In today’s newsletter, we looked at offensive wizardry in Washington, Lamar Jackson’s playoff woes and the remaining coaching vacancies. (Note: This was first published prior to former Lions DC Aaron Glenn’s confirmation as the Jets coach,
The Detroit Lions defense knows it will be a tough task defending Commanders rookie QB Jayden Daniels, who has reset a bunch of first-year records.
PHILADELPHIA − It's easy to forget that two years ago, Jalen Hurts was basically the phenomenon that Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels is now. No, Hurts wasn't a rookie in 2022 when he ran and threw the Eagles all the way to the Super Bowl.
Jayden Daniels threw for two touchdowns in a flawless performance, and the Washington Commanders stunned the Detroit Lions 45-31 on Saturday to reach the NFC championship game.
No rookie QB has ever lifted his team like Daniels, prompting a cross-sport comparison. Plus, Mahomes and the refs, Lamar's legacy and more.
It was a tale of two quarterbacks on Saturday in Detroit, with Tom Brady getting his opportunity to call a game starring impressive rookie QB Jayden Daniels.
One NFL executive believes that Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels will make an MVP run in 2025. "He's scary," an NFC executive told
Dave Helman sits down with Ben Arthur to talk about the Washington Commanders' victory over the Detroit Lions. Within the segment, the duo praise Jayden Daniels' heroics in the victory and discuss what's next for the Commanders.
Fueled by an ambitious new ownership group, a bold, first-year coach and a comet of a rookie quarterback, the Commanders have rekindled fan interest not only here, but also in D.C., and throughout
The Bears hired offensive mastermind and former Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson as their new head coach to develop Williams and improve an offense which ranked 31st in passing yards. DAZN News examines three key areas Johnson and the Bears must address to help Williams succeed.
In a mere matter of days before the NFC championship game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Commanders, The Athletic has intercepted communication between two of its beat reporters, Brooks Kubena and Ben Standig, in which they enlisted one another as quasi-analysts to gain insight into the other’s teams.