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Are the Giants less ‘clown show’ than the Jets? It’s getting harder to tell: Sando’s Pick Six

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Are the Giants less ‘clown show’ than the Jets? It’s getting harder to tell: Sando’s Pick Six

The New York Jets’ roots as a brash and unapologetic upstart, cemented by Joe Namath’s Super Bowl III bravado, differentiated them from the old-guard New York Giants for decades.

When the Jets had bombastic and playful Rex Ryan as their coach, the Giants had stern taskmaster Tom Coughlin.

When the Jets were going all-in on the polarizing Aaron Rodgers, the Giants were hoping the fifth and sixth seasons of nice guy Daniel Jones might turn out differently.

If the Jets aspired to be cryptocurrency, the Giants hoped to be the S&P 500. What’s the difference when both are competitively bankrupt?

The Pick Six column leads this week by examining how the Giants resemble the Jets, in results if not always process. If Tampa Bay’s Baker Mayfield mocking Giants fill-in Tommy DeVito during a 30-7 Buccaneers rout at MetLife Stadium helped drive home the point, great, but the evidence has been accumulating for years. The full Pick Six menu this week:

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• No difference between Jets, Giants?
• Can Eagles threaten Lions atop NFC?
• Great week for Bills, not Chiefs
• Surviving the Will Levis roller coaster
• Should a HOF coach win most of time?
• 2-minute drill: Roman and Lamar

1. What is the difference between the ‘clown show’ Jets and classy Giants again? Do not look for it in the standings.

Daniel Jones’ recent farewell speech and the Giants’ decision to grant the quarterback’s request for his release reflected the latest major failure for an organization with two winning records over its past 12 seasons. But, as reaction after reaction after reaction after reaction noted, this latest failure was handled in a “classy” manner.

The Jets, meanwhile, give off “clown show” vibes even while having a (slightly) better record this season, and a similar record over the past dozen (Giants are 69-120-1, Jets are 66-124).

What’s the difference between the Giants and Jets again?

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“The difference is, the Giants have won championships and have done so most recently (2007, 2011), so they have the most credibility capital to burn,” a coach from another team said. “That is all. They are burning through it.”

If that credibility didn’t run out when DeVito was promoted ahead of Drew Lock, who had been the backup to Jones all season, how about when the Giants fell behind Tampa Bay 23-0 at halftime and 30-0 through three quarters?

What about after the game, when rookie Malik Nabers, who wears jersey No. 1 after the Giants got permission from Hall of Famer Ray Flaherty’s heirs to use the long-retired number, called the team “soft as f—“? Or when star nose tackle Dexter Lawrence conceded the Bucs “beat the s—” out of the Giants?

These quotes could have been coming from the Jets’ locker room just as easily, except the team had a bye amid reports the relationship between Rodgers and owner Woody Johnson was strained.

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While the Jets have chased aging legends in Rodgers and Brett Favre, the Giants were slow to move on from highly drafted homegrown quarterbacks in Eli Manning and Jones. Those are differences, but what played out at the position this past week felt similar.

Johnson, per The Athletic’s Zack Rosenblatt and Dianna Russini, suggested to Jets coaches after four games that the team should bench Rodgers. He fired coach Robert Saleh a week later without consulting general manager Joe Douglas, per the report.

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More recently, the Giants promoted DeVito over $5 million backup Lock as Jones’ replacement, which made zero sense unless DeVito’s popularity among some fans was a factor.

“That move made less sense than anything that has happened in the league this season,” one exec said.

How could a team make such a move? Well …

Giants owner John Mara previously lamented losing star running back Saquon Barkley to the rival Philadelphia Eagles in free agency because, in Mara’s words, Barkley was “the most popular player we have, by far.” To what degree was player popularity a factor in DeVito over Lock?

“It has to be the owner trying to drum up some local support playing off of last year’s success,” an offensive coach said. (The Giants’ defense was primarily responsible for the three victories DeVito started in 2023.)

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If Mara influenced the DeVito decision, it’s bad. If the football people made it on their own, that might be worse.

Seven years ago, then-coach Ben McAdoo benched Manning in favor of Geno Smith when the Giants were 2-9, ending Manning’s streak of 210 consecutive regular-season starts (the third-longest streak in NFL history). Mara fired McAdoo and GM Jerry Reese the day after Smith lost his first start. Manning was reinstated as the starter. Smith never again played for the Giants. He later emerged as a productive starter for Seattle — better than any Giants starter since then, for sure.

Lock might or might not be another Smith, but the next coach or executive who thinks DeVito has a future as a starter will be the first I’ve encountered. The Giants finished Sunday with 245 yards — 10 fewer than Barkley gained on the ground (and 57 fewer than he gained in total) for Philadelphia on Sunday night — against a Tampa Bay defense that had allowed 425 per game over its previous six.

