Tag: ExNFL

  • Ex-NFL star wears ‘Make America Great Again’ hat before Super Bowl party, ‘all for’ Trump visit to game

    Ex-NFL star wears ‘Make America Great Again’ hat before Super Bowl party, ‘all for’ Trump visit to game

    Former NFL star Adam “Pacman” Jones appeared at a Super Bowl LIX party wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat in apparent support of President Donald Trump.

    Jones spoke to Fox News Digital on the carpet ahead of “SI The Party” in New Orleans on Saturday night. He said he was “all for” Trump’s potential visit to Caesars Superdome to watch the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles.

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    Adam “Pacman” Jones talks to Fox News Digital before a Super Bowl LIX party. (Fox News Digital)

    “Love it. Love it. I’m all for it,” Jones said, adding he believed Trump has “got the best thing for us.”

    Trump’s expected appearance at the Super Bowl has been the talk of the city since the first inkling that he may attend the event trickled out.

    Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce both seemingly appreciated the idea of a sitting president taking the time to attend the game.

    “It’s always cool to be able to play in front of a sitting president,” Mahomes said. “Someone that is at the top position in our country.”

    Adam Jones in 2023

    Adam Jones on “The Pac McAfee Show” at the Super Bowl LVII media center at the Phoenix Convention Center in Arizona, Feb. 9, 2023. (Kirby Lee-USA Today Sports)

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    “I think it’s a great honor no matter who the president is,” Kelce added, via the New York Post. “I know I’m excited because it’s the biggest game of my life, you know, and having the president there, you know, it’s the best country in the world. So, that’d be pretty cool.”

    Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts also weighed in.

    “He’s welcome to do what he wants,” Hurts said. 

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    When Hurts was asked a follow-up question about whether Trump being there would put more pressure on him, the quarterback responded, “No.” 

    Fox News’ Jackson Thompson contributed to this report.

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  • Ex-NFL star Todd Gurley details what Chiefs, Eagles players going through mentally to prepare for Super Bowl

    Ex-NFL star Todd Gurley details what Chiefs, Eagles players going through mentally to prepare for Super Bowl

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    The Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles have both been in this position before, ahead of Super Bowl LIX. 

    Experience in this high-pressure environment is certainly an advantage for those players that went through this nerve-wrecking week, but what exactly are these players experiencing behind closed doors? 

    One former NFL player revealed what was on his mind before he got a crack at the Lombardi Trophy. 

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    NFL free agent running back Todd Gurley reacts during the 2021 MLS All-Star Game at Banc of California Stadium. (Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports)

    “Honestly, you start thinking about gifts that you’re gonna buy yourself when you win, and you get the winning earnings,” ex-Los Angeles Rams and Atlanta Falcons running back Todd Gurley told Fox News Digital on Radio Row on Wednesday. “You’re not thinking ahead, but you’re like, ‘We’re gonna go to Vegas and celebrate.’”

    Gurley joked that, with both Kansas City and Philadelphia cold this time of year, whoever wins will not be staying long after the parade. 

    Now, Gurley, unfortunately, didn’t get that winning feeling in Super Bowl LIII, falling to Tom Brady and the New England Patriots, 13-3, to cap the 2018 season. Gurley had just 10 carries for 35 yards, as the Rams struggled mightily on offense. 

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    Gurley explained how the team was trying to prepare like it was a normal week when they got to Atlanta.

    “You just try to treat it like a normal week, but you know you only got a couple days left so you just want to lock in,” he explained while also discussing his partnership with Bush’s Beans. “You’re like, ‘Couple days left. Let’s lock in.’ And then you try to be as cliché as possible like, ‘it’s just another game, it’s just another game.’”

    However, what the Chiefs and Eagles might have figured out the first time facing each other in the Super Bowl was this, at least from Gurley’s perspective. 

    “Honestly, when the game came, I can definitely say it was by far one of the fastest games I’ve ever played in,” he said. “It was like a blur. I really don’t remember too much from it. It was super, super fast.”

    The adrenaline pumping with millions watching can reach all-time highs for players, and Gurley even mentioned halftime being too long due to the pomp and circumstance of the signature halftime show. 

    Todd Gurley tackled

    Los Angeles Rams running back Todd Gurley, #30, runs the ball against New England Patriots defensive back Jonathan Jones, #31, and outside linebacker Elandon Roberts, #52, during the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LIII at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. (John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports)

    Again, there are only a handful of players on each team who do not know this feeling of going through meetings, media availabilities and practices, knowing only one game remains for glory. 

    For the Chiefs, they basically have a routine now with the Super Bowl, as they can make history with three straight Lombardi Trophies won, becoming the first team in NFL history to do so. 

    However, players like Jalen Hurts, A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith and others want revenge, as the Eagles fell to the Chiefs, 38-35, in Arizona in this game two years ago. 

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    Preparation is key, but even with that and experience, the pressure of performing on the biggest stage anywhere is immense. The Super Bowl is where legends are made, and Gurley understood that when he took the field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in February 2019. 

