Tyrann Mathieu reacts to Jarvis Landry joining him on the Saints

Tyrann Mathieu reacts to his former LSU football teammate Jarvis Landry joining the New Orleans Saints.

One former LSU football star welcomes another to the New Orleans Saints, as Tyrann Mathieu could not be happier to reunite with his college teammate Jarvis Landry in the NFC South.

Mathieu and Landry were college teammates on the 2011 SEC Champion and national runner-up LSU team. The Honey Badger would make his way to the NFL two years later with the Arizona Cardinals, while Landry would be taken by the Miami Dolphins in the 2014 NFL Draft. Over a decade later, these two former Bayou Bengal greats get to play in their home state once again.

Jordan Schultz was the first to break the news of Landry signing with the Saints.

In a matter of minutes, Mathieu tweeted out to Landry to congratulate him about the move.

Landry responded to Mathieu’s tweet and cannot wait for what is in store this season.

Tyrann Mathieu is pumped that Jarvis Landry is joining the New Orleans Saints

Though they star on opposite sides of the ball, Mathieu and Landry have flourished in their NFL careers up to this point. Mathieu has been the same defensive back dynamo he was during his unforgettable sophomore season in 2011 at LSU. Landry has quietly been one of the best possession receivers in the NFL for the last half-decade or so. He is a five-time Pro Bowl player.

As for what are reasonable expectations for the 2022 Saints, they can challenge the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the division and push for an NFC Wild Card spot. They should be better than the rebuilding Atlanta Falcons and Carolina Panthers. However, the Saints have a new head coach in Dennis Allen taking over for Sean Payton, as well as Jameis Winston in year two post-Drew Brees.

The Saints narrowly missed the postseason a year ago, so one would think they will be in the mix heading into the final weeks of the upcoming season. While they are not a serious threat to come out of the NFC, a healthy Saints team has the ability to hang with anyone in the conference. By adding veteran playmakers in Mathieu and now Landry, the Saints have gotten very interesting.

With Landry still on the good side of 30, he could be a product player for years in New Orleans.



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Micah Parsons’ quote about 2022 schedule is exactly what Cowboys need

How Micah Parsons reacted to the Dallas Cowboys’ 2022 NFL schedule release is exactly the type of energy this contending NFC team needs to fully embrace this season.

Drawing the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Cincinnati Bengals right out of the gate could be frightening for most players, but Dallas Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons isn’t most players.

Parsons spoke with Cowboys legend Michael Irvin about Dallas’ 2022 regular season schedule over the air on The NFL Network Thursday night. Though both games are at home, including Sunday Night Football in Week 1 vs. Tampa Bay, they are against teams that have been to the Super Bowl in the last two years. Parsons is not backing away from either of these challenges.

“Seeing, Tampa Bay and Cincinnati back to back, that was kinda like the first thing that I saw,” said Parsons. “Bengals in it last year, Super Bowl contender, obviously. Tom Brady and the Buccaneers are always Super Bowl contenders.”

“It’s a testament to see where our team’s at and where we stand at. And I think that’s a great start to [play against] those two Super Bowl teams, Super Bowl-type teams will be big ‘W’s for the Cowboys.”

If Dallas were to go 2-0 vs. these two contending teams, it might be the year for “America’s Team.”

Micah Parsons’ thoughts on Dallas Cowboys schedule should be how team thinks

Dallas may not be the favorite to come out of the NFC this season, but the Cowboys have every reason to think they can repeat in the division and get to the conference title bout. The NFC is down, and the Cowboys must take advantage. If they can beat the Buccaneers at home, that will go a long way towards them being in the mix for the No. 1 seed. Cincinnati could be hungover, too.

He may not play the most important position on the field, but Parsons is absolutely right in taking the early-season scheduling challenges in stride. Dallas should embrace the opportunity of taking on some of the best teams the NFL has to offer right out of the gate, in their building nonetheless. Dallas has not been to the Super Bowl since 1995, so why not try to buck that trend this season?

If the Cowboys ever want to evolve from being merely a glorified hype machine, they need to win big games like these two. It has been a long time since the Cowboys had a player like Parsons, one who can be a galvanizing presence to help shift the culture in a positive direction. Obviously, he cannot do this all on his own, but the Cowboys are certainly way better by having him on the team.