Despite all that, every logical football person would rather work for Mara than for the Jets’ Johnson. As one exec put it, “Mara, I respect. He might make his thoughts known, but I haven’t seen evidence he forces it. I think you could talk to him and make things make sense. Woody and his crew? Who knows? They might just do something on their own. That is scary.”

Even so, the Giants’ winning percentage (.457) since John Mara succeeded his late father, Wellington, as owner during the 2005 season ranks 22nd among win rates for all current owners since each took control. The Jets’ Johnson ranks 23rd with a .430 win rate since purchasing his team in 2000.

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What’s the difference between the Giants and Jets again?

Not as much as the Giants’ two Super Bowl victories this century (with two wild-card teams that got hot) suggest.

Wellington Mara was the owner of record when the team hired Coughlin and traded for Manning on draft day in 2004. The Giants are 50-91-1 (.356) since Coughlin departed. That ranks 30th in the NFL.

“What we are watching (with the Giants) is, Paul Brown passes the Bengals to Mike Brown (in 1991) and all mayhem breaks out,” a veteran coach said.

One difference is that the Giants had Coughlin and Manning for roughly a decade after their ownership was passed to the next generation in 2005. In Cincinnati, those early 1990s Bengals teams were already transitioning away from their Super Bowl coach, Sam Wyche, and their Super Bowl quarterback, Boomer Esiason. They fell off faster.

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The Giants are the ones free-falling now. Only the Jacksonville Jaguars (.338) and Jets (.310) have worse records since Coughlin resigned under pressure following the 2015 season.

What’s the difference between the Giants and Jets again?

The Giants do not have to worry about Mara landing his helicopter on the practice field and summoning their GM to the office for his firing, as Fox’s Jay Glazer reported Johnson did with Douglas last week (see video below at the one-minute mark).

The differences do not show up in how these teams have hired.

Mara and Johnson have combined to hire 13 head coaches (including interim coaches). The only one with a winning record during his tenure was Al Groh, who went 9-7 in his lone season with the Jets (2000).

Mara’s hires have a combined 50-91-1 (.356) record. Based on this, the team should put Coughlin (.531) in its Ring of Honor a second time.

Mara Hire Tenure Record

2022-

17-27-1 (.389)

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2020-21

10-23 (.303)

2018-19

9-23 (.281)

2017

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1-3 (.250)

2016-17

13-15 (.464)

2016-24

50-91-1 (.356)

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*Interim

Johnson’s hires have a combined 171-227 (.430) record — bad, but not as bad as Mara’s hires.

Johnson Hire Tenure Record

2024-

1-5 (.167)

2021-24

20-36 (.357)

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2019-20

9-23 (.281)

2015-18

24-40 (.375)

2009-14

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46-50 (.479)

2006-08

23-25 (.479)

2001-05

39-41 (.488)

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2000

9-7 (.563)

2000-24

171-227 (.430)

*Interim

“It seems like the Jets are in disarray and the Giants are the prideful heirs to a great legacy,” a defensive coach said. “In reality, neither makes a lot of good decisions.”

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Nearly a quarter-century after the Jets were rebuffed by Bill Belichick, only to settle for Groh, rumors persist that the Giants could bring back Belichick, their former defensive coordinator under Bill Parcells. Belichick passed up the Jets over what he called at the time “various uncertainties” regarding ownership shortly before Johnson purchased the team in 2000. There can be no uncertainties about Giants ownership now. It needs help.

2. The Philadelphia Eagles have won their past seven games and seem to be gaining momentum. Can they seriously threaten the Detroit Lions in the NFC?

After watching Barkley and the Eagles dominate the Los Angeles Rams 37-20, NBC’s Cris Collinsworth declared Philadelphia a team that could win it all.

The Athletic’s playoff model agrees, with a caveat. The model sees the Lions as about twice as likely to win the Super Bowl, 21 percent to 11 percent.

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How do NFL insiders see it?

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“One game, head to head, yes, the Eagles could win, but if they played five games, Philly would lose at least three of them, maybe four of them,” an NFC coach whose team faced the Eagles said.

Another assistant from the NFC called the gap between the Lions and Eagles “substantial” even though a single game separates them in the conference standings.

“I don’t know if I trust Philly still,” he said. “There is something about if (Jalen) Hurts gets behind and they have to throw. Now, the defensive turnaround has been enormous for them.”

This was not a consensus view.

“I don’t think the Eagles are far behind because, with Saquon Barkley, they can run it on anybody,” an NFC exec said. “That would be a really good game. I don’t think the gap is as big as some think it is. Vic Fangio’s defense can be a little tricky, but I think they are buying in. They seem to be getting it, making calls, making adjustments.”

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The Lions, Eagles and Packers are the only teams ranked among the NFL’s top 10 in EPA per play on both sides of the ball, led by Detroit (second on offense, third on defense), per TruMedia.

Two execs thought Green Bay was the NFC team most likely to threaten the Lions or Eagles.

