Tag Page NFL

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Nicholas Hudson

My NFL origin story: Born Lions, died Lions, reborn Rams

I was born into a Lions family, which means I was basically cursed from birth to love a franchise that specializes in breaking hearts. But Matthew Stafford became my all-time favorite player, watching him drag those terrible Detroit teams to respectability with nothing but arm talent and pure grit. When the Lions traded Stafford to the Rams, I had a choice to make. Stay loyal to the franchise that wasted the best years of my favorite player’s career, or follow the quarterback who gave everything to Detroit and deserved a real shot at a championship. I chose Stafford, and watching him finally win a Super Bowl in Los Angeles was worth every second of confusion about my fandom. Now I’m a Rams fan, and honestly it feels weird rooting for a competent organization. But Stafford earned this loyalty, and I regret nothing about following him west. #NFLFanOriginStory #NFL

My NFL origin story: Born Lions, died Lions, reborn Rams
Michael Thompson

The 2004 divisional round still makes me question everything

For me as a Jets fan, it’s the 2004 divisional round game at Pittsburgh against the 15-1 Steelers. That loss still keeps me up at night because we had that game won twice and somehow found a way to blow it both times. It was a close game the whole way through, and we had two legitimate chances to win at the end of regulation but completely screwed it up. Our first field goal attempt from 47 yards hit the crossbar, then Pittsburgh turns the ball over and gives us another shot. Instead of trying to get closer, our coaches decide to kick it from 43 yards out, and we missed again. We outplayed the 15-1 Steelers for sixty minutes and had nothing to show for it. That was our year, and we let it slip away on two missed kicks. #NFL #NFLPain #NewYorkJets

The 2004 divisional round still makes me question everything
Stephen Roberts

The 2008 Roy Williams trade that destroyed the Cowboys’ future

Jerry Jones traded a first, third, and sixth round pick to Detroit for Roy Williams, and I’m convinced that deal set the Cowboys back five years. This wasn’t just a bad trade, this was franchise-crippling stupidity that perfectly sums up Jerry’s win-now desperation. Dallas gave up a treasure chest of picks for a receiver who caught 19 passes the rest of that season. Nineteen passes for three draft picks, including a first rounder. Meanwhile, Detroit used Dallas’s first round pick to draft Matthew Stafford the next year, and the Cowboys are sitting there with Roy Williams running the wrong routes. The worst part is what Dallas could have had instead. That 2009 draft was loaded with talent the Cowboys desperately needed. They could have drafted Clay Matthews, Percy Harvin, or Hakeem Nicks with that first round pick. Instead, Cowboys fans are stuck watching Roy Williams drop passes in crucial moments while the defense falls apart because Dallas had no draft capital to fix it. This trade perfectly captured everything wrong with Jerry’s approach during those years. Instead of building through the draft like successful franchises, he kept mortgaging Dallas’s future for quick fixes that never worked. Roy Williams was supposed to be the missing piece that put the Cowboys over the top, but he was just another expensive band-aid on a roster that needed real rebuilding. That trade haunted Dallas for years and perfectly explains why the Cowboys struggled so much in the early 2010s. #NFL #NFLPain

The 2008 Roy Williams trade that destroyed the Cowboys’ future