Win or lose, the Cowboys must approach their first two games of the year with Parson’s mindset.

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Miami Dolphins’ 2022 schedule: Early tests will be measuring stick – NFL Nation

MIAMI — The Miami Dolphins‘ 2022 schedule was released along with the rest of the NFL slate Thursday.

The 2022 NFL season will kick off on Thursday, Sept. 8 with the Buffalo Bills vs. the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium. ESPN opens its schedule with Monday Night Football on Sept. 12 featuring the Denver Broncos at the Seattle Seahawks.

The NFL expanded to 17 regular-season games last season. The final regular-season games for the 2022 season will be played Jan. 8, 2023. The playoffs begin Jan. 14 and continue through Super Bowl LVII on Feb. 12 in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what’s in store for the Dolphins:

Schedule

Sept. 11: vs. New England

Sept. 18: at Baltimore

Sept. 25: vs. Buffalo

Sept. 29: at Cincinnati (TNF)

Oct. 9: at N.Y. Jets

Oct. 16: vs. Minnesota

Oct. 23: vs. Pittsburgh (SNF)

Oct. 30: at Detroit

Nov. 6: at Chicago

Nov. 13: vs. Cleveland

Nov. 20: Bye

Nov. 27: vs. Houston

Dec. 4: at San Francisco

Dec. 11: at L.A. Chargers

Dec. 17/18: at Buffalo

Dec. 25: vs. Green Bay

Jan. 1: at New England

Jan. 7/8: vs. N.Y. Jets

Strength of schedule: 21st, .481

Biggest takeaway

The nation will get a good look at the Dolphins. They get two prime-time games and a showdown on Christmas Day with the Green Bay Packers.

It’s also a brutal stretch to start the season with the New England Patriots, Baltimore Ravens, Buffalo Bills, Cincinnati Bengals and Pittsburgh Steelers all on the schedule in the first seven weeks.

Revenge game

Week 3 against the Bills. The Dolphins were swept in embarrassing fashion by Buffalo last season, and this Sept. 25 matchup is their first shot at beating the reigning AFC East champion in what should be a measuring stick for coach Mike McDaniel’s team.

What the oddsmakers think

They have the Dolphins’ win total at 8.5. On paper, there are seven games that Miami should win if it considers itself a playoff contender — if it takes care of business in those games and pulls out a couple of swing games, Miami should clear 8.5.

Bold prediction

The Dolphins will start the season 8-2. That stretch to start the season will be difficult, but it’s also littered with winnable games. If McDaniel’s system works and Miami clicks early, it can start the season on a scorching hot note.

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New York Giants’ 2022 schedule: Only prime-time game is vs. Cowboys – NFL Nation

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New York Giants‘ 2022 schedule was released along with the rest of the NFL slate Thursday.

The 2022 NFL season will kick off on Thursday, Sept. 8 with the Buffalo Bills vs. the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium. ESPN opens its schedule with Monday Night Football on Sept. 12 featuring the Denver Broncos at the Seattle Seahawks.

The NFL expanded to 17 regular-season games last season. The final regular-season games for the 2022 season will be played Jan. 8, 2023. The playoffs begin Jan. 14 and continue through Super Bowl LVII on Feb. 12 in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what’s in store for the Giants:

Schedule

Sept. 11: at Tennessee

Sept. 18: vs. Carolina

Sept. 26: vs. Dallas (MNF)

Oct. 2: vs. Chicago

Oct. 9: at Green Bay in London

Oct. 16: vs. Baltimore

Oct. 23: at Jacksonville

Oct. 30: at Seattle

Nov. 6: Bye

Nov. 13: vs. Houston

Nov. 20: vs. Detroit

Nov. 24: at Dallas (Thanksgiving)

Dec. 4: vs. Washington

Dec. 11: vs. Philadelphia

Dec. 18: at Washington

Dec. 24: at Minnesota

Jan. 1: vs. Indianapolis

Jan. 8: at Philadelphia

Strength of schedule: 29th, .465

Biggest takeaway

The Giants are playing on Thanksgiving Day! It’s only the fourth time they have played on the holiday in the modern era, and the first time against the Dallas Cowboys since a 30-3 loss in 1992. In fact, the Giants haven’t won on Thanksgiving Day since 1982. And a Monday night matchup with the Cowboys on Sept. 26 is circled as the Giants’ only prime-time game this season, their fewest since 2004. Quite the dropoff from the usual three to five prime-time games they were accustomed to playing in recent years.