“I like Jordan Love,” one of them said. “Something makes him short-circuit still, and that is just a growing pain you are going to have to live with. It’s like some of the stuff Josh Allen went with early on.”

The second exec questioned Minnesota because of Sam Darnold.

“I don’t see anyone else in Detroit’s category,” he said. “I don’t trust Darnold. I would say Green Bay because of their overall talent, and because I trust Matt LaFleur and I trust their playoff performance last year.”

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The table below stacks all NFC teams by percent chance of reaching the playoffs, according to the model.

The Athletic’s playoff model projections: NFC

3. The Kansas City Chiefs won Sunday, but it felt like they lost. The Buffalo Bills did not play, but it felt like they won. Here’s why the Chiefs should be worried.

Bills coach Sean McDermott holds the NFL’s best regular-season record among head coaches (14-2) since an investigative report published Dec. 7, 2023 painted McDermott as an obstacle the organization had to overcome in order to win.

The three-part series by NFL writer Tyler Dunne for his “Go Long” website featured devastating testimonials from anonymous McDermott associates.

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“This job’s too hard to fight from within and that’s what you do there,” one of the sources said. “You’ve got to overcome the head coach.”

McDermott’s intensity and its potential negative effects were something I’d explored earlier last season when suggesting the team needed its coach to find a new gear. The criticisms aligned with the Bills’ late-game struggles in pressure situations, but if we’re going to question McDermott when it appears his team might be on the verge of crumbling, we should appreciate the successes when things appear to be operating smoothly.

Head coach records since Week 14, 2023

Could this season be going much better for the Bills? They are 9-2 and riding a six-game winning streak after handling the Chiefs 30-21 in Week 11. They’ll come out of their bye with a home game against the depleted 5-6 San Francisco 49ers.

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Drama? There seems to be none in Buffalo.

“The coach and GM (Brandon Beane) had the foresight to get rid of the receiver (Stefon Diggs) because they knew it was detrimental to the quarterback and the atmosphere,” a coach from another team said. “All of sudden, they are playing with Curtis Samuel and draft picks and just whatever, and the quarterback is playing good. And then they add Amari Cooper.”

Any Bills fan watching the Chiefs struggle to a 30-27 victory over the Carolina Panthers on Sunday has to like Buffalo’s prospects in a potential playoff rematch.

Against Carolina, Kansas City suffered its 10th-worst defensive EPA performance (-13.2) in 72 regular-season and playoff games since 2021, per TruMedia. The chart below identifies the Carolina game. The Bills’ offense is responsible for five of the Chiefs’ 18 worst defensive EPA games since 2021. Those games appear via blue dots.

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visualization

Buffalo’s offense has averaged 11.3 EPA per game in the six most recent matchups, including playoffs, with Kansas City dating to 2021. Only 12 teams since 2000 have averaged 11.3 or better over a full season. The Bills’ offense has performed better across these six games against Kansas City than it has performed, on average, against the NFL’s other 30 defenses over the same period.

Bills offensive splits, 2021-24

Opponent Chiefs Other 30 teams

Games

6

61

PPG

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27.5

27.2

TD/game

3.5

3.2

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EPA/play

0.16

0.08

EPA/game

11.3

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5

Success gate

47.0%

46.2%

Red zone TD %

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70.0%

63.2%

Turnovers/game

0.5

1.4

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Turnover EPA/game

-2.2

-5.7

The production has remained steady across three Bills offensive coordinators even as the Chiefs’ defense has improved.

We do not yet know whether the Bills and Chiefs will meet again in the playoffs. If they do, the focus should be on what the Chiefs’ defense can do to stop Buffalo from producing even better against Kansas City than it produces against the other 30 teams. That seemed especially true Sunday after the Panthers nearly outscored Kansas City.

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“I don’t see how Buffalo melts down unless they have a ton of injuries,” an exec said. “I’m not sure what the catalyst has been, except that maybe they have been off everybody’s radar long enough, and the offseason did not target them as much, and they are clearly operating better in those conditions than having the spotlight on them.”

4. Titans coach Brian Callahan loved how quarterback Will Levis played Sunday. It was a performance for the ages, in a way.

Will Levis took eight sacks and threw a pick six for the Tennessee Titans against the Houston Texans.

According to Pro Football Reference, which has unofficial sack data since 1960 (sacks became official in 1982), this was the 36th time since then that an NFL quarterback checked both those dubious boxes — at least eight sacks, at least one pick six — in the same game.

Here’s the deal: Levis was already on the list, despite Sunday marking only his 17th career start. He took eight sacks and threw a pick six in a 30-14 defeat to Green Bay in Week 3.

The difference Sunday was that Levis’ Titans won the game. Levis played a positive role in the outcome as well, completing 18 of 24 passes for 278 yards and two touchdowns. But the Titans’ 32-27 victory over the Texans was an outlier among outliers. Starting quarterbacks are now 3-33 (.083) since 1960 when taking eight sacks and having an interception returned for a touchdown.

