NFL | |||||
NEWS | |||||
Maia Chaka becomes first Black woman official in NFL history It is an accomplishment for all women, my community, and my culture." In 2014, she was selected to be a part of the NFL's officiating development ...
| |||||
Time for NFL teams to take a hard look at the books, and their rosters Last year, NFL owners felt the pinch when they played games in empty stadiums and missed out on a few billion dollars in revenue. This spring, it's the ...
| |||||
NFL's owners about to get much more rich after broadcast deals There are some very rich people about to get a whole lot richer. Who else but NFL owners? Probably within the next week, those 32 ...
| |||||
Washington Football Team: Rumors spreading about NFL investigation into Snyder For now, it seems brash to run with the news brought forth by Finlay, especially if the NFL essentially came out and refuted it. But, it does also bear noting ...
| |||||
TV deal will make NFL's rich owners more rich The NFL could see its rights fees for broadcasting games grow from $7.185 billion a year to roughly $12 billion. FILE PHOTO.
| |||||
NFL Should Release Report On Alleged Washington Football Team Sex Harassment, Employees ... The NFL has said it would share the report with outside sources, but has not specified whether that meant a full public disclosure. The league has ...
| |||||
Virginia Beach teacher becomes the NFL's first Black female official Mackie has been Chaka's mentor as she progressed through training to become an NFL official. "I thought he was just calling to give me some advice on ...
| |||||
NFL quarterback carousel is starting to make us dizzy On the NFL chess board, the quarterback is king. Always has been. Stable, upright, protected at all costs. Topple the king only when the game is lost.
| |||||
Maia Chaka becomes first Black woman official in NFL history She has been a part of the NFL's Officiating Development Program since 2014, which takes officials at the college level and gives them experience and ...
| |||||
NFL, NFLPA seek alternatives to opioids Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL's chief medical officer says the league is always looking at new methods and new techniques for treating pain that will be safer ...
| |||||
See more results | Edit this alert |
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
Receive this alert as RSS feed |
Send Feedback |
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar