football
Talking about college and professional football daily. Chances are we hate your team.
Conference Championship Recap: Winter Comes for Thee
I absolutely love Conference Championship Sunday; as I have said before, the final round before the championship round is always spectacular. The NBA and the NHL have the Conference Finals, MLB has the League Championship Series, and when it comes to the NFL, it's the Conference Championship, with both games taking place on the last Sunday in January. The stakes are simple: the winner of each Conference Championship will be in the big one, Super Bowl LX.
By Clyde E. Dawkins2 months ago in Unbalanced
Bills Hire Joe Brady: Comfort Over Courage
The Buffalo Bills’ decision to promote Joe Brady to head coach is one of the most polarizing moves of the 2026 NFL coaching carousel — not because Brady is unqualified to coach offense, but because of what this hire says about how the organization evaluated its own failures.
By Logan M. Snyder2 months ago in Unbalanced
Ravens Hire Jesse Minter: Continuity or Leap of Faith?
The Baltimore Ravens made one of the boldest and most intriguing moves in the 2026 NFL coaching carousel by hiring Jesse Minter, a first-time head coach with a purely defensive background. For fans and analysts alike, this hire immediately raises eyebrows. The team just parted ways with John Harbaugh, a Super Bowl-winning coach with an excellent record, citing a lack of recent playoff success as the reason. Meanwhile, the Ravens have handed the reins to someone with zero head coaching experience at any level in the NFL and a résumé entirely limited to the defensive side of the ball.
By Logan M. Snyder2 months ago in Unbalanced
Falcons Hire Kevin Stefanski: Stability or Another Reset?
Since Arthur Blank became owner of the Atlanta Falcons, the organization has struggled to find lasting stability on the sideline. In that span, Atlanta has cycled through six head coaches, with Mike Smith and Dan Quinn standing as the only two who produced sustained success. Everyone else has come and gone quickly, often before a roster or philosophy had time to fully take shape.
By Logan M. Snyder2 months ago in Unbalanced
Mike McCarthy and the Steelers: Stability Over Ceiling
The Pittsburgh Steelers’ decision to hire Mike McCarthy is one of the most polarizing moves of the 2026 NFL coaching cycle, not because McCarthy lacks credentials, but because his résumé forces an uncomfortable question: what exactly are the Steelers trying to be?
By Logan M. Snyder2 months ago in Unbalanced
Jeff Hafley and the Dolphins: A Discipline-First Reset
The Miami Dolphins’ decision to hire Jeff Hafley as their head coach is less about immediate results and more about signaling a structural reset. This is a team that has chased “quick fixes” at quarterback for several years, only to find itself perpetually underperforming despite high-end talent on both sides of the ball. Hafley’s hire signals a pivot: a move toward discipline, accountability, and a potential rebuild, rather than an attempt to squeeze another win-now season out of a roster that has plateaued.
By Logan M. Snyder2 months ago in Unbalanced
Sherrone Moore proclaims innocence in court hearing, wants stalking and home invasion charges dropped
Sherrone Moore is facing charges he wants dropped. Home invasion is among them. In this Title IX case, the disgraced University of Michigan head coach got caught up in a web of trouble. His lawyer, Ellen Michaels
By Skyler Saunders2 months ago in Unbalanced
From Chaos to Contender at the Right Time
The New York Giants’ decision to hire John Harbaugh may not have generated the loudest headlines of the offseason, but it might end up being one of the most consequential moves any franchise made. This is not a gamble on upside or a bet on novelty. It is a calculated investment in stability, culture, and long-term competitiveness—three things the Giants have lacked since their last Super Bowl era.
By Logan M. Snyder2 months ago in Unbalanced
John Jay Wrestling v Arlington
John Jay Splits Double Meet Click image for photos v Arlington and Ketchum. Scroll to end for photos versus Somers On Thursday December 12, John Jay welcomed Ketchum, Eastchester and Clarkstown North to the high school. Two matches for the price of one, the Wolves split the day.
By Rich Monetti2 months ago in Unbalanced
Divisional Playoff Recap: Josh Allen is a Choke Artist, Stop Pretending He's Not
As long as I can remember, I've always really loved the Divisional Playoff. The Divisional Playoff was originally the opening round of the merged NFL's playoffs, officially born in the same year that the merger happened: 1970. Since 1978, the Divisional Playoff has been the second round, and it's the round where the teams on bye are introduced. In addition, the Divisional Playoff serves as the final week to feature Saturday games, and also kicks off the "set bracket" portion of the playoffs.
By Clyde E. Dawkins2 months ago in Unbalanced
Rule Changes in CFL Football
Wow, practically every governing body for every sport in the world has altered rules to make that sport better, faster, more exciting, etc. That is, with maybe the exception of soccer, which is so mired in what is thought of as necessary tradition that it will never move into the 21st century or beyond. Volleyball, badminton, baseball, hockey, NFL football, basketball, curling and so many more have all made changes to rules that served to improve the games for participants and officials but especially for spectators of the game. Even chess has evolved versions of its game to include speed chess (blitz chess) and matches including multiple opponents and combinations of the two and resulting in games lasting less than one minute.
By John Oliver Smith3 months ago in Unbalanced
Wild Card Weekend Recap: What Happens Now?. Top Story - January 2026.
I think I figured out why I love Wild Card Weekend so much. It's because it's the first playoff anything of the calendar year. The NFL season starts in the fall, and once upon a time, the champion was crowned either on or slightly before New Year's. The evolution of the NFL schedule has resulted in the playoffs starting just into the New Year, and currently, the final week of the season falls on the first weekend of the New Year, with Wild Card Weekend coming a week after that. So yes, chronologically, the NFL's Wild Card Weekend serves as the first playoff anything of the calendar year.
By Clyde E. Dawkins3 months ago in Unbalanced