The Giants face a tough start with the Tennessee Titans (12-5 last season), Dallas (12-5), Green Bay Packers (13-4) and Baltimore Ravens (8-9) among the first six opponents. All will enter training camp with rosters significantly more talented than New York’s. The saving grace might be that only once in their first six games will the Giants face a hostile opposing crowd — in Week 1 against the Titans.

Revenge game

Cowboys at Giants on Monday Night Football in Week 3. Quarterback Daniel Jones and the Giants are looking to get their revenge in prime time. Jones is 0-8 as a starter in prime time, and New York has lost its past 10 night contests dating to 2018, when it beat the San Francisco 49ers and QB Nick Mullens on Monday Night Football. Did we even mention yet that the Giants were swept last season by the Cowboys and have dropped nine of the past 10 meetings against their NFC East rival? This is New York’s chance to prove its doormat days are in the past.

What the oddsmakers think

The oddsmakers have the Giants’ win total at 7, which seems ambitious. This would be a three-win improvement from last season’s 4-13 finish. Is the chance that Jones stays healthy (he hasn’t yet in three seasons) and a new coaching staff really enough to bring the four wins it would take to hit the over?

Bold prediction

The Giants will win twice as many games after the bye as before their break in Week 9. So that’s two wins in their first eight games and four in their final nine. It’s a byproduct of the tough early schedule, the easier post-bye matchups (beginning with home contests against the Houston Texans and Detroit Lions) and the time it takes to get acclimated to a new coaching staff.

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New England Patriots’ 2022 schedule: Four straight prime-time games – NFL Nation

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots‘ 2022 schedule was released along with the rest of the NFL slate Thursday.

The 2022 NFL season will kick off on Thursday, Sept. 8 with the Buffalo Bills vs. the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium. ESPN opens its schedule with Monday Night Football on Sept. 12 featuring the Denver Broncos at the Seattle Seahawks.

The NFL expanded to 17 regular-season games last season. The final regular-season games for the 2022 season will be played Jan. 8, 2023. The playoffs begin Jan. 14 and continue through Super Bowl LVII on Feb. 12 in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what in store for the Patriots:

Schedule

Sept. 11: at Miami

Sept. 18: at Pittsburgh

Sept. 25: vs. Baltimore

Oct. 2: at Green Bay

Oct. 9: vs. Detroit

Oct. 16: at Cleveland

Oct. 24: vs. Chicago (MNF)

Oct. 30: at N.Y. Jets

Nov. 6: vs. Indianapolis

Nov. 13: BYE

Nov. 20: vs. N.Y. Jets

Nov. 24: at Minnesota (TNF)

Dec. 1: vs. Buffalo (TNF)

Dec. 12: at Arizona (MNF)

Dec. 18: at Las Vegas (SNF)

Dec. 24: vs. Cincinnati

Jan. 1: vs. Miami

Jan. 7/8: at Buffalo (TBD)

Strength of schedule: 16th, .498

Biggest takeaway

Four straight prime-time games from Nov. 24 to Dec. 18 — three on the road and one against the defending AFC East champion Bills — shows that the national intrigue surrounding the Patriots remains strong. The final two of those prime-time games — at Arizona and at Las Vegas — sets up a scenario where the Patriots can remain out West for the week as coach Bill Belichick often likes to do. Overall, the team has five prime-time games.

Also, this is the first time the Patriots will open with two straight road games since 2014. The bye is well placed after nine games — directly in the middle of the season.

Revenge game

What will the offense look like Dec. 18 when the Patriots go up against their former coordinator, Josh McDaniels, in a prime-time matchup against the Las Vegas Raiders? The Patriots were hoping that the game would be played later in the season, in part because they wanted to play the Raiders in the preseason and practice with them before the preseason game. If the game was earlier in the season, that would have been tougher to pull off. Now those joint practices will happen.

