Monday, October 27, 2025

Articles by Yago Antunes

6 articles found

Cowboys rumors: Jay Glazer’s Maxx Crosby trade report suggests Jerry Jones is lying
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Cowboys rumors: Jay Glazer’s Maxx Crosby trade report suggests Jerry Jones is lying

Jerry Jones publicly downplayed the Maxx Crosby chatter, saying Dallas never contacted the Raiders about their All-Pro edge rusher. While the Cowboys are “open for business” before the Nov. 4 deadline, Jones hinted any ideal addition would be a defensive player, “but not a pass rusher,” per the New York Times, seemingly shutting the door on Crosby talk while pointing to help elsewhere on defense. The problem? Reporting says otherwise. Jay Glazer reported the Cowboys made trade calls to the Raiders on Maxx Crosby and to the Bengals on Trey Hendrickson, and both teams rebuffed them. Ari Meirov relayed Glazer’s note on X, adding that Dallas is in the market for defense. That paints a far more aggressive picture of the Cowboys’ approach than Jones’ version, and it aligns with how contenders typically operate this time of year: call everyone, see who blinks. The #Cowboys made trade calls to the #Raiders on Maxx Crosby and the #Bengals on Trey Hendrickson, but were rebuffed by both teams, per @JayGlazer. Dallas is in the market for defense. pic.twitter.com/hjqcZf3W0t — Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) October 26, 2025 Stepping back, the disconnect looks more like messaging than mystery. Publicly, Dallas has little incentive to advertise failed bids, especially for franchise pillars like Crosby or Hendrickson. Privately, casting a wide net makes sense for a roster still seeking a difference-maker on defense. If Jones truly isn’t targeting pass rush, that could mean the Cowboys are focused on back-seven help or interior upgrade areas, where prices may be more manageable. There’s also a hard reality on the other end of the phone. Recent reporting around the league has stressed that Las Vegas met with Crosby and told him he isn’t being shopped and won’t be traded, and Cincinnati has no plans to move Hendrickson. That stance blocks the splashiest options regardless of what Dallas is willing to discuss. The Cowboys may hold the draft capital to make noise, but leverage sits with teams that won’t part with cornerstone players. All of which brings us back to the headline tension: Jones says no Crosby outreach; Glazer’s reporting, via Meirov, says Dallas absolutely made those calls. Both things can be true in a technical sense if conversations were exploratory or routed through intermediaries. Practically, though, the takeaway is the same: the Cowboys are hunting upgrades, and the organizations holding elite edge rushers aren’t budging. NFL rumors snapshot before the buzzer: multiple reports indicate the Raiders told Crosby he’s not available, while ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler has Dallas working the defensive market and checking on Hendrickson, only for the Bengals to hold firm. The Cowboys have the picks to stay aggressive, but the dream edge splash remains unlikely with both teams dug in.

Why Oklahoma’s John Mateer is going to ‘hate’ watching Ole Miss tape
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Why Oklahoma’s John Mateer is going to ‘hate’ watching Ole Miss tape

Two weeks ago, John Mateer endured a rough night in Oklahoma’s football team 23-6 loss to Texas, throwing three interceptions with no touchdowns while completing 20 of 38 for 202 yards and rushing 14 times for five yards. Per ESPN Insights, those three picks tied the most by a Sooners quarterback against an unranked opponent since Landry Jones (2009), Cody Thomas (2014), Spencer Rattler (2020), and Dillon Gabriel (2022). Oklahoma led 6-3 at halftime before the Longhorns scored 20 unanswered behind Arch Manning. After the Ole Miss game, the conversation shifted to what the film would reveal. “Yeah, we’ll have to wait and go back and look at the tape. I told him, ‘There’s gonna be, you’re gonna hate what you see on tape, because of some missed opportunities.’ Not talking about having to go make a play, I’m just doing the basics a little cleaner. And so, we’re all gonna have some regret watching the tape.” The evaluation came with a reminder that some issues were routine, fixable details rather than hero-ball moments, per 247Sports. Asked if Mateer looked more comfortable pushing the ball downfield, the response was measured: “Yeah, we made some good plays down the field. And at times had really good command, and then some other times where maybe we got a little bit rushed.” The staff also addressed Mateer’s health: “I don’t know. Have to ask him. He’s practiced well, he’s thrown with good accuracy, and he’s made good decisions. I do think that’s still a process of getting completely and fully healed. But I’m not sure if he has the limitations or not. Again, his velocity is good, his accuracy has been really good. So I haven’t seen the limitations at practice.” As for a full return to 100%: “Everybody’s injury heals differently.” All per 247Sports. Player safety has also been in focus around the program. Following Keontez Lewis’ headfirst collision into an unpadded brick wall during the 44-0 win over Kent State on Oct. 4, the Oklahoma football team installed padding around the end-zone walls and near the benches ahead of its next home date. OU Daily first reported the upgrades, and coaches said discussions began within days of the incident. The big-picture takeaway remains steady: clean up the basics on film, get healthier, and finish drives — the kind of corrections that can flip a narrative swiftly.

