NFL General News

I’m totally innocent but here’s my resignation


As many of the idiots on the radio shows have said.....


"Even if she's completely innocent, she's tainted by the allegations...".



Sad, but true.
 
It looks like this NFL offseason is the one where unretirements are cool. A former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver retired at the start of March, only to change his mind a month later and sign with the Tennessee Titans for one more season.


Others flirted with retirement, such as Travis Kelce. The legendary tight end decided to run it back with the Kansas City Chiefs after a tumultuous 2025 campaign.

More recently, a player who was out of the league for a whole three years decided to make a surprise comeback. He joined the Indianapolis Colts ahead of the 2026 season.


Indianapolis Colts Add Safety With 44 NFL Stars​


The Indianapolis Colts added Nasir Adderley to the roster on Tuesday. Adderley retired from the league in 2023 once his contract with the Los Angeles Chargers expired. He played four seasons, starting 44 games.

Adderley will join a secondary that already saw Jonathan Owens and Juanyeh Thomas sign in free agency. The Colts saw Nick Cross and Rodney Thomas II leave, too. The 28-year-old will bring depth to the defense, but it remains to be seen if all those years outside the competition affect his game.

Indianapolis enters the 2026 campaign with renewed expectations after re-signing both quarterback Daniel Jones and wide receiver Alec Pierce.
 
wow they just want me to watch fewer and fewer games a year,I guess. Right now the nfl network reairs most games at some point or another either on demand or as a part of their regular schedule. I don't know if that will continue. As long as I can watch the patriots games, I'll be okay.
Ridiculous!!

To watch every NFL game in 2026, viewers need approximately 10 different subscriptions and channels, with costs potentially exceeding $1,000 per season. Major platforms include broadcast networks (CBS, FOX, NBC), cable channels (NFL Network, ESPN+), and streaming services (Prime Video, Peacock, Netflix, and YouTube TV for NFL Sunday Ticket)
 
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