on the heels of offseason trade rumors.

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    The coming change at offensive coordinator will get most of the attention but if you pop open the hood of this car and you suddenly see there are more matters that need your attention beyond a paint job.

    Jacksonville Jaguars – Figure out ‘your guys’

    The Jaguars won’t be interested in moral victories or pats on the back but nevertheless, they have to feel as if the back-half of the season and their performance in a wild-card loss validated their status as a team on the right track. Trevor Lawrence got rolling, skill-position players started popping and it was clear Liam Coen was pushing the right buttons as the play-caller and designer. This is an ecosystem to bet on, but the question now is: Who the primary skill-position options will be for this team in 2026?

    In the backfield, it’s a rather simple equation. Travis Etienne Jr. ended up being the clear right answer for this team at running back. Bhayshul Tuten flashed some explosive ability but never pushed Etienne for the starting gig. The veteran back finished the year with 311 touches between the regular and postseason. In Sunday’s loss, he took 20% of his carries for 10-plus yards; you can make a real argument they should have gotten him more work.

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    Etienne is a free agent after the team declined his fifth-year option. It would be hard to imagine that they just want to let him walk after a strong season. Perhaps they view his production as replaceable thanks to a well-designed ground game and want to see more of Tuten in Year 2. That’s a big variable this offseason.

    The passing game, specifically the wide receiver room, is a tougher knot to untangle.

    The Jaguars found a steadying presence in Jakobi Meyers at the NFL trade deadline and gave him a contract extension, while holdover Parker Washington became a huge hit as the team’s leading receiver from the slot. Washington isn’t some flash in the pan; this guy is a legitimate talent I’ve had my eye on for years, since before he was drafted in 2023.

    With those two guys finishing the year as the top targets, the temptation will be to just pencil those guys right back into those roles in 2026. The conventional wisdom will be that Travis Hunter plays more cornerback than wide receiver in Year 2 once he’s healthy, and/or Brian Thomas Jr. will be traded to a team more ready to maximize him outside of the low-volume X-receiver role he was relegated to down the stretch in Jacksonville. Perhaps any or all of that is exactly what happens. However, teams absolutely invite regression when they just sit on their hands and don’t build on strengths in the early goings of new regimes.

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    The 2025 Falcons are a good cautionary tale. They got an excellent value season out of Darnell Mooney and Drake London broke through in 2024. They added nothing to that room, and the offense suffered as London got hurt and Mooney had a bad season. Players aren’t metronomes; what has been is not always what will be.

    Meyers is a good player but is more of a No. 2 receiver and turns 29 this year. Washington can absolutely start, as we’ve seen this year but relying on just those two to be exactly what they were this past season would not be wise. Getting more out of either, or both of Thomas and Hunter in 2026, can be a key in staving off similar regression.

    The Jaguars receiver room will be a major offseason storyline to track. I don’t have the answers as to what will definitively happen with this group in the coming months but I can tell you for sure, no matter how ambiguous it might look on paper right now, it’s an offense I want to be invested in because there are good players and guys with higher ceilings than they showed in 2025, all playing for an ecosystem in my circle of trust under Coen’s watch.

    Green Bay Packers – Fix the running game

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    Head coach Matt LaFleur is facing tons of heat after another disappointing playoff exit, especially with this year’s edition coming at the hands of a comeback win from their division rival. That’s the price of the job.

    My biggest critique of LaFleur this season, and this isn’t hindsight from Saturday’s loss as I’ve said it before on my shows, is that he hasn’t always had a good grasp on the strengths and weaknesses of his offense. Namely, he’s been overly conservative in relying on a ground game that just doesn’t offer any dynamism and hasn’t all season.

    Saturday night provided a good example of what I’m talking about. The Packers saddled up Josh Jacobs for 19 of 21 running back carries in the game. Just two of them went for more than 10 yards and none went for over 15. A whopping 57% of his carries in the second half went for zero or negative yards and he sported a 14% rushing success rate. If you don’t think that’s a huge reason why this team couldn’t close out a 21-3 lead, you’re kidding yourself. It’s not a shock, either, as Green Bay ranked 19th in EPA per running back rush in 2025 after a 10th place finish the year prior.

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    The Packers have made big investments in both Jacobs and the offensive line — commitments too large financially and draft equity-wise to be so lifeless on the ground. I’m not sure it’s all on Jacobs’ shoulders but he did dip from 5.0 yards per touch in 2024 to 4.5 this past season. While he deserves admiration for being a warrior and playing through injuries, you have to wonder if he hurt the run game’s efficiency by doing so, much less if he’ll be able to reverse course as he turns 28 years old next month. Jacobs’ deal is a four-year agreement but is more of a true year-to-year commitment. Perhaps he is a cap casualty this offseason but regardless, I don’t think Green Bay can just roll into next season and assume Jacobs will be ready to grind out a workhorse role again. Even if he’s back with the team, I’d expect a complementary and more explosive threat added alongside him to weaponize this ground game again.

    Again, the issues also go beyond Jacobs’ play. I’m not sure they have more than one above average starter on that offensive line penciled in for 2026 — and that player, Zach Tom, didn’t play in the wild-card loss. Aaron Banks has been a huge letdown as a free agent guard and Round 1 selection Jordan Morgan hasn’t caught on. This is another area where the Packers can’t afford to sit on their hands.

    All of this might sound wild considering Jacobs has been a fantasy machine in Green Bay on the back of touchdowns. However, there’s no way you can come away from this season happy with the ground game if you’re invested in the team’s success.

    Carolina Panthers – Add to the offensive line

    Much of the oxygen this offseason will surround Bryce Young and what the ceiling of this team truly is with him under center. It’s probably wise to add a backup quarterback a little more capable than Andy Dalton, who will turn 39 in October, of taking over if Young falters. However, Young will be the starter on this team, and building an ecosystem around him to elevate his play while he hopefully improves as a pre- and post-snap processor to paper over some of his physical limitations is a must.

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    All eyes should turn to the offensive line in this regard this offseason. The Panthers turned this unit from a withering weakness to a real strength two years ago. Now, they must refurbish this group once more. Austin Corbett, Yosh Nijman, Cade Mays and Brady Christensen all played over 200 snaps for this team as injuries forced rotations and are all unrestricted free agents this offseason. Mays is likely the biggest priority to retain as he emerged as a quality starting center. The others are backups and Christensen is coming back from a torn Achilles but depth will be key for this team once again in 2026. Starting left tackle Ikem Ekwonu ruptured his patellar tendon in the first quarter of the loss to the Rams, which makes him a long shot to be ready early this coming season. That’s a huge loss and should change the course of the Panthers’ offseason plans.

    Featuring a plus-offensive line is a must for both Young and Dave Canales. For Young, having quality protection matters given his height and preference for working over the middle. While those starters along the interior make the biggest difference, tackle play is also a big deal, considering he likes to move in the pocket and through the C-gaps to readjust his throwing platform.

    With Canales, we know he wants to base his offense around a strong running game. I’m quite confident in the wide receiver tandem of Tetairoa McMillan and Jalen Coker — although more depth and a better tight end room are needed — and believe the aerial attack can take on a bigger burden in 2026. Yet, Canales will still want to control games and set the tone with a multi-layered rushing unit. There’s no way they can let the offensive line talent wither and expect to get that level of output going forward.

    Panthers players like McMillan, Coker and Chuba Hubbard, with Rico Dowdle likely moving on, will be popular and possible even value fantasy picks this summer. I’d be much more willing to click all options if they fortify the front-five during the offseason.

  • 2026 college football QB transfer portal tracker: Sam Leavitt heading to LSU; Dylan Raiola commits to Oregon

    The college football transfer portal is open from Jan. 2-16 and many quarterbacks across the country are on the move.

    We’ll be keeping track of the notable names who are looking to change schools ahead of the 2026 season as college football prepares for a transfer frenzy.

