The weekend of NFL football that some believe to be the NFL's best has arrived. Divisional-round playoff action will take place with two games Saturday and two games Sunday between the league's elite eight,
Readers of the Los Angeles Times Sports department share their thoughts and opinions on the Rams' season, the Dodgers' spending spree and the Lakers.
The countdown to Super Bowl LIX is on and talkSPORT.com will keep you up to date with all the news from around the league. The race to New Orleans on February 9 has reached the win-or-go-home
Lamar Jackson, Joe Burrow and Saquon Barkley are finalists for The Associated Press 2024 NFL Most Valuable Player and Offensive Player of the Year awards.
The snow pelted all over Lincoln Financial Field in the second half, a time when the Philadelphia Eagles defense rose to the occasion. Jalen Carter and Nolan Smith forced two fumbles in the snow that led to two fourth-quarter field goals as the Eagles outlasted the Los Angeles Rams 28-22 in the snow to advance to the NFC Championship game.
Philadelphia will host the Commanders next weekend thanks to Barkley rushing for 205 yards and two touchdowns and the Eagles defense recovering two key fumbles
Barkley rushed for 255 yards and scored on runs of 70 and 72 yards in a 37-20 victory over the Rams at SoFi Stadium.
The Rams had a Saquon Barkley problem earlier ... in a Philadelphia uniform — but none quite like Los Angeles. In the regular season, Barkley's best performance came during the Week 12 win ...
Detroit Lions safety Kerby Joseph helped keep his team’s injury-riddled defense afloat throughout the season, but he wasn’t named a finalist. Joseph recorded a league-high nine interceptions to go along with 83 tackles and 12 pass breakups. His reputation as a “dirty” player may have cost him some votes, but that shouldn’t factor into the award.
By John Towey, Staff Writer Well, at least the NFC Championship isn’t the Cowboys and the Eagles. I hope both teams lose, maybe we can make the Bengals honorary NFC champions. Unfortunately,
Rams-Eagles (37.9 million viewers) is NBC Sports’ fourth-most watched NFL Divisional Playoff since Nielsen’s institution of the People Meter in 1988 – covering a total of 33 games.