Posts in Pro Bowl
The List: A Virtual Pro Bowl Highlights the NFL’s Calm before the Super Bowl Storm
 
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The week in between the conference championship games and the Super Bowl is usually dominated by a video of the teams arriving at the host site early in the week, as well as practices, walkthroughs, and press conferences. This year, there will be no such coverage, since the Buccaneers and Chiefs will arrive late this week, and the clubs will conduct most of their interviews digitally.

Although there is no in-person coverage, that does not mean this edition of The List will be barren. The Pro Bowl was held via the Madden NFL 21 video game, the college Senior Bowl still went off as planned and several clubs were busy adjusting their coaching staffs. In addition, there will be a look at how the Super Bowl participants impacted their communities. However, we start off with the Pro Bowl.

 

THE GAMES

NFC tops AFC in the virtual Pro Bowl

 Even though the in-person Pro Bowl game was canceled for the 2020 season, rosters were still selected and a game was still held on Sunday. A combination of four current players, NFL legends, and celebrities were selected to control both the NFC and AFC on the Madden NFL 21 video game, with the NFC coming out on top by a 32-12 score. The event was shown on NFL social media sites on Sunday evening, with FOX Sports studio personalities Charissa Thompson and Michael Strahan serving as hosts.

Kyler Murray not only had the controller in his hand for the NFC during the first quarter, but he was also named the MVP in the game after throwing four touchdown passes. Ironically, the only score, while Murray was in control, was a rushing touchdown by Vikings star Dalvin Cook. NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace took over in the second quarter, with Murray tossing scoring passes to his Cardinals teammate, DeAndre Hopkins, as well as Seahawks wide receiver D.K. Metcalf and Lions tight end T.J. Hockenson. Seattle safety Jamal Adams took over in the third, and Murray threw one more touchdown to Cook to round out the NFC scoring. Former Bills, Raiders, and Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch controlled the NFC team for the final quarter.

The AFC team controllers were Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson, former star wide receiver and ESPN analyst Keyshawn Johnson, Titans running back, and the NFL’s leading rusher, Derrick Henry, and rapper Snoop Dogg. The AFC got the first-quarter touchdown from Super Bowl participant Patrick Mahomes to Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen and a pass from Mahomes to Titans star A. J. Brown in the third. 

National team wins the Senior Bowl

 Texas A&M quarterback Kellen Mond earned the MVP award but the National team defeated the American team, 27-24, on Saturday in the Senior Bowl at Hancock Whitney Stadium in Mobile, Alabama.

The game, which began in 1950 at the Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, transferred to Mobile the following year. The contest includes the best professional hopefuls and the teams are run by the staff of NFL teams. For the majority of the game’s history, the teams were called the South and North, except for a three-year span from 1991-93, when they were named the AFC and NFC according to their coach’s affiliation. This year, the National team (formerly the South) was run by Miami’s Brian Flores while Carolina’s Matt Rhule coached the American team (previously the North).

Mond completed 13 of 25 passes for 173 yards (141 in the third quarter) and two touchdowns in a losing effort, but the game wasn’t decided until he had left the game. Arkansas quarterback Feleipe Franks threw a 21-yard scoring pass to Mississippi tight end Kenny Yeboah in the fourth quarter as the National team went up by two scores. Georgia quarterback Jamie Newman completed a 10-yard touchdown pass to Florida wide receiver Trevon Grimes with 49 seconds left for the American team.

Louisville wide receiver Dez Fitzpatrick earned offensive player of the game honors after posting game-highs with six catches and 90 yards for the National team. Tulane defensive lineman Cameron Sample was the defensive player of the game. He had seven tackles and half a sack for the American team.

Inside the Hashes sent a crew to cover the Senior Bowl in person. Click on the links below to check out their stories. 

SUPER BOWL NEWS

Chiefs tackle social justice and COVID-19 issues

 Patrick Mahomes has done quite a bit in his young career. He earned a regular-season MVP award, led the Chiefs to their first title in 50 years, earned three Pro Bowl selections, was named an All-Pro and Offensive Player of the Year in addition to his MVP honor in 2018, signed a 10-year, $503 million contracts with Kansas City before the 2020 season, proposed to his high school sweetheart and found out he was going to be a dad.

Mahomes’ influence extends beyond the field, as he became a minority stakeholder of the Royals’ franchise, and his fiancée, Brittany Matthews, is part of an ownership group to bring a women’s professional soccer team back to Kansas City. The events of 2020 also inspired Mahomes and safety Tyrann Mathieu to start a voter registration initiative in Kansas City and led to the quarterback joining with More Than A Vote, a group started by basketball superstar LeBron James that focuses on minorities registering to vote and speaking about systemic racism around the country.

Not only did Mahomes and Mathieu try to improve involvement in social issues, and they also worked to increase voter turnout. Mathieu and his TM 32 Foundation hosted multiple voter registration events, including one on September 22 (National Voter Registration Day) at Union Station, a historic train station in downtown Kansas City. Mahomes and his 15 and the Mahomies Foundation split the $100,000 cost with the Chiefs to turn Arrowhead Stadium into a polling place for Election Day in early November.

Another Chiefs player who is making a difference is one who hasn’t played a down this season. Guard Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, who started on the right side in the team’s victory in Super Bowl LIV last season, opted out of the 2020 campaign due to the coronavirus. He was sitting out, not to avoid the pandemic, but to work on the front lines. Duvernay-Tardif is a Canadian who was selected by Kansas City in the sixth-round in 2014, but he also has a second career option that few in the NFL have. In addition to being a champion lineman, he also has a doctorate in medicine from McGill University in Montreal, which he put to good use during COVID-19.

Although Duvernay-Tardif did not officially have a medical license, his services soon came into high demand once the pandemic became more widespread. He was assigned to the Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu long-term care facility in Quebec, where he has worked as an orderly on the front lines during the pandemic. His work led to Duvernay-Tardif joining his teammate Mahomes, as well as basketball stars LeBron James and Breanna Steward and tennis champion Naomi Osaka as Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year award winners.

Team colors announced and coin toss participants named

 The Buccaneers will be the home team this Sunday in more ways than one. The Super Bowl alternates which conference will use the home bench and locker room. This year, at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, the NFC has that right. Tampa Bay is the first team to play in a Super Bowl in its own home stadium, and along with that honor is the right to choose what uniform to wear. The Buccaneers have decided to wear their white jerseys and pewter pants while the Chiefs will don their signature red jerseys.