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    Alonza Barnett (James Madison to UCF)

    The two-year starter has one more season of eligibility remaining. Barnett was 216-of-370 passing for 2,806 yards and 23 TDs with eight interceptions while rushing 127 times for 589 yards and 15 scores in 2025 as the Dukes made the College Football Playoff. He was 23-of-48 passing for 273 yards and two scores while rushing 12 times for 45 yards and a TD in JMU’s first-round CFP loss to Oregon.

    Rocco Becht (Iowa State to Penn State)

    The three-year starter announced on Dec. 20 that he would be entering the transfer portal with one season of eligibility remaining. Becht is joining former Iowa State coach Matt Campbell at Penn State. Becht, the son of former NFL tight end Anthony Becht, threw 64 career touchdowns at Iowa State. Only Brock Purdy (81) has thrown more.

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    Byrum Brown (USF to Auburn)

    Brown, 21, appeared in just four games as a freshman, attempting only 50 passes as USF finished the year 1-11. The following year, Brown burst onto the scene, leading USF to a 7-6 record while breaking the school’s record for passing yards in a single season with 3,292. He threw 26 touchdowns and added 11 on the ground, emerging as one of the best dual-threat quarterbacks in the nation.

    Aidan Chiles (Michigan State to Northwestern)

    Chiles followed former Oregon State coach Jonathan Smith to Michigan State but the school fired Smith at the end of the 2025 season. Over 21 games at Michigan State, Chiles was 320-of-526 passing for 3,807 yards and 23 TDs with 14 interceptions while also rushing 195 times for 531 yards and 12 scores.

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    Anthony Colandrea (UNLV to Nebraska)

    Colandrea is set to transfer again after one season with the Rebels. He won the starting job after fall camp and was 275-of-417 passing for 3,459 yards and 23 TDs with nine interceptions in coach Dan Mullen’s first season. Colandrea also rushed 127 times for 649 yards and 10 scores as the Rebels had one of the most prolific offenses in the country. Before transferring to UNLV, Colandrea spent two seasons at Virginia.

    Ashton Daniels (Auburn to Florida State)

    Daniels spent just one season with the Tigers after playing the first three seasons of his career at Stanford. He played in just four games at Auburn in 2025 and can keep his redshirt for another season of eligibility. He appeared in 33 games across three seasons with the Cardinal and was 366-of-602 passing for 3,986 yards, 21 TDs and 20 interceptions in that span with 282 carries for 1,117 rushing yards and nine touchdowns. In 2025, Daniels threw for 797 yards while completing 57% of his passes.

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    Josh Hoover (TCU to Indiana)

    Hoover has played in 35 games over the past three seasons with the Horned Frogs. In 2024, he was 313-of-471 passing for 3,949 yards and 27 TDs with 11 interceptions. This past season, Hoover was 272-of-413 passing for 3,472 yards and 29 TDs with 13 interceptions. He’s thrown for over 9,600 yards and 71 TDs in his TCU career while averaging over eight yards an attempt.

    Katin Houser (East Carolina to Illinois)

    Houser started all 12 games for the Pirates in 2025 and was 269-of-408 passing for 3,300 yards, 19 TDs and six interceptions while also adding nine rushing touchdowns. Houser started his career at Michigan State and redshirted his first year with the Spartans in 2022 before transferring to ECU in 2024. He’ll have one season of eligibility at his new school.

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    DJ Lagway (Florida to Baylor)

    The former five-star recruit is leaving Florida after two seasons and Billy Napier’s departure. Lagway showed his exceptional promise over 24 games but also left Florida fans wanting more. In 2025, he was 213-of-337 passing for 2,264 yards and 16 TDs but threw 14 interceptions. Five of those came against LSU and another three came against Kentucky.

    Sam Leavitt (Arizona State to LSU)

    An injury limited Leavitt to seven games in 2025 after he led the Sun Devils to the Big 12 title and the College Football Playoff in 2025. Leavitt hasn’t played since Oct. 25. In 2024, Leavitt was 216-of-350 passing for 2,885 yards and 24 TDs with six interceptions while rushing for 443 yards and five scores. His passing stats took a step back in 2025; he was 145-of-239 for 1,628 yards and 10 TDs with three interceptions before his season ended prematurely.