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Levis is the only quarterback to appear twice on the list. His penchant for taking sacks was already on my radar entering Week 12. I’d been looking for any statistical category for Levis that correlated with Tennessee winning. The answer was clear: Levis’ sack EPA was the key. His ratio of sack EPA in victories versus defeats was the most lopsided through any quarterback’s first 16 starts since 2007, per TruMedia.

That changed Sunday when the Titans lost 10.8 EPA on his sacks but still won the game.

The table below stacks Levis’ starts from best to worst sack EPA. The correlation with winning is stark.

Will Levis’ sack EPA, best to worst

Yr-Wk Opponent Result Levis Sack EPA

2024-4

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W, 31-12

+0.0

2024-6

L, 20-17

+0.0

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2023-12

W, 17-10

-1.1

2023-8

W, 28-23

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-1.7

2023-13

L, 31-28

-1.8

2023-14

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W, 28-27

-2.0

2023-11

L, 34-14

-5.1

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2023-9

L, 20-16

-5.5

2023-10

L, 20-6

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-6.0

2024-10

L, 27-17

-6.0

2023-17

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L, 26-3

-7.5

2024-1

L, 24-17

-7.7

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2024-11

L, 23-13

-7.9

2024-2

L, 24-17

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-8.7

2023-15

L, 19-16

-8.8

2024-12

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W, 32-27

-10.8

2024-3

L, 30-14

-16.2

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Why so many sacks?

“I don’t think he’s naturally instinctive,” an offensive coach who studied quarterbacks in the 2023 draft said. “Bad things happen as a result.”

Callahan, who raised some eyebrows by using the word “dumb” to characterize a Levis fumble against the Jets in his Week 2 postgame news conference, sounded much different Sunday.

“I thought he played for the most part fantastic, particularly in the first half,” Callahan said. “You throw interceptions sometimes. To see him come back and fight was great. But I really was happy with the way he played. He put some great balls down the field. He did some really nice things and he protected the ball well outside the interception. That is what quarterbacking looks like.”

5. Should a Hall of Fame coach have a winning record most of the time?

The 29 coaches already enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame had winning records in 71 percent of their combined seasons.

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No current coach with at least seven qualifying seasons in the role has posted winning records as frequently as the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Mike Tomlin, whose 15 in 17 seasons equates to an 88.2 percent rate (one more victory this season will get him to 88.9 percent).

McDermott, Kansas City’s Andy Reid and Jacksonville’s Doug Pederson have already won or lost enough games for the 2024 season to qualify in their totals. The other coaches in the table below could still have winning or losing records this season, so 2024 was excluded for them.

Current HCs with 7-plus qualifying seasons

Rank Current Coach Winning Seasons % Winning

1

15/17

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88.2%

2

7/8

87.5%

3

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6/7

85.7%

4

21/26

80.8%

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5

13/17

76.5%

6

12/17

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70.6%

7

10/16

62.5%

7

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5/8

62.5%

9

4/7

57.1%

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10

3/7

42.9%

The subject is topical because the Pro Football Hall of Fame plans to announce on Dec. 3 which retired coach will advance from the semifinalist to finalist round, a big step toward enshrinement.

I recently joined eight other members of the Hall of Fame Blue-Ribbon Committee in discussing and voting on the semifinalists: Tom Coughlin, Mike Holmgren, Dan Reeves, Chuck Knox, Marty Schottenheimer, George Seifert and Mike Shanahan among long-time head coaches, plus Clark Shaughnessy (primarily an assistant) and Bill Arnsparger (exclusively an assistant). We do not yet know which coach will advance.

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These are fun candidacies to think through. I lean toward asking the most basic questions. How frequently does a head coach win? How consistently does the coach win when he changes organizations? How about when he changes starting quarterbacks? Does he take his teams to Super Bowls? Has he won a championship? How many?

George Allen, John Madden and Vince Lombardi are the only Hall of Fame coaches to produce winning records at a higher rate than Tomlin has produced them. They combined for 30 winning records in 30 seasons before the salary cap promoted parity.

The table below shows Allen, Madden and Lombardi leading the way among the 29 Hall of Fame coaches. I’ve slotted in the seven longtime head coaches who are Hall semifinalists this year.

Rank Coach Winning Seasons % Winning

1

George Allen

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10/10

100.0%

1

Vince Lombardi

10/10

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100.0%

1

John Madden

10/10

100.0%

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4

George Halas

34/40

85.0%

5

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Tony Dungy

11/13

84.6%

6

Guy Chamberlain

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5/6

83.3%

7

Mike Holmgren

14/17

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82.4%

8

Ray Flaherty

9/11

81.8%

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8

Curly Lambeau

27/33

81.8%

8

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Don Shula

27/33

81.8%

11

Paul Brown

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20/25

80.0%

12

Joe Gibbs

12/16

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75.0%

13

Bill Cowher

11/15

73.3%

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14

George Seifert

8/11

72.7%

15

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M. Schottenheimer

15/21

71.4%

16

Bill Walsh

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7/10

70.0%

17

Tom Landry

20/29

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69.0%

18

Bill Parcells

13/19

68.4%

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19

Jimmy Johnson

6/9

66.7%

19

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Buddy Parker

10/15

66.7%

19

Bud Grant

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12/18

66.7%

19

Steve Owen

16/24

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66.7%

23

Chuck Noll

15/23

65.2%

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24

Hank Stram

11/17

64.7%

25

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Jimmy Conzelman

9/15

60.0%

26

Chuck Knox

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13/22

59.1%

27

Don Coryell

8/14

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57.1%

28

Sid Gillman

10/18

55.6%

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29

Marv Levy

9/17

52.9%

30

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Dan Reeves

12/23

52.2%

31

Fritz Pollard

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1/2

50.0%

31

Tom Flores

6/12

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50.0%

31

Tom Coughlin

10/20

50.0%

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31

Mike Shanahan

10/20

50.0%

35

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Dick Vermeil

7/15

46.7%

36

Weeb Ewbank

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7/20

35.0%

This is only one lens through which to view coaches. In general, the lower a coach resides on that list, the more I think he needs special achievements for enshrinement (example: Marv Levy taking the Buffalo Bills to four consecutive Super Bowls). Dick Vermeil and Weeb Ewbank are the only Hall of Famers with winning records in less than half their seasons as head coaches.

6. Two-minute drill: Harbaugh Bowl is about more than that

While the Monday night game between the Baltimore Ravens and Los Angeles Chargers focuses a spotlight on the Harbaugh brothers, that is not the only storyline.

The game also brings together Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson and his former longtime offensive coordinator, Greg Roman, who now serves in that role with the Chargers.

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While Roman’s offense played a role in Jackson becoming a dual-threat star right away, the way Jackson smiled and paused when asked about his former coordinator during the week played into the idea that change was needed in Baltimore for the quarterback to take another step in his development.

“You have to develop your running quarterback into a passer at some point or you hit a ceiling,” a veteran offensive coach said. “You have to recognize that and make a move when you can, when you think you can hit it.”

Jackson’s production has returned to what it was at his best under Roman, except he’s been more productive as a passer, and less productive as a runner.

Some might have read Jackson’s response as an indictment of his former coordinator, but the situation could be more nuanced than that.

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The relationship between Jackson and the Ravens seemed to deteriorate through the pandemic and what turned into a tense standoff regarding a new contract. Roman left the team in January 2023, when that relationship still seemed strained. The sides worked through those issues over a three-month period before reaching a $260 million contract extension.

Roman wasn’t with the Ravens during that time, so he wasn’t part of whatever healing process took place. All parties have moved on, and all seem to be in a better place than they were the last time Jackson and Roman were together on the Ravens.

If Roman’s offense was holding back Jackson, we might expect Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert to bump up against a schematic ceiling at some point.

“They let Herbert run wild throwing the ball earlier in his career, and it didn’t work,” the offensive coach said. “Now, they have reined him in. Herbert has to take a step back for the good of the organization, and within it, he has to grow and come out the other side. You hope there is enough balance over time.”

• Packers roll: The Green Bay Packers’ 38-10 victory over San Francisco at Lambeau Field was about what should have happened without Brock Purdy, Nick Bosa, Trent Williams or Brandon Aiyuk available to the 49ers. Is there much to read into this outcome, beyond the fact that the 49ers are in trouble?

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“It’s a combination of injuries and then Kyle Shanahan’s late-game management, blowing all those leads earlier in the season,” an exec said. “They look tired, like Manti Te’o was saying before the season. They had a year like this before (in 2020). I want them to do well because I don’t want to see them get another stud in the draft after a down year.”

• Seahawks D: Seattle won while every other NFC West team lost, and its defense continued its recent improvement under first-year coach Mike Macdonald. The Seahawks rank sixth in defensive EPA per play since Week 9, a span of games against all three NFC West opponents. They held Arizona’s Kyler Murray to the ninth-worst statistical game of his 77-start career by EPA per pass play in the 16-6 victory.

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Led by ‘f—ing beast’ Leonard Williams, Seahawks’ D smothers Cardinals for NFC West lead

• On Washington: Will allowing two kick-return touchdowns in the fourth quarter and missing an extra point that would have forced overtime during an inexplicable home defeat to the Dallas Cowboys wind up defining this once-promising Commanders season?

It was a wild way to punctuate a three-game losing streak.

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A 223-yard fourth quarter padded the Commanders’ offensive stat sheet, but that will not spare offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury from continued questions about staying power over the second halves of seasons. Washington finished with negative offensive EPA (-5.7) for a third consecutive game, all defeats, after enduring only one such game in the first nine weeks.

• Better late than never: Dallas, for all its struggles, is the only team to score more than 17 points in the final 9:00 of regulation this season. The Cowboys have done it twice (19 against Baltimore, 24 against Washington).

• Classic Mayfield: Watch this Baker Mayfield postgame interview and laugh while he sounds like a kid trying to convince his parents he didn’t take the car out the night before. How did he keep a straight face?

(Photo of Tommy DeVito: Elsa / Getty Images)

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Brooke Slusser sparks liberal social media meltdown by speaking about SJSU transgender volleyball scandal

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Brooke Slusser sparks liberal social media meltdown by speaking about SJSU transgender volleyball scandal

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Left-wing social media users launched a volley of insults at 23-year-old Brooke Slusser in recent days.

In response, dozens of high-profile women’s rights activists have come to the former San Jose State University volleyball player’s defense.

Slusser has addressed the critics herself in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

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“I would just say people that don’t know my life or my trauma don’t have room to say how good or bad my time at SJSU was. I hope they never have to understand going through something as awful as that,” she said.

She has also acknowledged the responses in a series of TikTok posts, as she has become more active on the platform this week to speak about her alleged experience at SJSU. 

The online hate campaign started after Slusser shared details about living arrangements in the same apartment with transgender volleyball teammate Blaire Fleming while at San Jose State university, in an interview with Fox News Digital. 

During the interview, she said, “You find out you’re just chilling in a bed with a man that you have no idea about… I [was] unknowingly sharing a bed at that time with a man,” and alleged SJSU volleyball coach Todd Kress encouraged her to live in the same apartment as the trans teammate when another group of players were also looking for a final tenant. 

The fallout of the interview has prompted high-profile activists, lawmakers and even an actor to speak out, taking a side behind or against Slusser.

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Many critics echoed the sentiment that “nothing bad” happened to Slusser, despite the fact that the anxiety from the situation ultimately led to her developing an eating disorder and not being able to complete her college degree. 

Former “Glee” actor Kevin McHale even appeared to mock Slusser’s appearance. 

A coalition of “save women’s sports” activists rushed to Slusser’s defense, with OutKick host Riley Gaines, XX-XY Athletics founder Jennifer Sey, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., women’s tennis legend Martina Navratilova and former ESPN star Sage Steele leading the charge to defend Slusser from the pro-trans detractors. 

“Brooke has every right to feel violated. This is a violation of her personal space and boundaries. She was lied to. She would not have agreed to room with or play with a man,” Sey wrote in response to one critic. 

Navratilova wrote in response to that same critic, “Brooke has every right to be mad. Try again with the punishment wish…”

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Slusser finds herself at the center of a sports culture war flashpoint at a time when the conflict over her school’s handling of her transgender former teammate has reached a political impasse. 

‘HORRIBLE’ MOMENTS EXPOSED FOR UNR VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS WHEN THEY WERE ROPED INTO THE SJSU TITLE IX SCANDAL

After the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR) announced at the end of January that an investigation into the university for its handling of a trans athlete and other players concluded that the school violated Title IX, SJSU and the California State University system declined to resolve the violation. 

Instead, SJSU President Cynthia Teniente-Matson announced Friday that the school and the California State University (CSU) system are suing the federal government to challenge the investigation. 

“Because we believe OCR’s findings aren’t grounded in the facts or the law, SJSU and the CSU filed a lawsuit today against the federal government to challenge those findings and prevent the federal government from taking punitive action against the university, including the potential withholding of critical federal funding,” Teniente-Matson said Friday.

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“This is not a step we take lightly. However, we have a responsibility to defend the integrity of our institution and the rule of law, while ensuring that every member of our community is treated fairly and in accordance with the law. Our position is simple: We have followed the law and cannot be punished for doing so.”

The school is also requesting that OCR rescind its findings and close its investigation. 

Teniente-Matson affirmed the university’s commitment to defending the LGBTQ community in the announcement.

“Our support for the LGBTQ members of our community, who have experienced threats and harms over the last several years, remains unwavering. We know the attention the university has received around this issue and the investigative process that followed have been unsettling for many in our community,” the university president said.

Among ED’s findings, it determined that a female athlete discovered that the trans student allegedly conspired to have a member of an opposing team spike her in the face during a match. The department claims “SJSU did not investigate the conspiracy, but later subjected the female athlete to a Title IX complaint for ‘misgendering’ the male athlete in online videos and interviews.”

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Slusser alleged in a November 2024 lawsuit against the Mountain West that she and former assistant coach Melissa Batie-Smoose were made aware of a meeting between Fleming and Colorado State women’s volleyball player Malaya Jones on Oct. 2, 2024, during which Fleming discussed a plan with Jones to have Slusser spiked in the face during a match the following night.

Slusser’s own lawsuit partially survived motions to dismiss last week as well. 