What the oddsmakers think

The oddsmakers have the Patriots’ win total at 8.5. Belichick’s team needs a few things to happen to hit the over, starting with quarterback Mac Jones making the often-discussed second-year jump. There are big questions at linebacker and cornerback to answer as well, and the offensive coaching staff, where Matt Patricia and Joe Judge — whose primary backgrounds are on defense and special teams, respectively — are taking on lead roles.

Bold prediction

The Patriots will need to beat the Bills in the regular-season finale to secure a playoff berth, and it will be intriguing to see how it unfolds if Buffalo has already solidified its own playoff seeding. The Patriots’ 2021 season ended in embarrassing fashion at Buffalo in a 47-17 playoff loss, and in this scenario, they would have a chance to write a different story a year later.

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Broncos WR Jerry Jeudy arrested in Arapahoe County

Denver Broncos wide receiver Jerry Jeudy was arrested in Arapahoe County on Thursday, May 12 on second-degree criminal tampering charges.

On Thursday, May 12, the day the NFL officially released its NFL schedule, news was broken regarding Denver Broncos wide receiver Jerry Jeudy.

The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s office announced that Jeudy was taken into custody around noon local time, via Ryan O’Halloran of The Denver Post.

Shortly afterwards, the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s office tweeted out that the wide receiver is being charged with second-degree criminal tampering with a domestic violence enhancer, which is a misdemeanor. Jeudy is on a no bond hold, which means he cannot be released until he sees a judge.

Broncos: Jerry Jeudy brought into custody on May 12

As for what the charges mean, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero provided details. The second-degree criminal tampering charge in Colorado means to tamper with someone’s property “with intent to cause injury, inconvenience, or annoyance.” As for the domestic violence enhancer, that is due to Jeudy’s relationship with the accuser.

The team is aware of Jeudy’s arrest and they are gathering more information, per ESPN senior NFL insider Adam Schefter.

Denver selected Jeudy with the 15th-overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft out of Alabama. He played 16 games in his very first season, but he was limited to 10 games in 2021 due to a high ankle sprain suffered in the team’s Week 1 game against the New York Giants.

Through his two seasons with the Broncos, Jeudy caught 90-of-169 targets for 1,323 yards and three touchdowns.

We will continue to keep you posted on this story once more details are made available.



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Vikings, Patriots to play on Thanksgiving in 2022

The NFL schedule release revealed that the Patriots and Vikings have been added to the Thanksgiving Day slate of games in 2022.

With the NFL schedule release revealing what this upcoming season will look like, fans are getting a peek at what the Thanksgiving Day feast of games will look like.

As usual, the Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys are hosting games in the early morning and mid-afternoon slots. But the NFL has played a game of roulette with the primetime matchup, and two new teams have been added to the slate.

More specifically, two teams are making a long-awaited return to football’s special day.

According to Patriots beat writer Karen Guregian, Thanksgiving night will be hosted in Foxborough with the Minnesota Vikings coming to town.

NFL schedule release: Patriots-Vikings rounds our Thanksgiving Day games

It will mark the first time since 2017 that the Vikings are taking part in the Thanksgiving Day action. New England, on the other hand, hasn’t played on Thanksgiving in a decade having last played all the way back in 2012.

Without meaning too much disrespect, the Patriots-Vikings matchup saves the general football public from yet another year of the Saints and Falcons playing each other in the primetime game. Somehow three of the last four Thanksgivings have featured either the Saints and Falcons in the nighttime window with two of those being matchups between the two teams (New Orleans played the Bills last year).

Those already assuming Kirk Cousins and the Vikings will waltz into Gillette Stadium and get handed a loss should know that Minnesota has a 6-2 record in Thanksgiving Day games. The most famous of their showdowns was in 1998 when Randy Moss torched the Dallas Cowboys for three touchdowns, all of which were over 50 yards.

New England, on the other hand, is only 3-2 in Thanksgiving Day games but hasn’t lost since somehow getting blown out by the Detroit Lions back in 2000. Of course, the Patriots most famous Thanksgiving Day highlight was the Mark Sanchez Butt Fumble back in 2012.

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Patriots banking on Year 2 jump from Nelson Agholor, Mac Jones, others – NFL Nation

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots are in the fourth week of their voluntary offseason program, and veteran wide receiver Nelson Agholor already notices a difference for himself.

“Everybody runs certain routes, but the route tree [here] is a little different than what I’ve ran before,” he said. “Now I know it, so I get to put my own spin on how we do things and play fast.

“Whereas a year ago, I was learning, so you do things at a certain learning tempo. You never get to go full speed, because you want to make sure you’re doing it right, so you kind of move with caution. Now I know what it looks like and I get to just put my flavor on it.”

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That flavor — for Agholor and a handful of other Patriots entering their second season in New England — figures to be a critical ingredient if coach Bill Belichick’s squad is to improve on last season’s 10-7 record and embarrassing 47-17 playoff loss to the Buffalo Bills.

The reason is obvious: Unlike last offseason, when the Patriots spent a then-record $163 million in guaranteed money in free agency, Belichick was more conservative this year and is banking on internal improvement from 2021 free agents and draft picks.

Agholor is a signature example of this thinking. He signed for two years, $22 million in March of 2021, and his production (37 receptions, 473 yards, 3 TDs) didn’t match the price tag for a variety of reasons. But he remains optimistic better days are ahead.

“The best part about it, Year 2 in the Patriots’ system is when guys really get going. I feel comfortable, I’m excited to have my best season with the Patriots and show why I’m here,” he said.

Agholor joins fellow returnees Jakobi Meyers (team-high 83 catches for 866 yards, 2 TDs) and Kendrick Bourne (55 for 800, 5 TDs) atop the receiver depth chart, with veteran trade acquisition DeVante Parker and speedy second-round pick Tyquan Thornton completing the top five.

Second-year jumps aren’t guaranteed, and plenty of players serve as reminders that it can go in the opposite direction — receiver N’Keal Harry, cornerback Joejuan Williams, tight end Devin Asiasi, and linebackers Josh Uche, Chase Winovich and Anfernee Jennings are a few who come to mind.

With Agholor as a springboard, here are other players acquired in 2021 who the Patriots need to make a significant second-year jump:

Tight end Jonnu Smith: He signed for four years, $50 million and finished with just 28 receptions for 294 yards and a touchdown last season. He made a significant change in hopes of a rebound, becoming a full-time participant in the voluntary offseason program. He wasn’t in the program last year, in part due to expecting the birth of his daughter, and COVID-19 considerations.

QB Mac Jones: The 15th overall pick finished second in Associated Press Offensive Rookie of the Year voting, so his “jump” slots into a different category — leadership. Jones already seems to be embracing it, and is more comfortable in doing things like opening his home to teammates on the first night of the draft and having a Hibachi chef on hand. Said owner Robert Kraft in late March: “I actually believe [Jones] has a little more edge than we’ve seen. But he’s been respectful.”

Linebacker Cameron McGrone: When the Patriots selected the Michigan standout in the fifth round, they knew he probably wouldn’t play as a rookie as he recovered from a torn left ACL suffered in his final college season. McGrone did return to practice by the end of last season (he wasn’t activated to the roster), and inside linebackers coach Jerod Mayo might have had him on his mind when he was asked on the “Pats from the Past” podcast about fewer three-down linebackers coming out of college. Said Mayo: “We have some guys who can rush and cover, some guys that Pats Nation hasn’t even heard of.”

Linebacker Ronnie Perkins: The third-round pick from Oklahoma (96th overall) didn’t appear in a single game, in part because Matthew Judon and Kyle Van Noy were entrenched atop the outside linebacker depth chart. He was often spotted before games working on pass-rush technique with director of skill development Joe Kim, and now has a clearer path to a role after the team released Van Noy (Chargers) … if he proves he deserves it.

Cornerback Shaun Wade: The Ohio State alum was selected in the fifth round by the Ravens, and the Patriots traded for him at the end of the preseason, giving up a 2022 seventh-round pick and a 2023 fifth-rounder. But the 6-foot-1, 191-pound Wade played in just three games, in part due to injury, but also because of a learning curve after arriving so late. Cornerbacks coach Mike Pellegrino made the point last season that Wade was essentially learning a new language. The Patriots have a notable void at cornerback after J.C. Jackson‘s free-agent departure, and Wade will compete for it.