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    Drew Mestemaker (North Texas to Oklahoma State)

    Mestemaker is heading for Stillwater. The former walk-on has thrown for over 4,000 yards this season as North Texas played for the American Conference title and had a shot at the College Football Playoff. He’ll be following former North Texas coach Eric Morris to Oklahoma State. Morris was hired to succeed Mike Gundy in November.

    Kenny Minchey (Notre Dame to Kentucky)

    The redshirt sophomore lost out to CJ Carr in Notre Dame’s competition to succeed Riley Leonard. With Carr entrenched as the team’s starter entering 2026 thanks to a stellar redshirt freshman season, Minchey wanted a new home and found it in Lincoln. He appeared in six games in 2025 and was 20-of-26 passing for 196 yards while rushing seven times for 84 yards and a score.

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    Aaron Philo (Georgia Tech to Florida)

    Philo was considered the successor to Haynes King at Georgia Tech after spending two seasons as King’s backup. However, he entered the transfer portal after offensive coordinator Buster Faulkner took the same position at Florida for new Gators coach Jon Sumrall. Over eight games at Georgia Tech, Philo was 59-of-102 passing for 938 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions.

    Beau Pribula (Missouri to Virginia)

    Pribula spent one season with the Tigers after transferring from Penn State ahead of last year’s College Football Playoff. Pribula got off to a hot start at Missouri but the Tigers’ passing game cratered during SEC play and he threw just seven passes in Mizzou’s Week 14 win over Arkansas. Pribula was 182-of-270 passing for 1,941 yards and 11 TDs and nine interceptions across 10 games while rushing for 297 yards and six scores.

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    Dylan Raiola (Nebraska to Oregon)

    Raiola’s season ended with three games to go in 2025 after he suffered a broken fibula in the Cornhuskers’ Nov. 1 loss to USC. The sophomore was 181-of-250 passing for 2,000 yards and 18 TDs with six interceptions before the injury. His stats were up from his freshman season after he immediately saw the field after signing as a five-star recruit. With two years of eligibility remaining, Raiola could be the most sought-after QB in the portal.

    Brendan Sorsby (Cincinnati to Texas Tech)

    Sorsby spent two seasons as Cincinnati’s starter after transferring from Indiana and has one season of eligibility remaining. He threw just one interception over Cincinnati’s first eight games of the season before throwing four over the final four as the Bearcats ended the year on a four-game losing streak. Sorsby was 207-of-336 passing for 2,800 yards and 27 TDs with five interceptions in 2025 while rushing for 580 yards and nine touchdowns.

  • Ready for Indiana vs. Miami? Well, hurry up and wait

    So, how about those College Football Playoff semifinals last week, huh? A thrilling Miami win, a dominant Indiana performance! Can’t wait to see those two unlikely-but-deserving programs square off in … wait, another week from now?

    Yes, like a defensive lineman that recovered a fumble in his own red zone, the college football season started with unstoppable momentum and now, with the end in sight, is collapsing in a chaotic heap of its own making.

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    Of all the woes that have bedeviled college football as it’s lurched into this new era — NIL, the transfer portal, disposable and interchangeable coaching staffs, a constantly moving target of a playoff bracket — the most maddening is that the sport has managed to strangle all the momentum out of its best asset: the on-field product.

    College football has always faced the challenge of navigating its last few weeks around two pillars: the academic calendar (stop laughing) and the holidays. Yes, since they still insist on calling players “student-athletes,”  college sports have to at least nod in the direction of final exams. Add in the fact that, for most of sports history, leagues and networks have assumed that people would want to spend time with their families, not their televisions, over the holidays, and you have a couple challenges to the late-season schedule.

    ATLANTA, GA - JANUARY 09: Indiana Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza (15) celebrates with fans after the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl against the Oregon Ducks on January 09, 2026 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    When Indiana and Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza take the field against Miami in the national championship game, it will have been 10 days since their dominating win over Oregon in the semifinal. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    But challenges are one thing. Mountainous immovable impossibilities are quite another, and in addition to final exams and holidays, college football also must navigate around the behemoths that are Tradition and NFL Football. Tradition is why college football must rotate its entire schedule around the bowls and New Year’s Day, and the NFL is why college football has to surrender the Saturdays it’s stacked up throughout the entire fall.