Uniform choice was not the only Super Bowl LV announcement made over the past week. The NFL named four people to participate in pre-game festivities, including three front line workers who will serve as honorary captains during the coin toss. Los Angeles educator Trimaine Davis was responsible for making sure students in his classes had access to devices, internet access, and workshops to learn how to use the technology. Suzie Dorner is the COVID ICU nurse manager at Tampa General Hospital and she lost two grandparents to COVID-19. Marine veteran James Martin helped veterans and young athletes connect through the Wounded Warrior Project and by live streaming events in his hometown of Pittsburgh.

In addition to Davis, Dorner, and Martin, the NFL announced that Amanda Gorman will read an original poem about the impact of the three of them before the Super Bowl. Gorman, a National Youth Poet Laureate, participated in the inauguration of President Joe Biden on Jan. 20 by reciting a poem entitled “The Hill We Climb.”

THE NEWS

Tight end Witten retires after 17 seasons

 Jason Witten is leaving the NFL once again. On Jan. 27, the 11-time Pro Bowl tight end announced that, once his contract with the Raiders expired, he would sign a one-day deal with the Cowboys and retire. He finished his 17-year career as one of the most respected and productive players at that position.

Witten was a third-round pick of the Cowboys in 2003 out of the University of Tennessee. After backing up new Lions coach Dan Campbell with Dallas as a rookie, Witten took over the starting role and was selected to 10 Pro Bowls in the next 11 seasons while also earning two All-Pro selections. He retired in 2018 and spent the season as an analyst for ESPN’s Monday Night Football game broadcasts before returning for one season with the Cowboys and another with the Raiders in 2020.

Witten ranks high, not just on the tight end leader list, but also on the all-time list with 1,228 receptions (second among tight ends and fourth overall), 13,046 yards (second at the position and 19th overall), and 74 touchdowns (fifth among tight ends and tied for 38th in NFL history). He has already been named the head coach at Liberty Christian School in Argyle, Texas.

Rooney family matriarch passed away

 Patricia Rooney, the wife of Steelers owner and chairman, Dan Rooney, and the daughter-in-law of franchise founder, Art Rooney Sr., passed away peacefully at home on Saturday at 88. Patricia and Dan Rooney were married for 65 years and had nine children, including Art Rooney II, who is the team’s current president. Dan Rooney also served as the U. S. ambassador to Ireland from 2009-12 under President Obama.

“My family and I are mourning the passing of my mother, Patricia,” Art Rooney II said in a statement. “She helped raise nine children while supporting my father's career with the Steelers and his time as Ambassador to Ireland. It is a sad day for our family.”

Lions trade Stafford to the Rams for Goff and some draft picks

 Matthew Stafford’s time with the Lions is over. On Saturday night, Detroit agreed to trade its top all-time passer to the Rams for quarterback Jared Goff, a third-round pick in the 2021 NFL Draft and first-rounders in both 2022 and 2023. The deal will not become official until the league year begins on March 17.

Stafford is the 2011 Comeback Player of the Year, a Pro Bowler in 2014, and he also tops the Lions’ all-time list with 45,109 yards and 282 touchdowns. He has two years and $43 million left on his current contract, and he will count $17.8 million against the salary cap. Goff is a two-time Pro Bowler who totaled 18,171 yards and 107 scores in five seasons. He has four years and $106.6 million left on his contract, including a $25 million base salary and a $22.2 million cap hit in 2021.

The one thing Detroit will be gaining from this trade is a quarterback with playoff success. Goff has a 3-3 record in the postseason, but he threw for 297 yards and a touchdown as the Rams beat the Saints, 26-23 in overtime, in the 2018 NFL Championship Game. He struggled two weeks later when Los Angeles fell to New England in Super Bowl LIII. Stafford led the Lions to four winning records in 12 seasons, but he lost all three playoff games Detroit has played in his tenure.

For Richie Dordas’ reaction to the Matthew Stafford trade, click this link

Watson requests a trade from the Texans

 The Texans can only hope the Deshaun Watson situation is resolved as smoothly as the Stafford trade was for the Lions. The three-time Pro Bowl quarterback officially requested a trade this week, despite signing a four-year, $156 million contract extension in September.

The situation was made worse when team CEO Cal McNair failed to communicate with his offensive star concerning the hiring of general manager Nick Caserio on Jan. 7. Watson is among the best quarterbacks in the NFL and also owns a no-trade clause that allows him to choose his destination. If the Texans decide to call his bluff, the 25-year-old can simply hold out and refuse to play. Watson ranks second in franchise history with 14,539 yards and 104 touchdowns in just four seasons, and he also has 1,677 yards and 17 scores rushing.

Of course, Caserio stated that he has “zero interest” in trading Watson, but if he did, the team should have plenty of potential trade partners. In the AFC, the Jets may not want to continue to put their trust in Sam Darnold, the Dolphins might be willing to exchange rookie Tua Tagovailoa, the Patriots could try for Watson after the failed Cam Newton experiment and the Colts need someone to replace the newly retired Philip Rivers. Watson might also want to leave the quarterback-rich AFC and force a trade to an NFC team instead. Potential landing spots could be San Francisco (with injury-prone Jimmy Garoppolo), Carolina (with the inconsistent Teddy Bridgewater), or Chicago (which hasn’t had a star at the quarterback position since the Truman administration). 

Ravens give their tight end an extension

 Despite suffering a season-ending knee injury in Week 10, tight end Nick Boyle and the Ravens agreed to a two-year, $13 million extension on Friday that will last through the 2023 season. In addition to his run-blocking ability, Boyle has amassed 120 receptions, 1,047 yards, and four touchdowns in six seasons with Baltimore.

Giants sign former Jets center Harrison

 Jonotthan Harrison has now officially run the gamut in terms of being a member of all three New York-area teams. Harrison signed a $2 million futures deal with the Giants on Sunday. The undrafted center out of Florida in 2014 began his career by playing three seasons with the Colts. He followed that by three years with the Jets and started 10 games in 2019. Harrison spent 2020 on the Bills’ practice squad and is expected to back up Nick Gates with the Giants this season.