Jets rumors: Quinnen Williams trade interest comes up ‘massive’ demands
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Jets rumors: Quinnen Williams trade interest comes up ‘massive’ demands

The Jets kept shuffling the roster during a bruising start, claiming rookie linebacker Kobe King off waivers from the Vikings after his five-game special-teams stint. The former Penn State standout arrives as New York sits 0-7 under first-year head coach Aaron Glenn, with injuries piling up on offense and uneven play on defense. Sauce Gardner has underwhelmed and is out for Week 8, the unit is allowing 26.1 points per game, and the offense has sputtered amid uncertainty at quarterback after Justin Fields was benched and Tyrod Taylor battled an injury. ”Keep an eye on the Jets; teams have been showing interest in DT Quinnen Williams, although New York’s asking price is massive.” That’s the stance for now, per the New York Times. The timing tracks with a front office weighing short and long-term leverage. Williams is the Jets’ most valuable defender, and setting a sky-high threshold signals New York won’t move a premium piece just to create activity before the Nov. 4 trade deadline. Given the winless record and a defense that’s middle of the pack in yardage but bleeding points, the club’s calculus appears clear: only an offer that meaningfully accelerates a reset would pry away its interior anchor. Meanwhile, the broader context around the team hasn’t softened. Garrett Wilson and Mason Taylor have dealt with practice absences ahead of Cincinnati, and the offense has mustered only 17 total points across the last two games while averaging 271 yards per outing. Those realities make it harder to justify weakening the defense without an overwhelming return. There’s also chatter around other Jets assets, most notably Breece Hall. League speculation has linked the 24-year-old back to potential suitors ahead of Nov. 4, with proposals floating mid-round pick packages. Hall is in the final year of his rookie deal with a modest 2025 cap figure, but he has publicly said he wants to stay, and New York isn’t rushing a move. Any price would reflect his age, production, and the need for an extension after a trade. For now, the headline in Florham Park is restrained. Interest is real, but unless a team meets New York’s massive demands, Quinnen Williams isn’t going anywhere.

Ole Miss’s HC Lane Kiffin’s ‘cool’ truth bomb after pulling off SEC first
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Ole Miss’s HC Lane Kiffin’s ‘cool’ truth bomb after pulling off SEC first

Lane Kiffin’s postgame moment went viral for the right reasons. After Ole Miss’ 34-26 win over Oklahoma, the head coach was caught exchanging playful words with a Sooners defender who had chirped throughout the game. Kiffin later explained that it was part of his personality and nothing personal, noting the player had repeatedly told him the Rebels wouldn’t score. The bigger takeaway for Kiffin, though, was how his team handled late-game pressure one week after a tough fourth quarter at Georgia. “We’re up two scores last week at Georgia, where they never lose except Alabama, and we didn’t finish it off,” Kiffin said. “We got knocked down. And so that same situation happens today on the road; [ranked] team, No. 1 defense in the country. Can we be stronger in those situations, especially defensively? For that to happen, it’s really cool.” Per ESPN, Ole Miss flipped the script this time, outscoring Oklahoma 9-0 in the fourth quarter, holding the Sooners to 84 yards over the final 15 minutes, and forcing quarterback John Mateer into 10 incompletions on his last 15 throws, including a last-gasp heave that fell short of the end zone. The win delivered a milestone for Kiffin’s tenure: Ole Miss’s first road victory over a ranked SEC opponent under his watch. According to ESPN Research, the Rebels are also 6-0 following a loss since the start of the 2023 season, exactly the kind of resilience Kiffin referenced. A week after being blanked late in Athens, Ole Miss answered with complementary football, leaning on a defense that closed the door and an offense that managed the game in winning time. Kiffin also acknowledged the emotional carryover from Georgia. He said the sideline felt that “here we go” moment as the crowd surged and the opponent punched back, but this time the Rebels didn’t “freak out.” They steadied themselves, communicated, and finished. The off-field noise isn’t going away, either. Per ESPN’s Molly McGrath, Kiffin told her he planned to address ongoing Florida coaching rumors directly with his team, framing the speculation as a compliment to the program and a necessary conversation for a roster with many newcomers. He emphasized that decisions are about everyday happiness, not money. Ole Miss leaves with a signature response and a clearer identity: a team learning to win the fourth quarter when it matters most.