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    Thing is, the NFL doesn’t give a damn about tradition, its own or anyone else’s, not when there’s calendar real estate to be claimed. The NFL even elbowed college football right off its traditional New Year’s Day date back in 2022 when Jan. 1 fell on a Sunday. Back then, in the four-team playoff era, the Fiesta (TCU-Michigan) and Peach (Ohio State-Georgia) Bowl playoff semifinals were played on New Year’s Eve, along with the Sugar Bowl. The Rose Bowl had to wait until Monday, Jan. 2, and even then it overlapped with an NFL game (the Bengals-Bills Monday Night Football game ultimately canceled because of Damar Hamlin’s medical emergency).

    The result of all these competing forces is the dog’s breakfast of a schedule that the College Football Playoff has become. By the time this is all over, CFP games will have been played on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Indiana will have played exactly two football games between the Big Ten championship on Dec. 6 and the national championship 45 days later on Jan. 19. Two full weeks of NFL playoffs will air between the semifinals and the national championship.

    This isn’t sustainable, and that doesn’t even factor in the madness that is the transfer portal opening and closing in the middle of all this, along with all its attendant coach movement.

    College football’s calendar needs a complete teardown to the studs. There are as many ideas for the calendar as there are college football fans, but some combination of the following will almost surely happen:

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    • Changing “Week 0” to “Week 1” and starting the whole season a week earlier

    • Extending the season to the second week in December, ending the Army/Navy game’s dominion over that weekend

    • Altering traditional Thanksgiving week from rivalry games to conference championships (and potential playoff play-in games)

    • Eliminating conference championships altogether

    No matter what, the college football powers that be have to get the sport finished up earlier than late January. Every bit of momentum from a magical, ridiculous season will have bled away by then. The season has to end earlier, ideally before the NFL playoffs start, but absolutely no longer than wild card weekend.

    Problem is, the NFL’s not going to give up the Monday night playoff game it’s held since 2021; college football missed the window on that one. But maybe a Tuesday night championship after the first wild card weekend would be better than waiting another six days…?

    No matter which way the sport goes in the future, it’s still nearly a week to go until the 2026 national championship kicks off. Might as well spend that time kicking around ideas for the future.

  • Let’s stop piling on Justin Herbert and look at Chargers’ collective bad luck and failures

    Another year, another playoff disappointment for a franchise that seems to have an abundance of them. The Los Angeles Chargers’ season came to an ugly end in the wild-card round, losing 16-3 in a meager performance against a New England Patriots team that wasn’t playing their best football either.

    Every problem that hampered the Chargers this season came to full display alongside a mediocre performance from star quarterback Justin Herbert as they limped their way to another dispiriting end in the playoffs. As the quarterback and face of the team, Herbert will draw the ire of many talking heads who pin everything on him. The truth is this is a failing that encompasses just about everyone involved and will require a real look in the mirror this offseason.

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    [Get more Chargers news: L.A. team feed]

    One area the Chargers have been consistently plagued by is injuries. For the second straight season, their offensive line was crushed by injuries. All-Pro talent Rashawn Slater was lost for the season in early August, Joe Alt battled through injuries before having season-ending ankle surgery in early November and backup Trey Pipkins III missed a couple games while playing injured in several others. That’s not a survivable situation in the modern NFL with how talented and athletic the front seven players can be, but it’s a disappointing end to the season nonetheless. First-round running back Omarion Hampton also missed games throughout the season and never quite recovered when he came back and free-agent Najee Harris was put on season-ending injury reserve early in the season.

    Jan 11, 2026; Foxborough, MA, USA; Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) throws the ball away to avoid a sack during the second quarter against the New England Patriots in an AFC Wild Card Round game at Gillette Stadium. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images

    Justin Herbert took considerable punishment in Sunday’s defeat against the Patriots in the AFC’s wild-card round. (David Butler II-Imagn Images)

    (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / REUTERS)

    It seems to happen to this team as much or more than any other, but the unpredictable swings of health really put a ceiling on what the Chargers could accomplish. That doesn’t absolve the play of Herbert or any of the skill players, but they were playing with guys out of position and pulling so deep on the depth chart that it was preseason-quality offensive line play from time to time.