Seahawks waive lineman after his arrest

 The NFL career of Chad Wheeler unraveled over the past week. The Seahawks offensive tackle was arrested on Jan. 27 and charged with first-degree domestic violence assault, domestic violence unlawful imprisonment, and resisting arrest in King County, Washington. He is out on $400,000 bail.

According to reports, Wheeler allegedly demanded the victim to stand up and bow to him and when she refused, he grabbed her by the neck, threw her on the bed, wrenched her left arm behind her back, and proceeded to strangle her until she passed out. When she regained consciousness, Wheeler reportedly said, “Wow you’re alive” before the victim locked herself in the bathroom and called authorities. Seattle released Wheeler after the incident was made public, and the lineman issued a statement on Twitter in the afternoon, apologizing for his actions, stating that he had a “manic episode” and he was seeking help. He also stated it is time to “walk away from football and get the help I need to never again pose a threat to another.”

Wheeler was signed by the Giants as an undrafted free agent out of USC in 2017. He played two seasons with New York and started 14 games at right tackle in 2018. Wheeler spent most of the following year on Seattle’s practice squad and played five games with the Seahawks in 2020.

 

INJURY NEWS

Crosby played through multiple injuries

 Defensive end Maxx Crosby led the Raiders in sacks each of his first two seasons, and his seven-sack performance looks more impressive in light of some new information. Last week, Crosby tweeted a photo showing him with his right arm in a cast and his left arm in a sling. He stated that he played with a broken hand and a torn labrum in his shoulder. Crosby had surgery to repair both injuries and the recovery time is about four months. The 2019 fourth-round pick out of Eastern Michigan had 10 sacks as a rookie with Oakland and followed that by starting all 16 games for the Raiders after they moved to Las Vegas this season.

Willie Gay joins Fisher on the sidelines for the Super Bowl

 Chiefs linebacker Willie Gay Jr. will not be able to play in Super Bowl LV after undergoing surgery to repair a torn meniscus last week. The procedure includes a four-month recovery period, giving Gay plenty of time to prepare for the 2021 season. He is the second key player who will miss the Super Bowl on the Kansas City side, joining starting offensive tackle Eric Fisher, who suffered a torn Achilles. The Chiefs placed wide receiver Demarcus Robinson and center, Daniel Kilgore, on the reserve/COVID-19 list on Monday. Neither Robinson nor Kilgore tested positive and both should be able to play in the Super Bowl. The Buccaneers have announced that wide receiver Antonio Brown (knee) and safety Jordan Whitehead (shoulder and knee) are doubtful for this Sunday’s game. 

COACHING AND FRONT OFFICE MOVES

Texans hire Culley as head coach

 The NFL’s first head coaching position to come open was also the last to be filled. On Jan. 28, the Texans agreed to terms on a five-year deal with David Culley, who spent the past two seasons as assistant head coach, wide receivers coach, and passing game coordinator with the Ravens. He takes over a Houston offense that has ranked in the middle of the pack in the NFL over the past five years with Deshaun Watson under center. Watson has reiterated his desire to be traded even after Culley was hired. Baltimore’s offense rated in the top third of the league during Culley’s tenure, thanks to the efforts of 2019 MVP Lamar Jackson.

The 65-year-old Culley has spent 42 years in coaching, starting as a running backs coach with Austin Peay in 1978. He moved to universities around the southeastern U.S. over the next 25 years, rising to the offensive coordinator position with Texas-El Paso in 1989-90. Culley moved on to the NFL in 1994, and he worked as a wide receivers coach with the Buccaneers and Steelers before staying in that position for 14 seasons with the Eagles from 1999-2012. He was an assistant head coach and wide receivers coach with the Chiefs from 2013-16 and was the Bills’ quarterbacks coach in 2017-18 before joining the Ravens.

Washington coach Rivera is cancer-free

 Ron Rivera has been an NFL head coach for 10 years and is a two-time Coach of the Year. However, his greatest victory was not earned on the field. The coach’s daughter tweeted on Friday that Rivera was cancer-free. The Washington coach was diagnosed with squamous cell cancer in August. He finished treatment in late October and did not miss a game while leading the club to the NFC East title.

Rivera was a linebacker with the Bears when they won Super Bowl XX, and he made a name for himself as a defensive coordinator with Chicago (2004-06) and San Diego (2008-10). He posted a 76-63-1 record in nine seasons as Panthers head coach, leading Carolina to the playoffs four times, including a loss to Denver in Super Bowl 50. Despite a losing record in 2020, Washington gave eventual NFC champion Tampa Bay a run for its money in a 31-23 loss in the Wild Card round.

Other coaching and front office news

  • The Falcons added five new members to their coaching staff this week when they hired T.J. Yates as passing game specialist, Robert Prince as wide receivers coach, Jon Hoke as defensive backs coach, Ted Monachino as outside linebackers coach, and Chandler Henley as assistant offensive line coach. Atlanta also filled out a top front office spot on Friday after hiring Kyle Smith as vice president of player personnel. Smith spent the past 10 seasons with Washington, starting as a scout before being promoted to director of college personnel in 2017 and vice president of player personnel in 2020.

  • On Thursday, the Bears hired Chris Rumph as defensive line coach. Rumph served as outside linebackers coach with the Texans in 2020. The following day, Chicago added Bill McGovern as inside linebackers coach and Bill Shuey as outside linebackers coach.

  • The Lions continued filling out their coaching and front office staff this week. After hiring general manager John Dorsey, offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn, and assistant head coach and running backs coach Duce Staley before Championship Game weekend, Detroit followed that up by bringing in Ray Agnew as assistant general manager, Mark Brunell as quarterbacks coach, Dom Capers as senior defensive assistant and Dave Fipp as special teams coordinator. 

  • The Packers cut ties with two coaches over the past week. Green Bay announced that defensive coordinator Mike Pettine and special teams coordinator Shawn Mennenga will not return to the team in 2021. The Packers promoted assistant Maurice Drayton to replace Mennenga as a coordinator on Thursday. 