Linebacker Raekwon McMillan: The veteran was coming on strong in training camp last year before tearing his left ACL and missing the season. Given his injury history, banking on him over the course of a 17-game season comes with notable risk. Last year before the injury, Belichick had said: “I’ve been very impressed with his intelligence, his work ethic. He’s locked in every day.”

Safety Joshuah Bledsoe: A sixth-round pick from Missouri, he arrived in town with an injured wrist and spent most of the year rehabbing before returning to practice late in the season. He never appeared in a game. If healthy, he has a legitimate chance to be part of the team’s future based on some promising behind-the-scenes development.

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Vikings rookie Lewis Cine on being passed up by Bucs: ‘They did me dirty’

Minnesota Vikings rookie safety Lewis Cine was drafted in the first round of the NFL Draft, but it wasn’t by the team he expected: the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

In the NFL Draft, every fallen spot makes the difference: not just in rookie contract salaries, but also, in the potential promise of an NFL future.

Joining a roster led by Tom Brady in what’s believed to be his final NFL season would be historic, especially as a young safety ready to help out a Bucs secondary needing depth. For prospect Lewis Cine, this was his moment to become a Tampa Bay Buccaneer.

Then, the Bucs traded their No. 27 pick for No. 33, saying that the only person they even wanted in the first round was defensive end Logan Hall, the player they chose with the No. 33 pick.

According to Cine, that isn’t accurate: the Bucs told Cine they wanted him at No. 27, then traded that pick away.

“They just did me so dirty,” Cine said, according to Tampa Bay Times reporter Rick Stroud.

Vikings rookie Lewis Cine claps back at Bucs for false promises during NFL Draft

Although this isn’t the first time an NFL team fell through on their draft promise, the Buccaneers have likely recalibrated during the offseason. The team signed free safety Logan Ryan, reuniting him with his former Patriots quarterback, and Mike Edwards is listed second on the Bucs depth chart, according to ESPN. With four free safeties on their roster, the Bucs prioritized defensive end with Jason Pierre Paul remaining unsigned.

Although the Vikings weren’t playoff contenders last season, their luck could change with Cine on their roster. Cine immediately has more opportunity to make an impact: the Georgia product is already listed as the No. 1 free safety on their depth chart, per ESPN.

For Cine’s future as a free safety, passing on him so that he could see more opportunity in Minnesota may have been doing him dirty while inadvertently doing right by his budding career.



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Latest 2022 NFL schedule leaks [Updated]

NFL schedule leaks happen every year ahead of the official NFL schedule release, and we’re keeping track of every single one.

It’s that time of the year, when football is about to go back into quasi-hibernation as teams drift between the frenzy of the offseason and prepping for training camp.

For fans it can feel like being stuck in limbo, but the NFL is dropping the curtain on the first act of this new season by quite literally mapping out how the rest of it will go. The NFL schedule release is the unofficial end of the and the beginning of a new year. Matchups are locked in, the National TV schedule is set, and fans know when and where they will be able to watch their team battle for a Super Bowl. From gamblers licking their chops at what bets can be made during the season to fantasy footballers receiving a major piece of their strategic puzzle, the NFL schedule release is way more interesting than it has any business being.

But it’s the dropping of the curtain on all the chaos we’ve endured thus far in the new year and the table setting for the journey that lies ahead.

NFL Schedule release: Tracking all of the NFL schedule leaks

Note: This post will update once the latest leak trickles through. Any leaks that are verified will be noted as such, as will leaks that end up being debunked. 

Dallas Cowboys will play in Green Bay Week 10 

We thought it might happen last year in the playoffs, which would have been perfect, but Mike McCarthy will make his return to Lambeau Field in November. If you’re trying to do the math, this game won’t line up with the Thanksgiving Day schedule, although how awesome would a Cowboys-Packers game be that day?

NFL Thanksgiving schedule

Aside from the schedule as a whole being released, one thing all NFL fans want to know is which games will be played on Thanksgiving. Football has monopolized the holiday and made pigskin as synonymous with turkey and stuffing.

This year it sounds like the Bengals and Commanders will get in on the early slate fun, while the Bills and Ravens are slotted into the ‘Free Space’ primetime game.



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