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    L.A. entered the playoffs playing on a razor-thin margin of error that isn’t feasible to convert into wins at this point. The Chargers also didn’t get any offensive answers from Jim Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman, who was fired shortly after the season-ending loss. There’s only so much window dressing that can be done during late-game comeback scenarios, but Roman once again struggled to put together a cohesive passing game, and even rookie sensation Ladd McConkey had a serious dip in production in Year 2 with the Chargers.

    Beyond getting their players healthy and adding talent via the draft and free agency, the Chargers have to tinker with their plan of what this offense is going to look like if they want to have any sustained postseason success. Right now, they could use an overhaul of the passing game while they continue to develop their collection of young receivers. Even though Herbert hasn’t played his best games in the playoffs (0-3 career record), he still has the talent to go on a deep run and three playoff games is just three games. The entire sample size of his career says this is still one of the best quarterbacks in the league and there’s no reason to worry that he can’t do this. There’s still a long way to go on the 27-year-old’s career and given the Chargers’ overall competency they’ll be competing for the playoffs for years to come.

    The good thing is they absolutely have a great thing going on defense, granted coordinator Jesse Minter doesn’t take a head coaching job this offseason. Minter’s defense held up its end of the bargain and the Chargers have done a great job developing some of the young talent on that side over the past two seasons. It’s on the offense and its über-talented quarterback and historically successful head coach to right the ship so they can maximize this current window.

    Games like Sunday make it seem like they’re further away than they really are, but they still need a few uncertain and unknown pieces to come to fruition in a big way before they’ll be ready to make that run people have been waiting for.

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    Sometimes it ain’t your year. Sometimes it ain’t anybody’s year. That’s how last night felt for the Chargers and now they’re off to what should be a busy offseason with their league-leading projected $109 million in salary-cap space.

  • 2025 NFL playoffs, odds, betting: San Francisco 49ers are biggest playoff underdogs in over 40 years against Seahawks

    The San Francisco 49ers pulled off an improbable 23-19 win at the Philadelphia Eagles as sizable 5.5-point underdogs on Sunday to reach the divisional round. The 49ers overcame two interceptions from Brock Purdy to win on the road against the Super Bowl champions.

    Brock Purdy & Co. will face a familiar foe on Saturday, as the 49ers will travel to Seattle to play their NFC-West division rivals for the third time this season.

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    If San Francisco wins, it will be a historic upset, according to oddsmakers.

    The 49ers are currently 7.5-point underdogs at the No. 1-seeded Seahawks at BetMGM. If the line holds, it would mark the biggest underdog that San Francisco has been in the postseason in over 40 years.

    The 49ers were 10-point underdogs at Washington all the way back on Jan. 8, 1984, a game in which they lost 24-21 (but did cover the spread). San Francisco was also a 7-point ‘dog back on Dec. 27, 1970 against the Minnesota Vikings; the 49ers won outright 17-14.

    San Francisco split the season series with the Seahawks, but lost 13-3 to Seattle in Week 18 to fall to the No. 6 seed and give Seattle the top seed in the NFC and the accompanying bye. The 49ers have only scored 20 total points in two games against the Seahawks’ ferocious defense.

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    In addition to losing Nick Bosa, Fred Warner, Mykel Williams and Tatum Bethune for the season prior to the Eagles game (along with wideout Ricky Pearsall being inactive), the 49ers lost star tight end George Kittle to a torn Achilles during the game.

    Pearsall could be back for Saturday’s game, but it will no doubt be a shorthanded San Francisco team heading into one of the toughest venues to play in the NFL against a well-rested Seahawks squad.

    The Seahawks currently have the best odds to win the NFC (+120) at BetMGM, followed by the Los Angeles Rams (+150). The 49ers have the longest odds at +900.

    Underdogs went 4-2 against the spread in the wild-card round.