  • Houston did not wait long to give new head coach David Culley some help. On Friday, the Texans hired Lovie Smith as defensive coordinator. Smith spent the past five seasons as the head coach of Illinois, and he amassed a 17-39 record before he was fired in mid-December. He was head coach of the Bears from 2004-12 and he led the Buccaneers in 2014-15. Smith posted an 89-87 record and led the Bears to three playoff appearances, including a loss to the Colts in Super Bowl XLI. The Texans also hired Alfonza “Pep” Hamilton as quarterbacks coach. Hamilton held the same role with the Chargers last season and worked well with rookie Justin Herbert. 

  • Last week, the Jaguars hired general manager Trent Baalke as full-time general manager, offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell and defensive coordinator Joe Cullen. Jacksonville followed those moves by hiring Sanjay Lal as wide receivers coach and Brian Schneider as special teams coordinator this week. On Monday night, the Jaguars added former Seahawks offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer as passing game coordinator. Schottenheimer will work under Bevell, who preceded him as offensive coordinator in Seattle. 

  • The Raiders got onto the coaching carousel on Friday, hiring four coaches on the defensive side of the ball. Las Vegas brought in defensive backs coach Ron Milus, linebackers coach Richard Smith, assistant defensive backs coach Addison Lynch, and defensive quality control coach Ryan Milus.

  • Last week, the Vikings promoted Ryan Ficken to special teams coordinator. Ficken is entering his 15th season on Minnesota’s coaching staff. He spent the past eight years as an assistant special teams coordinator. On Monday, the Vikings hired former Eagles strength and conditioning coach Josh Hingst to the same position.

  • The Eagles hired several new coaches over the past few weeks, including Michael Clay as special teams coordinator, Brian Johnson as quarterbacks coach, Jason Michael as tight ends coach, and Tracy Rocker as defensive line coach. 

  • On Monday, the Steelers announced that Adrian Klemm will be the new offensive line coach. Klemm spent the past two seasons as the assistant to Shaun Sarrett, who was hired by the Chargers last week.

  • The 49ers also hired James Bettcher as a senior defensive advisor to aid new defensive coordinator DeMeco Ryans. Bettcher previously served as defensive coordinator for the Cardinals (2015-17) and Giants (2018-19). 

  • After special teams coordinator Brian Schneider left for the Jaguars, the Seahawks announced that they were promoting assistant Larry Izzo to replace him. Izzo was a three-time champion and a three-time Pro Bowler on special teams with the Patriots. Seattle also hired former Rams passing game coordinator Shane Waldron as offensive coordinator and ex-Rams assistant offensive line coach Andy Dickerson as run-game coordinator.

  • The Titans brought in two new coordinators this week, tight ends coach Todd Downing being promoted to run the offense and outside linebackers coach Shane Bowens moving up to lead the defense.

  • Tom Rathman, who spent the past three years as Colts running backs coach, announced his retirement on Jan. 28 after more than 30 years in the NFL. Rathman was a Nebraska fullback who won two titles as Roger Craig’s lead blocker with the 49ers in the late 1980s. After a nine-year playing career, Rathman had two stints as San Francisco’s running backs coach (1997-2002 and 2009-16), and he also held the same post with Detroit (2003-05) and Oakland (2006-08) before joining Indianapolis in 2018.

Upcoming schedule: The NFL will bestow all of its major awards the day before the Super Bowl on the 10th Annual NFL Honors special Saturday at 9 p.m. on CBS. Among the awards to be announced include MVP, Coach of the Year, Offensive and Defensive Players and Rookies of the Year, Comeback Player of the Year, and Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year. In addition, the Pro Football Hall of Fame will announce its 2021 class during the broadcast. All of that leads up to Super Bowl LV between the Chiefs and the Buccaneers from Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, which will air on CBS at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday.

Writer

Writer

-By: Kevin Rakas

NFL Announces Pro Bowl Rosters for a Weeklong Virtual Event
 
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The Pro Bowl has gone through several changes over the years, but the 2020 version will be the most unique one yet. In mid-October, the NFL announced that an in-person game would not happen. The following month, the league decided to turn the event into a weeklong experience, with celebrities, current, and legendary NFL players, as well as gaming streamers, managing the Pro Bowl rosters and facing off in the Madden NFL 21 video game. The week culminates in a virtual game with the Pro Bowl players controlling themselves in a virtual game that will be televised nationally on ESPN and ABC.

On Dec. 21, the 2020 rosters were announced on the NFL Network. The game was originally scheduled for Jan. 31, 2021, at Allegiant Stadium, and the league announced that the Raiders would host the game after next season. Despite the absence of an actual contest, players get credit for a Pro Bowl selection on their records. Since the game is virtual, every player selected will appear, unlike in recent years, when the Super Bowl participants were held out of the contest. Finally, players will get full monetary bonuses for appearing in the game (last year, players on the winning team received $70,000 and those on the losing team got $35,000).

The event began in 1938 as a matchup pitting the NFL champion against the best players from the rest of the teams. There was no contest held from 1943-49, but the game returned in 1950 with the American and National Conference teams squaring off. The format switched to East vs. West in 1953 and continued through 1969, with the AFL holding a separate All-Star Game beginning in 1960.

After the NFL merger in 1970, the NFC and AFC met annually the Sunday after the Super Bowl until 2009, when the game was moved to the Sunday in between the conference championships and the Super Bowl. The event was held at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum from 1950-71 and, after rotating for a few seasons, the game moved to Aloha Stadium in Hawaii, where it stayed from 1979-2015, except for 2009 (Sun Life Stadium in Miami) and 2014 (University of Phoenix Stadium).

The Pro Bowl changed formats from 2013-15, when legends such as Jerry Rice, Michael Irvin, Cris Carter, and Deion Sanders were named captains and selected teams regardless of conference. The game returned to the AFC-NFC format and moved to Camping World Stadium in Orlando from 2016-19.

Even though fans can choose their favorite players online, their votes are not the only ones that count. The vote breakdown is split evenly between fans, current players, and coaches, with each group counting for one-third in the selection process. Illustrating this point is the fact the four players, Jets rookie tackle Mekhi Becton, Texans inside linebacker Zach Cunningham, Bills safety Jordan Poyer and Colts rookie kicker Rodrigo Blankenship, led the fan vote at their respective positions but did not make the final selection.

Here is the breakdown of the Pro Bowl rosters, beginning with the AFC (number of selections in parentheses).