Colorado District Judge Kato Crews dismissed all the plaintiffs’ charges against the Mountain West Conference but did not dismiss charges of Title IX violations against the CSU system. 

Crews deferred his ruling on whether to dismiss those charges until after a decision in the ongoing B.P.J. v. West Virginia Supreme Court case, which is expected in June.

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Brooke Slusser #10 and Blaire Fleming #3 of the San Jose State Spartans call a play during the first set against the Air Force Falcons at Falcon Court at East Gym on October 19, 2024 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. (Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

The CSU provided a statement to Fox News Digital in response to Crews’ ruling. 

“CSU is pleased with the court’s ruling. SJSU has complied with Title IX and all applicable law, and it will continue to do so,” the statement said.

The outcomes of the lawsuits by and against SJSU on this issue could ultimately set a consequential precedent for the future of women’s sports in America. 

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Jessica Pegula’s commitment to hard work every day has turned her into a leader

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Jessica Pegula’s commitment to hard work every day has turned her into a leader

Jessica Pegula never needed tennis.

She simply kept showing up for it anyway, through the long and often anonymous slog of the professional tour.

Now 32 and the oldest player in the top 10, Pegula is having her best season start yet.

The fifth-ranked American reached the Australian Open semifinals for the first time in January, falling to eventual champion Elena Rybakina. She followed that by capturing the Dubai 1000-level tournament, just a rung below the majors.

She is 15-2 so far in 2026, tied with Victoria Mboko in match wins and second only to Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina (17-3), who she defeated 6-2, 6-4 in the Dubai final.

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Pegula is guaranteed to emerge from this week’s BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells as the top-ranked American, overtaking No. 4 Coco Gauff, if she reaches the final.

Jessica Pegula kisses the Dubai trophy after defeating Elina Svitolina in the finals on Feb. 21.

(Altaf Qadri / Associated Press)

First, she will have to get past No. 12-seed Belinda Bencic of Switzerland, her fourth-round opponent on Wednesday. Bencic has not dropped a set in four previous meetings with Pegula.

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“That will be a challenge for me,” said the characteristically even-keeled Pegula after defeating former French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko in the third round on Monday.

A late bloomer, Pegula has taken the long road.

She failed to qualify for Grand Slam main draws in 12 of 14 attempts from 2011 to 2018, and didn’t reach the third round at a major until the 2020 U.S. Open at age 26. All three of her Grand Slam semifinal runs — along with her 2024 U.S. Open final — have come after she turned 30.

Pegula said this week that her patience and persistence stem from “always being a little more mature for my age even when I was younger.”

“I think as I’ve gotten older, your perspective changes as well,” she added.

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Pegula, whose parents are principal owners of the NFL’s Buffalo Bills and the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres, acknowledges that her wealthy family background can cut two ways.

Financial security offers freedom to push through the sport’s early years on tour, when results are uncertain and the grind is relentless. That same cushion might make it easier to walk away if the climb becomes too frustrating.

Jessica Pegula plays a backhand against Donna Vekic during their match at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.

Jessica Pegula plays a backhand against Donna Vekic during their match at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.

(Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

Pegula says her motivation to pursue tennis came well before her family’s fortune grew.

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“I’ve been wanting to be a professional tennis player and No. 1 in the world since I was like 7,” she said in a small interview room after beating Ostapenko this week.

“It’s a privilege, but at the same time I don’t want to do myself a disservice of not taking the opportunity as well,” she explained. “I’ve always looked at it that way.”

In the last few seasons, that maturity on the court has dovetailed with a growing leadership role off it.

Pegula has served for years on the WTA Player Council and was recently tapped to chair the tour’s new Tour Architecture Council, a working group tasked with examining the increasingly demanding schedule and structural pressures players say have intensified in recent seasons. The panel is expected to explore changes that could reshape the calendar and player workload in coming years.

Pegula said she hadn’t put up her hand to be involved but agreed after several players approached her to take the lead role — though she declined to say who they were.

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“I think maybe as you mature … you realize how important it is to give back to the sport,” she said last week.

Life has also provided grounding and a wider lens.

Pegula’s mother, Kim, suffered a serious cardiac arrest in 2022, a situation she discussed in detail in a moving 2023 essay for “The Players’ Tribune.”

The Buffalo native and Florida resident also married businessman Taylor Gahagen in 2021. Gahagen helps “holds down the fort” at home with the couple’s dogs and travels with her when possible. He is with her in Indian Wells.

“I have an amazing support system,” Pegula says.

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Despite winning 10 WTA singles titles, achieving a career singles high of No. 3 in 2022 and the No. 1 doubles ranking, Pegula’s low-key demeanor means she flies a bit under the radar.

She’s not one for fashion statements, outlandish antics or attention-seeking initiatives, her joint podcast with close friend Madison Keys notwithstanding.

Instead, Pegula tends to go about her business quietly, relying on a calm temperament and a methodical style that wears opponents down over time.

She gets the job done — the Tim Duncan of the women’s tour.