  • Cubs Strike Again by Bringing in Alex Bregman, How Bad Did Boston Miss Out & the Bo Bichette–Phillies Connection

    Subscribe to Baseball Bar-B-Cast

    When the Chicago Cubs acquired Edward Cabrera from the Miami Marlins, many were left wondering if there would be another big move left in their arsenal. That question was answered over the weekend when they agreed to a deal to bring three-time All-Star Alex Bregman to the Windy City.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman talk about the Cubs’ five-year, $175 million deal with the former Houston Astros and Boston Red Sox star to help solidify their lineup and continue their stellar offseason. Could this be the move that helps get Chicago back to the top of the NL Central for the first time since 2020?

    Later, Jordan and Jake examine how badly it appears the Red Sox messed up in their negotiations with Alex Bregman, considering they traded away Rafael Devers during the season and are now left with neither All-Star on their squad. Then the guys get into how real of a possibility it is that Bo Bichette joins the Philadelphia Phillies, as well as a new addition to Team USA’s World Baseball Classic roster.

    1:29 – The Opener: Bregman to Cubs

    26:19 – Scott Boras Scoreboard update

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    34:41 – The Red Sox badly messed up

    49:21 – Red Sox front office response

    59:41 – Bo Bichette and the Phillies?

    1:09:04 – New addition to Team USA

    Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • NFL Panic Meter: Are Eagles, Steelers and other losing teams from wild-card weekend heading in right direction?

    There was potential dynasty talk with the Philadelphia Eagles after they won the Super Bowl last season. That didn’t last long.

    It was understandable though. They had a roster loaded with talent and were dominant for most of the 2024 season, including a blowout Super Bowl win over the Chiefs. It looked like the Eagles could win multiple Super Bowls with this core.

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    What the Eagles reminded us all is that winning once is hard and doing it again is much, much harder. Super Bowl champions almost always look like they’re a threat to win multiple titles, and it almost never happens.

    [Get more Eagles news: Philadelphia team feed]

    The question the Eagles face is whether they’re closer to the championship team from 2024 or the good but frustrating team from this season. There will be changes. There was trade speculation with A.J. Brown before Sunday’s loss to the San Francisco 49ers even ended. That happens after the type of season Brown had, with more drama than big plays. The offensive coordinator seemingly has to change after Kevin Patullo was unsuccessful in replacing Kellen Moore. The Eagles’ offense was bad all season, which seems impossible given the talent they have.

    Some stars will be at an age in which a steep fall could be coming, like tight end Dallas Goedert (who will be 31 next season), linebacker Zack Baun (30 next season), Saquon Barkley (29 next season, an age in which running backs often slow down) and offensive tackle Lane Johnson (36 next season).

    PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JANUARY 11: Jalen Hurts #1 of the Philadelphia Eagles jogs off the field after his team's 23-19 loss against the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Wild Card Playoff game at Lincoln Financial Field on January 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

    PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – JANUARY 11: Jalen Hurts #1 of the Philadelphia Eagles jogs off the field after his team’s 23-19 loss against the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Wild Card Playoff game at Lincoln Financial Field on January 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

    (Mitchell Leff via Getty Images)

    It’s hard to know what the Eagles will be. A complete reset isn’t going to happen. The talent is still undeniable. It shouldn’t be a big surprise if the Eagles bounce right back to be a Super Bowl favorite, like they did after collapsing late in the 2023 season. But changes have to happen after a miserable season. It’s just a matter of whether it will be an extreme makeover or just some rearranging. But either way, the Eagles will be one of the more fascinating teams of the offseason.

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    Panic meter: The Eagles should be OK next season … right?

    Panthers have some good vibes

    We shouldn’t get too excited about a team that went 8-10, including playoffs, with two losses to the Saints and another to the Cardinals. However, there were good signs, especially in the two games against the Rams.

    The Panthers beat the Rams in the regular season and came within a minute of doing it again in the playoffs. The Rams scored the game-winning touchdown with 38 seconds left. It was the rare playoff loss in which the losing team should have felt pretty good coming out of it.