 

AFC OFFENSE

QB: Patrick Mahomes (3rd selection), Josh Allen (1st), and Deshaun Watson (3rd). Mahomes earned the most votes with 342,353. The MVP of Super Bowl LIV with the Chiefs leads the NFL with 4,740 yards and is tied for second with 38 touchdowns to just six interceptions. Through Week 15, Allen ranks fourth with 4,000 yards and he is tied for sixth with 30 scoring passes. He led the Bills to their first AFC East title in 25 years with a win over the Broncos. Watson ranks second in passing yards and is tied for eighth in touchdowns as the Texans’ leader. His 4,458 yards and 30 scores are both career highs.

RB: Derrick Henry (2nd), Nick Chubb (2nd), and Josh Jacobs (1st). Henry received the third-most votes with 315,359. He is well on the way to winning his second rushing title with a career-high 1,777 yards through 15 games. Henry is also second in the NFL with 15 touchdowns. He led the Titans to the AFC Championship Game last season after posting 1,540 yards and 16 scores. Chubb ranks seventh with 959 yards and is tied for fourth with 11 touchdowns. Although he is well behind last season’s career-best rushing pace, Chubb has helped the Browns win 10 games for the first time since 2007. Jacobs sits sixth in the league with 976 yards, and he also has 10 scores. Last year’s All-Rookie Team member is the leading offensive catalyst for a Raiders team that is 7-8 so far this season.

FB: Patrick Ricard (2nd) is the lead blocker for an offense that is led by 2019 NFL MVP Lamar Jackson, as well as running backs Gus Edwards and rookie J.K. Dobbins. The Ravens lead the NFL with 177.8 rushing yards per game.

WR: Stefon Diggs (1st), Tyreek Hill (5th), Keenan Allen (4th), and A.J. Brown (1st). Despite going over the 1,000-yard mark for a third straight year, Diggs finally was selected to the Pro Bowl. He leads the league with 111 receptions and ranks fifth with 1,314 yards (both career highs) as Josh Allen’s favorite target for the 11-3 Bills. On the other end of the spectrum, Hill has been named to the Pro Bowl in each of his five seasons. He is second in the NFL with 15 scores and ranks seventh with 1,276 yards for a Kansas City team that has the best record in the league at 14-1. Allen ranks sixth with 100 catches, and he is eight yards shy of his fourth straight 1,000-yard season. Although the Chargers are just 6-9, Allen has been an invaluable asset in the development of rookie quarterback Justin Herbert. Brown is tied for sixth in 10 touchdowns to go along with 60 receptions and 924 yards. He had 51 yards in a Titans loss to the Chiefs in the 2019 AFC Championship Game.

TE: Travis Kelce (6th) and Darren Waller (1st). Kelce has eclipsed 1,000 yards receiving for the fifth straight year. His 1,416 yards leads the league after 15 games and is a single-season record by a tight end (passing the 1,377 George Kittle had in 2018). Kelce also has 105 catches and 11 touchdowns for 14-1 Kansas City. Waller has 98 receptions, 1,079 yards, and eight touchdowns for the Raiders this season. He has 537 yards in his past four games, including 200 in a Week 13 win over the Jets.

Offensive Line: The tackles are Eric Fisher (2nd), Laremy Tunsil (2nd), and Orlando Brown Jr. (2nd). Fisher was the first overall pick of the 2013 NFL Draft, and he is a veteran presence on a Chiefs offense that leads the league with 319 passing yards per game. Tunsil was a first-round pick of the Dolphins in 2016, and he was traded to the Texans before the 2019 season. Houston ranks second in the NFL with 297 passing yards (although they are tied for second-worst in rushing offense). Brown, the son of former Browns and Ravens tackle, Orlando Brown Sr., has helped create holes for Baltimore’s league-leading rushing attack. However, the team has a league-worst 186.5 passing yards per game.

The guards are Joel Bitonio (3rd), Quenton Nelson (3rd), and David DeCastro (6th), and the centers are Maurkice Pouncey (9th) and Ryan Kelly (2nd). Bitonio is a seven-year veteran whose specialty is opening lanes for Nick Chubb, Kareem Hunt, and the league’s fourth-best running game in Cleveland (145.5 yards per game). Nelson, the sixth overall pick in 2018, is a huge presence on the Colts’ offensive line. Kelly is a veteran leader for an Indianapolis offense that is led by quarterback Philip Rivers, wide receiver T.Y. Hilton and rookie running back Jonathan Taylor. DeCastro and Pouncey have been the best at their positions for the better part of a decade, and they are the keys to success for Ben Roethlisberger and a Steelers’ offense that started the season 11-0.

 

AFC DEFENSE

DE: Joey Bosa (3rd), Myles Garrett (2nd), and Frank Clark (2nd). Bosa has 7½ sacks in 2020 and 47½ overall in five seasons. He is the leader of a Chargers squad that is ranked ninth in passing defense, but he missed time this season with a concussion. Garrett is seventh in the NFL with 12 sacks, and he has 42½ in four seasons. The top pick in the 2017 NFL Draft has gone from swinging his helmet at Mason Rudolph last year to being Cleveland’s nominee for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award in 2020. Clark was traded from the Seahawks to the Chiefs during the 2019 NFL Draft, and he has made the Pro Bowl in both seasons with Kansas City. He has six sacks for a unit that is coming off a win in Super Bowl LIV.

DT: Cameron Heyward (4th), Chris Jones (2nd), and Calais Campbell (6th). Heyward has spent his entire 10-year career with Pittsburgh, amassing 58 sacks. The Steelers ran second in the NFL against the pass, allowing just 196 yards per game, and they are also eighth against the run. Jones has 7½ sacks this season and 40½ in his five-year career. He made one stop and knocked down three passes in a 31-20 win over the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV. Campbell spent his first 12 seasons as a defensive end with the Cardinals and Jaguars before converting to tackle with the Ravens in 2020. Baltimore is living out the old mantra of winning by running the ball and stopping the run. The Ravens have the best rushing offense in the NFL and are ninth against the run on defense.

OLB: Bradley Chubb (1st), T. J. Watt (3rd), and Matthew Judon (2nd). Chubb returned after missing 12 games in 2019 with a torn ACL to post 7½ sacks and lead a Broncos defense that ranks 12th against the pass. The North Carolina State Product had 12 sacks and was a member of the All-Rookie Team in 2018. Watt leads the NFL and has set a career-high this season with 15 sacks, and he has 49½ so far in four years with the Steelers. The 2017 All-Rookie Team member is a leader of a new Steel Curtain defense that is second in the league against the pass and eighth against the run. Judon has totaled six sacks this season and 34½ in his five-year career. He is a versatile defender with a Ravens unit that is the ninth-best against the run.