“She’s just all about lacing them up and competing between the lines, and then trying to be as big an asset as she can to her peers off the court,” says Mark Knowles, the former doubles standout who has shared coaching duties with Mark Merklein since early 2024.

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“I think one of her great attributes is she’s very level-headed,” Knowles adds. “She doesn’t get too high, doesn’t get too low.”

Her tennis identity echoes her steadiness.

Instead of bludgeoning opponents with power, the 5-foot-7 Pegula beats them with savvy, steadiness and tactical variety. A careful student of the game, she studies matchups and patrols the court with a composed efficiency that incrementally drains big hitters and outmaneuvers most rivals long before the final score confirms it.

Keys calls that consistency her “superpower.”

“She doesn’t lose matches that she shouldn’t lose,” the 2025 Australian Open champion said this week.

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Because of injuries in the early part of her career, Knowles says Pegula might have less wear-and-tear than other players her age. And he and her team have prioritized rest and recovery, which included the decision to skip the tournament in Doha last month following her tiring Australian Open run.

On brand, there was no panic in Pegula after dropping the first set in her two matches so far at Indian Wells. As she’s done all season, she steadied herself to earn three-set wins.

Bucket-list goals remain, however. Chiefly, capturing a Grand Slam title.

Jessica Pegula returns a shot to Jelena Ostapenko during the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells on Monday.

Jessica Pegula returns a shot to Jelena Ostapenko during the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells on Monday.

(Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)

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Pegula jokes that she briefly interrupted a run of American female success when she fell in the 2024 U.S. Open final to No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka. But seeing close friend and teenage phenom Keys capture her major in Melbourne last year — after many wondered if her window had passed — hit closer to home.

“I think Madison winning Australia just motivated me even more,” Pegula says.

Although Pegula believes she is among the best hardcourt players in women’s tennis, that confidence hasn’t translated into success in the California desert. She has reached the quarterfinals just once in 10 previous appearances in Indian Wells.

“Why not try and add that one to the resume?” says Knowles, noting that she had never won the title in Dubai until last month. “She’s playing still at a very high level.”

Pegula says the key to keeping things fresh is maintaining her love of the game by continuing to improve and experiment with new ideas, a process that keeps her engaged mentally and eager to compete.

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“I’m not afraid to kind of take that risk of changing and working on different things,” she says, “which just keeps my mind working and problem solving.”

For a player who never needed tennis, she remains determined to see how much more it can give her.

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Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo makes NBA history with 83-point game

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Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo makes NBA history with 83-point game

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Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo made NBA history on Tuesday night.

Adebayo scored 83 points, all while setting league marks for free throws made and attempted in a game for the Miami Heat in a 150-129 win over the Washington Wizards. It is the second-highest scoring game for a player ever, only to Wilt Chamberlain’s famed 100-point game.

“An absolutely surreal night,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra told reporters after the game.

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Adebayo started with a 31-point first quarter. He was up to 43 at halftime, 62 by the end of the third quarter. And then came the fourth, when the milestones kept falling despite facing double-, triple- and what once appeared to be a quadruple-team from a Wizards defense that kept sending him to the foul line.

He finished 20 of 43 from the field, 36 of 43 from the foul line, 7 for 22 from 3-point range.

After the game, he was seen in tears while he hugged his mother, Marilyn Blount, before leaving the floor after the game.

“Welp won’t have the highest career high in the house anymore,” Adebayo’s girlfriend, four-time WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson, wrote on social media, “but at least it gives me something to go after.”

MAGIC’S ANTHONY BLACK MAKES INCREDIBLE DUNK OVER FOUR DEFENDERS IN HISTORIC NBA GAME

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Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat celebrates during the fourth quarter of the game against the Washington Wizards at Kaseya Center on March 10, 2026, in Miami, Florida.  (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

The NBA’s previous best this season was 56, by Nikola Jokic for Denver against Minnesota on Christmas night. The last player to have 62 points through three quarters: one of Adebayo’s basketball heroes, Kobe Bryant, who had exactly that many through three quarters for the Los Angeles Lakers against Dallas on Dec. 20, 2005.

He wound up passing Bryant for single-game scoring as well. Bryant’s career-best was 81 — a game that was the second-best on the NBA scoring list for two decades.

Adebayo scored 31 points in the opening quarter against the Wizards, breaking the Heat record for points in any quarter — and tying the team record for points in a first half before the second quarter even started.

He finished the first half with 43 points, a team record for any half and two points better than his previous career high — for a full game, that is — of 41, set Jan. 23, 2021, against Brooklyn.

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Adebayo’s season high entering Tuesday was 32. He matched that with a free throw with 5:53 left in the second quarter, breaking the Heat first-half scoring record.

Adebayo’s 43-point first half was the NBA’s second-best in at least the last 30 seasons — going back to the start of the digital play-by-play era that began in the 1996-97 season.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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