    The Panthers showed they have good young talent, particularly at receiver with Tetairoa McMillan and Jalen Coker. The franchise has benefited from some stability, which has been very rare since David Tepper bought the team. Whether the Panthers move forward will depend on whether Bryce Young, who played well in the loss to the Rams, becomes a more prolific passer. Young had some good moments but still threw for just 3,011 yards and managed 11 interceptions as a low-volume passer. But at least there is some hope for a franchise that has had a rough decade otherwise.

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    Panic meter: At least there’s finally something to feel good about.

    Packers try to get over rough finish

    It’s hard to not feel like the sky is falling after the Packers lost their last five games, including an epic collapse to the Chicago Bears in the wild-card round.

    It was an awful end, but the Packers are still in fine shape. They have had a very young roster for the past few seasons. They fell apart after some big season-ending injuries, particularly to defensive end Micah Parsons and tight end Tucker Kraft. Presumably those two will return early in the 2026 season. There are questions about Matt LaFleur after many blown leads last season. It appears he’ll return, but will do so with more pressure than at any other point in his tenure.

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    The Packers aren’t going to disappear. It only seems that way because of the miserable finish to the season.

    Panic meter: The Pack will be back, but it will be a long offseason.

    Jaguars’ surprising season ends early

    It’s hard to not feel pretty good after going 13-4 with a division title, even if the Jags couldn’t overcome Josh Allen and the Bills in the wild-card round. Liam Coen’s first season was a smashing success. It seems like it will keep rolling on next season.

    Maybe. We’ve seen teams, such as the Washington Commanders, have a huge spike one season and then fall back a bit. It’s hard to get better after improving by nine wins from the previous season. There’s no great reason to believe the Jaguars were a fluke (they were sixth in DVOA this season with a +138 point differential), but we see teams rise and fall quickly.

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    Panic meter: It looks good, but expecting another 13-win season is difficult.

    Chargers have some issues to monitor

    Last postseason, the most disappointing team was the Chargers. Until the Steelers played on Monday night, the Chargers led the race for that dubious award yet again. It’s hard to figure there’s some fatal flaw that is causing the Chargers to tank hard when they get to the playoffs, but it is a bit concerning.

    Still, this seems like a team that will be a perennial playoff contender with Jim Harbaugh. The one key factor is whether defensive coordinator Jesse Minter returns or if he gets a head-coaching job. He had a fantastic year and good coordinators can be tough to replace. Ask the Detroit Lions. If Minter is back, the next question becomes the health of offensive tackles Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt. The Chargers desperately need them back, and to get better on the interior of the line too. But if Minter is back and the offensive line is improved, there’s no reason the Chargers can’t be a Super Bowl contender next season. As long as they figure out why they’ve been a terrible playoff team lately.

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    Panic meter: If Minter returns, the Chargers might be really dangerous.

    Mike Tomlin steps down as Steelers head coach

    At some point, there’s little point in continuing to run things back when there’s no hope for a better result in the future.

    There will be major changes for the Steelers. It started Tuesday afternoon when Mike Tomlin stepped down as the team’s coach after 19 seasons. That came less than 24 hours after the Steelers got blown out in a wild-card playoff game, not putting up a touchdown in a 30-6 loss to the Texans.

    That’s the major shakeup, one the Steelers aren’t used to after decades of stability at head coach. It also might be just the start of a transformative offseason.

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    The Steelers haven’t been a true championship contender in a long time, and they never resembled that this season either. Their defense is aging and Aaron Rodgers seems unlikely to return next season, if he plays at all. The roster might need an overhaul no matter who the new coach is.

    The Steelers have resisted major change at their head-coaching position and haven’t had to rebuild in a long time. After Tomlin stepped down, blowing up the roster might be next on the table. No matter what, of all the wild-card weekend losers, the Steelers probably should have the least optimism going forward.

    It could be a rough season in 2026, whether they keep the core intact or they change it out. Though that could change with the right head coaching hire and nailing a long-term solution at quarterback, which has eluded the franchise. For better or worse the Steelers will look a lot different next season. And for a season or two as they retool, it might be worse.

    Panic meter: This will be one of the Steelers’ most important offseasons in a long time.