ILB: Darius Leonard (2nd) and Tremaine Edmunds (2nd). Leonard is a do-everything defender who ranks 10th in the NFL with 122 tackles to go along with two sacks, two forced fumbles, and two fumble recoveries. The 2018 Defensive Rookie of the Year is a leader on a Colts team that is 10-5 in 2020. Edmunds has had at least 100 sacks in all three of his professional seasons, including 105 with the Bills this year. Buffalo ranks seventh against the pass.

CB: Xavien Howard (2nd), Tre'Davious White (2nd), Stephon Gilmore (4th), and Marlon Humphrey (2nd). Howard leads the league with both nine interceptions and 19 passes defensed. He has 21 picks in five seasons and he is part of a team that allows a conference 18.8 points per game. White has three interceptions in 2020 and 15 overall in four seasons with the Bills. He also made 55 tackles for a Buffalo team that ranks seventh against the pass. Gilmore has been selected to the Pro Bowl in each of the past three seasons. Despite being on the injured list with a partially torn quad, he is a member of the Patriots’ fourth-best pass defense. Humphrey has career highs with 81 tackles and an NFL-high eight forced fumbles in 2020. He has started 14 games for a Baltimore defense that ranks ninth against the run.

Safeties: Minkah Fitzpatrick (2nd) and Justin Simmons (1st) are on the free safeties and Tyrann Mathieu (2nd) is on the strong side. Fitzpatrick is tied for fifth with four interceptions, and he has 11 overall in three seasons with the Dolphins and Steelers. He also posted 74 tackles and 10 passes defensed for Pittsburgh's second-stingiest passing defense. Simmons has exactly 93 tackles and four interceptions for the second straight year. The Broncos are 12th against the pass this season. Mathieu is third in the NFL with six interceptions, and he has 23 in his eight-year career. The “Honey Badger” also has 62 tackles and nine passes defensed with the defending champion Chiefs.

 

AFC SPECIAL TEAMS

ST: Jake Bailey (1st), Justin Tucker (4th), Andre Roberts (3rd), Matthew Slater (9th), and Morgan Cox (4th). Bailey leads the NFL with a 46.1-yard net average and is fourth with a 48.7 overall average for the Patriots. Tucker is the all-time NFL leader with a 90.6 percent success rate on field goals. The Super Bowl XLVII champion totaled at least 100 points in each of his first nine seasons and his 1,215 overall with the Ravens. Roberts ranks second in the league with 912 kickoff return yards and is fourth with 261 on punt returns this season with the Bills. He led the NFL with 1,174 kickoff return yards as a member of the Jets in 2018. Slater is the most-decorated special teams player with nine Pro Bowl and two All-Pro selections. He also has won three championships with the Patriots during his 13-year career. Cox has played 164 games in 11 seasons as a long snapper with the Ravens. The member of the Super Bowl XLVII champion Ravens team missed nine games with a torn ACL during the 2014 season.

NFC OFFENSE

QB: Aaron Rodgers (9th selection), Russell Wilson (7th), and Kyler Murray (1st). Rodgers leads the NFL with 44 touchdown passes, the third time he has eclipsed that mark in his career. He ranks fifth with 4,059 yards and he has thrown just five interceptions. Rodgers has the Packers in the top spot in the conference through 15 games. Wilson was second to Mahomes in total votes with 335,156. He is tied for second with Mahomes behind Rodgers with 38 scoring passes and he ranks seventh with 4,031 yards. Wilson led the Seahawks over the Rams in Week 16, allowing Seattle to clinch the NFC West title. Murray has 3,884 yards and 26 touchdowns passing, along with 816 yards and 11 scores rushing (tied for fourth in the league). The top pick in the 2019 NFL Draft has Arizona (8-7) in the thick of the NFC playoff picture.

RB: Dalvin Cook (2nd) ranks second in the NFL with 1,484 yards, and he is tied for the league lead with 15 touchdowns. Although he is having a career year, the Vikings are just 6-8 and two games out of a playoff spot in the NFC. Alvin Kamara (4th) has made the playoffs in each of his four seasons. The 2017 Offensive Rookie of the Year has 777 yards and 10 touchdowns rushing, as well as 739 yards and five scores receiving for the playoff-bound Saints. Aaron Jones (1st) ranks fourth in the league with 968 yards to go along with eight touchdowns for the NFC-leading Packers. He is still behind last year’s totals when he had 1,084 yards and a league-high 16 scores.

FB: Kyle Juszczyk (5th) has been selected to the Pro Bowl in all four years he has been with the 49ers, as well as 2016 with the Ravens, The injury-riddled 49ers rank 13th in the league with 120.2 yards per game, and Juszczyk has contributed four touchdowns receiving and two rushing.

WR: Davante Adams (4th), DeAndre Hopkins (5th), DK Metcalf (1st), and Justin Jefferson (1st). Adams leads the NFL with 17 touchdowns and he is third with 1,328 yards. He also leads the league with 102.2 yards per game for the 12-3 Packers. Hopkins ranks second with 1,372 receiving yards, and this season is the sixth time he has reached the 1,000-yard mark. In his first year with the Cardinals, Hopkins has 103 receptions. Metcalf ranks sixth with 1,282 yards to go along with 80 catches and 10 touchdowns. The muscular second-year player has five 100-yard games for the Seahawks this season. Jefferson ranks eighth in the NFL with 1,267 yards. The 2020 first-round pick out of LSU has joined with Adam Thielen to create a formidable receiving tandem for Kirk Cousins and the Vikings.

TE: T.J. Hockenson (1st) and Evan Engram (1st). This has been a down year for tight ends in the NFC, with usual Pro Bowlers George Kittle and Zach Ertz spending considerable time on injured reserve, opening up the position to a pair of newcomers. Hockenson is second on the Lions behind Marvin Jones with 64 catches, 698 yards, and six touchdowns. Despite dropping nine passes and only posting one score this season, Engram leads the Giants with 61 receptions and ranks second with 637 yards.