Raiders rumors: The ‘only’ way Las Vegas will trade Jakobi Meyers
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Raiders rumors: The ‘only’ way Las Vegas will trade Jakobi Meyers

Jakobi Meyers still wants out of Las Vegas, and he hasn’t hidden it. As the Raiders hit their bye, the veteran wideout reiterated that he wants his trade request granted but said he’ll remain professional and focus on playing well if he stays. “I’ve got no control over that, if I’m here I’m here,” he told ESPN’s Ryan McFadden, adding that he still hopes to be moved while keeping his standards on the field. Even so, the Raiders aren’t planning a giveaway. Las Vegas would trade Meyers only if the return meets a strong-value threshold, with no such offer on the table yet, per ESPN. With the Nov. 4 deadline approaching, the organization is prepared to carry him through the end of his deal if necessary. Meyers, 28, confirmed he “wants to be in a good spot” and hasn’t engaged in recent talks about a new contract. He missed last week’s loss to the Chiefs with knee and toe injuries but is expected back after the Week 9 bye. Through six games, he has 29 receptions for 329 yards. Also, multiple teams are actively exploring receiver help, including the Steelers, Bills, and Broncos. That posture reflects Las Vegas’ broader calculus: a productive, respected veteran on an expiring contract has real value, but the club won’t move him for less than they believe he’s worth. In the meantime, Meyers emphasized he won’t be a distraction, saying the team knows how he feels and he’ll keep showing up for his teammates. From a market-fit standpoint, there’s no shortage of landing spots. Beyond the teams monitoring the position, Meyers’ profile, sure-handed, disciplined, and scheme-flexible, fits what several offenses need down the stretch. He has produced steadily despite a turbulent year, which is why interest persists as the clock ticks toward the deadline. Looking at potential destinations, multiple scenarios make sense. The Steelers could use a reliable chain-mover; the Bills remain a natural contender seeking another trustworthy target; the Patriots offer familiarity and immediate plug-and-play value; and the Giants profile as a team that could use stability at receiver. The common thread is simple: Meyers helps quarterbacks win on schedule and in structure, precisely why the Raiders will only listen if the offer matches his on-field impact.

Firings could be on way, but it won’t be LSU head coach Brian Kelly
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Firings could be on way, but it won’t be LSU head coach Brian Kelly

Brian Kelly’s approval rating in Baton Rouge has cratered, and the buyout math explains why the anger isn’t likely to result in his exit right now. After the Vanderbilt loss, the Commodores’ first win over LSU in 35 years, a growing segment of the fan base called for change. But firing Kelly after this season would reportedly trigger a payout of 90% of the roughly $58.2 million left on his deal, about $52.38 million paid in monthly installments through 2031, subject to mitigation if he lands another job. That price tag dwarfs most recent buyouts and makes an immediate move highly unlikely. The Tigers fell to 5-3 following an embarrassing home loss to Texas A&M in Death Valley, and pressure has only intensified as Kelly is now 7-6 in SEC play over the last two seasons. Even so, with a buyout north of $53 million and six years remaining on his contract, LSU is expected to let the final stretch play out. Sources told On3 that coaching staff changes could come as soon as Sunday afternoon, signaling that adjustments are imminent even if the head coach stays. LSU’s offense sits at No. 83 nationally, averaging 366.6 yards per game, which places a spotlight on the side of the ball most likely to see turnover, per On3. That trajectory has heightened the scrutiny on a program that, under Kelly, has not matched championship standards. The combination of uneven SEC results and a middling offense has created the conditions for a shake-up without triggering the most expensive option on the table. Compounding the turbulence, roster churn is back in the headlines. Starting cornerback Ashton Stamps, who had started 16 straight games for LSU and ranked top five in the SEC in passes defended last season, re-entered the transfer portal, per Shea Dixon of On3. After being redshirted and falling behind PJ Woodland, transfer Mansoor Delane, and freshman DJ Pickett, Stamps played only one game for 18 snaps this season. LSU has seen additional portal movement in recent months, a reminder that depth charts can flip fast when competition spikes. If changes are coming in Baton Rouge, they’re far more likely to hit the staff than the head coach. The buyout makes that clear; the standings and the stat sheet make the case.