Offensive Line: The tackles are David Bakhtiari (3rd), Trent Williams (8th), and Terron Armstead (3rd). The Packers are just ninth in passing yards and Bakhtiari protects Aaron Rodgers’ blindside. As a result, he has thrown just five interceptions. Williams was one of the best tackles in the NFL over the past decade, but he had a falling out with Washington after team doctors misdiagnosed a cancerous growth on his head. He was traded to San Francisco during the 2020 NFL Draft, and he has been a force for a 49ers passing offense that ranks 11th in the league despite starting quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo being injured for most of the year. Armstead has been protecting Drew Brees for eight years and, although Brees was injured this season, the Saints’ offense can still score in bunches.

The guards are Brandon Scherff (4th), Elgton Jenkins (1st), and Andrus Peat (3rd), and the centers are Jason Kelce (4th) and Frank Ragnow (1st). Although both Washington’s passing and rushing totals are in the bottom third of the league, Scherff has been a steady presence and has helped in the development of rookie running back Antonio Gibson. Jenkins is only in his second season, but he has become an integral part of a Packers running game that ranks seventh in the NFL. Peat joins Armstead as a star on a New Orleans offensive line that creates running lanes for Alvin Kamara and Latavius Murray. The Saints are sixth in the league in rushing offense. The Kelce brothers will once again be on opposite sides in the Pro Bowl. Jason Kelce has been a stalwart on the Eagles’ offensive line for a decade. Philadelphia ranks ninth in rushing offense, and now Kelce gets to block for dynamic rookie quarterback Jalen Hurts. Ragnow is the center for a Lions’ passing offense that ranks seventh in the NFL with quarterback Matthew Stafford at the helm. The virtual Pro Bowl setting helps Ragnow, who might be missing significant time with a fractured throat.

NFC DEFENSE

DE: Cameron Jordan (6th), Brandon Graham (1st), and Chase Young (1st). Jordan has 7½ sacks this season and ranks second in Saints history 94½ over his 10-year career. His leadership and determination are a big reason why New Orleans is fourth in the NFL against the run and sixth in pass defense. Graham has 58 sacks in an 11-year career spent entirely with the Eagles. He had two tackles, a sack, and a forced fumble in a win over the Patriots in Super Bowl LII. While Graham had to wait more than a decade for his first Pro Bowl selection, Young earned the honor in his rookie season. The second overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft has 6½ sacks for a Washington defense that is third-best against the pass.

DT: Aaron Donald (7th), Fletcher Cox (6th), and Grady Jarrett (2nd). Donald is the most decorated defensive player of the past decade. He has made the Pro Bowl in each of his seven seasons, was the Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2014, and earned back-to-back Defensive Player of the Year honors in 2017-18. Donald is second with 13½ sacks this season, and he is second in franchise history with 85½. Thanks to his relentless pursuit of the ball, the Rams are the best in the NFL against the pass, allowing just 192 yards per game, and they rank third against the run. Cox has 6½ sacks in 2020 and 54½ in nine seasons. He made 11 tackles during the 2017 playoffs and had one stop in a Super Bowl LII victory. Jarrett has 25½ sacks in his six-year career, and he is part of a Falcons defense that is seventh against the run.

OLB: Za’Darius Smith (2nd), Khalil Mack (6th), and Jason Pierre-Paul (3rd). One half of the “Smith Brothers” along with Preston, Za’Darius is tied for fourth in the NFL with 12½ sacks this season and has 26 overall in two years with the Packers. Green Bay ranks eighth in the league against the pass and is the top seed in the NFC with a 12-3 record. Mack was a member of the All-Rookie Team in 2014 and has been a Pro Bowler every season since. The 2016 Defensive Player of the Year has eight sacks for a Bears team that is 8-7 and fighting for a playoff spot in the NFC. Pierre-Paul had 58½ sacks in his first eight seasons with the Giants and has 30½ in three campaigns with the Buccaneers, including a ninth-best 9½ in 2020. The converted defensive end is a veteran leader on a Tampa Bay team that is 10-5 and allows an NFL-low 77.5 rushing yards per game.

ILB: Bobby Wagner (7th) and Fred Warner (1st). Wagner is tied for seventh in the NFL with 132 tackles. He has made 1,207 stops overall, including 100 or more in each of his nine seasons and he has led the league twice. Warner is finally being recognized after posting at least 100 tackles for the third straight season (115 in 2020). He had 14 tackles in a Week 16 win against the Cardinals, including several key stops on Arizona’s final drive.

CB: Jalen Ramsey (4th), Jaire Alexander (1st), Marshon Lattimore (3rd), and James Bradberry (1st). Ramsey was a member of the All-Rookie Team with the Jaguars in 2016, and he has been selected to the Pro Bowler in each of the next four years. He has 39 tackles for a Rams defense that is the best in the league against the pass. Alexander was a 2018 All-Rookie Team member who has 48 tackles and 12 passes defensed for the Packers, who rank eighth in the NFL in passing defense. Lattimore was a Pro Bowler and the Defensive Rookie of the Year after picking off five passes in 2017. He has 62 tackles and the Saints rank sixth against the pass this season. After four years with the Panthers, Bradberry was selected to the Pro Bowl in his first season with the Giants. He has 50 tackles and 17 passes defense for a New York squad that ranks 11th in the NFL against the run.

Safeties: Qunadre Diggs (1st) is the free safety with Budda Baker (3rd) and Jamal Adams (3rd) on the strong side. Diggs ranks fourth in the NFL with five interceptions, and he also has 58 tackles and 10 passes defensed in his first full season with Seattle. He is an underrated star on a Seahawks defense that is fifth against the run. Baker went over 100 tackles for the third time in four years and he had his first two career interceptions in 2020. The 2017 All-Rookie Team member is a valuable starter on a Cardinals team that is one of the NFL’s top 10 against the pass. Adams has 80 tackles in his first season with the Seahawks, and he set a single-season NFL record for sacks by a defensive back with 9½ in 2020. The 2017 All-Rookie Team member had 12 sacks and 273 tackles in his first three seasons with the Jets.

 

NFC SPECIAL TEAMS

ST: Jack Fox (1st), Younghoe Koo (1st), Cordarrelle Patterson (4th), Nick Bellore (1st), and Tyler Ott (1st). Fox is a Lions rookie who ranks second behind Jake Bailey with a 46.1-yard net average and third in gross average at 49.1. Koo leads the NFL with 35 field goals and he ranks third with 135 points for the Falcons in 2020. Patterson has led the NFL in kick return yards in each of the past two seasons with the Bears, 825 in 2019 and 964 so far this year. He had two 1,000-yard seasons with the Vikings (2013 and ’16), and he was a member of the Patriots when they beat the Rams in Super Bowl LIII. Bellore began his career by playing four years with the Jets, then two each with the 49ers and Lions before playing the past two with the Seahawks. He has 201 tackles in 10 seasons, including 83 as a starting linebacker with San Francisco in 2016. Ott has been Seattle’s long snapper for each of the past four seasons. An undrafted graduate of Harvard, he has also appeared in five playoff games with the Seahawks.

PRO BOWL SNUBS

As with any other selection process, great players were left out of the Pro Bowl. Among the players who were snubbed include quarterback Tom Brady, who ranks fourth with both 4,234 yards and 36 touchdowns in his first season with the Buccaneers after spending the past 20 with the Patriots. Other passers who merit consideration include Justin Herbert, who recently set the NFL rookie record with 28 touchdowns for the Chargers, and Ryan Tannehill, who has 32 scoring passes and just seven interceptions with the Titans. Jaguars rookie James Robinson ranks third in the league with 1,070 rushing yards to go along with seven touchdowns. Calvin Ridley has nine scores and is fourth in the NFL with 1,322 receiving yards for the Falcons, and tight end Robert Tonyan ranks second with 50 catches and 10 touchdowns for the NFC-leading Packers. Wyatt Teller joins with Joel Bitonio in Cleveland to form arguably the best starting guard tandem in the league.

On the defensive side of the ball, Saints defensive end Trey Hendrickson is tied for fourth in the NFL with 12½ sacks and nose tackle Quinnen Williams has seven sacks and 55 tackles in his second year with the Jets. Among linebackers, one of the biggest snubs is Shaquil Barrett, who went from a league-leading 19½ sacks with the Buccaneers last year to eight in 2020. His teammate, Devin White, was edged out by Fred Warner in the overall voting. White is tied for fourth in the NFL with 140 tackles, and he also has nine sacks for Tampa Bay. Zach Cunningham ranks second in the league with 151 with the Texans. In the secondary, J.C. Jackson has originally left off the Pro Bowl ballot entirely, despite leading the league in interceptions in late November. He now ranks second with eight for the Patriots. Finally, Jordan Poyer has 117 tackles, 14 passes defensed, and two interceptions for the Bills.

Writer

Writer

- By: Kevin Rakas

Brandon Brooks, Rick Lovato Among Five Eagles Pro Bowl Selections

Brandon Brooks, Rick Lovato Among Five Eagles Pro Bowl Selections

 
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Even in a down season by our recent standards, the Eagles will still be represented well in the 2019 Pro Bowl. Zach Ertz, Brandon Brooks, Jason Kelce, Fletcher Cox, and Rick Lovato were all voted into the game. Out of the five, Ertz is the only one who will not start. Unfortunately for the NFL’s reception leader among tight ends, he is in the same conference as third-year superstar 49ers tight end George Kittle.


Brandon Brooks

A PFF-darling, Brandon Brooks has also gained recognition from NFL fans for his top-shelf play all season. It was less than 12 months ago when the 340-pound behemoth tore his Achilles tendon in the divisional round of the 2018 playoffs. Eight months after the devastating injury, he suited up for the Eagles in Week One, playing 73% of snaps. His first week back along with Week 12’s matchup with Seattle were the only two games this year in which Brooks did not play every snap. Philadelphia made sure to reward him handsomely, inking him to a 4-year 54.2 million dollar extension five weeks ago.

Fletcher Cox

The Pro Bowl is a popularity contest, and Fletcher Cox was a beneficiary of that fact. Cox remains a very good player by all means, but he hasn’t been the same destructive force that he’s been over the past few years. He began the season dealing with a nagging foot injury stemming from the same playoff game that Brooks was hurt in, but he’s gotten healthier and better as the year has gone along. For the year, Cox has just 3.5 sacks (his lowest total since his second season if he finishes with the same total) and 37 tackles. He has also forced two fumbles. Hopefully, Cox can have a late-season surge similar to last year’s when he recorded 6.5 sacks over the final five weeks. 

Zach Ertz

Madden NFL 20 may not give him the respect he deserves, but at least the fans do. Obviously, Ertz wasn’t going to match the same lofty totals that we saw from him last season, but he’s done a heckuva job keeping up his productivity. Among tight ends, Ertz’s 84 catches ranks second (Kelce, 86) and his 888 yards ranks third (Kelce, Waller). Ertz has also been subjected to much more defensive attention than last year due to him being really the only reliable option for Carson Wentz. It’s funny thinking about how several Eagles fans wanted Dallas Goedert to be the main man so the Eagles wouldn’t have to pay Ertz. Goedert is currently averaging less than 35 receiving yards per game.

Jason Kelce

Ranking first among all centers in snaps played, Kelce has allowed just one sack on the season. He’s proven his magical 2017 season wasn’t an outlier, making first-team All-Pro again in 2018 and now has a shot at it for a third straight year. Missing the Pro Bowl in 2017 & 2018, Kelce has finally reached the point where name recognition can get him into the game even if his play falls off in the coming years.

Rick Lovato

Eagles fans must’ve showed out for this one because does anyone actually have an idea of who the “best” long snappers in the league are? Regardless, with the introduction of long snappers into the Pro Bowl ballot this season, Lovato becomes the first NFC long snapper to be voted into the NFL’s all-star game. Impressive stuff.

Jake Elliott Snubbed?

Elliott didn’t make the Pro Bowl in favor of New Orleans’ Will Lutz, and while this could be considered a snub, I think it’s fine having Lutz in there. Elliott’s FG percentage is slightly higher (90.5 to 88.6), but Elliott has attempted just 21 kicks compared to Lutz’s 35. Lutz is also 37/38 on extra points compared to Elliott’s 29/31. Both are having impressive seasons, and you can’t go wrong either way.

-By: Micah Jimoh

Writer/Interviewer

Writer/Interviewer