    COOKIN’ UP SUPER BOWL DELIGHTS WITH BUSH’S BEANS

    Today, Gurley’s preparation for the “Big Game” involves getting in the kitchen to whip up some tasty eats at home, which he always loves to do. 

    Being out in Los Angeles, Gurley said he gets to have cookouts all the time. What he cooks is the main question, but there seems to be a constant: baked beans. 

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    It is not just the standard Bush’s Original, which Gurley believes is more than fine. He prefers his family’s secret recipe. 

    “You want to spice it up a little bit,” he said. “Obviously, you usually go with the original. But you just start seeing stuff. Before YouTube and all this stuff, you learn it from the family or your learn it from your friends like, ‘Hold on, what was that you put in it the other day?’ And then you start adding stuff, so you do ground beef if you’re a beef guy, or you do turkey. Obviously, onions go with a lot of things – can’t go wrong with that. Some green peppers, some brown sugar, and then some bacon bits.”

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  • Ex-NFL player Kyle Rudolph discusses Vikings’ QB decision, referees, the Super Bowl and NFL Draft giveaways

    Ex-NFL player Kyle Rudolph discusses Vikings’ QB decision, referees, the Super Bowl and NFL Draft giveaways

    Kyle Rudolph left the Minnesota Vikings a couple seasons before they went 14-3 in 2022, when they lost in the first round of the playoffs to the New York Giants.

    Two seasons later, they had almost a carbon copy of that campaign. This year, they went 13-4 but had another first-round playoff exit.

    “You got to make the plays when it matters most, and they just didn’t do it each of those last playoff games,” Rudolph told Fox News Digital in a recent interview.

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    Now, the Vikings have to decide whether to keep Sam Darnold or hand the keys to the offense to J.J. McCarthy.

    Minnesota Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph (82) catches a pass for the winning touchdown over New Orleans Saints cornerback P.J. Williams (26) during overtime of a NFC wild-card playoff game at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.  (Chuck Cook/USA Today Sports)

    Minnesota drafted McCarthy with the 10th selection of last year’s NFL Draft, and he was in the running to start until a knee injury in the preseason ended his season. That gave the nod to Darnold, who took advantage of the opportunity and had, by far, the best season of his career.

    Darnold was playing himself into a lucrative contract until his final two games. Now, who knows what he’ll get on the open market?

    At the very least, he may get a decent deal like Baker Mayfield’s. But even that might be a lot for Minnesota, Rudolph said.

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    “Well, I think it really, so much in football comes down to the money piece. You know, when you have a salary cap, and you’re trying to build a roster, unfortunately, you have to make decisions that are solely based on the ramifications of the salary cap and what that does for your roster,” Rudolph said. 

    “So, when you look at Sam Darnold and the year that he had in Minnesota, there’s just so many factors that go into it ultimately for Sam. Does he want to go to the highest bidder? Do I think Minnesota can be the highest bidder? No, I do not. You have so much other talent on that roster that they would like to keep and have to pay. If that’s what Sam decides, and he wants to go to the highest bidder, I don’t think Minnesota has a chance. 

    “If Sam says, ‘I love playing for Kevin O’Connell. This is the best year of my career. He brings the best out of me, I love being on this team,’ I think he would have to take some sort of a discount. And then the third piece that comes in is, ultimately, you always have the franchise tag. 

    “So, if they were decide to franchise tag Sam, they could keep him on that one-year franchise tag deal. But, again, that makes things really, really tough on the salary cap because that’s a one-year full salary cap hit. So, it’ll be interesting what they decide.

    Kyle Rudolph and Sam Darnold side by side

    Kyle Rudolph explained why he believes it’s “really tough” to see Sam Darnold returning to the Vikings last season.  (Imagn)

    “To this point, Kevin [O’Connell] has proved that it really doesn’t matter who the quarterback is. Jaren Hall, Josh Dobbs, Kirk Cousins, Sam Darnold — he’s going to get the most out of him, and they’re going to go win football games.”

    The Vikings will be home watching the Philadelphia Eagles try to dethrone the Kansas City Chiefs, who are in their fifth Super Bowl in the last six years with a chance to three-peat.

    It’s widely been argued Kansas City has the refs on their side. But Rudolph disputed the idea of any conspiracy or favoritism.

    AARON RODGERS’ EX TEAMMATE THINKS QB ‘CAN STILL GET IT DONE’ WITH NFL FUTURE IN QUESTION

    “If you go and look at the statistics and dive into kind of like where are the Chiefs compared to every other team in the NFL in terms of calls for and calls against, they’re kind of right there in the middle of the pack,” Rudolph said. 

    “But what is different about the Chiefs, they’re on national TV almost every week. They’re playing in primetime a whole lot. They’re always making deep playoff runs, five out of six years in the Super Bowl. Obviously, you have all the off-the-field publicity with Travis [Kelce] and Taylor [Swift] and Patrick’s stardom. It’s just, you see it a lot more.

    Mahomes and refs

    Referee Carl Cheffers speaks to Patrick Mahomes during a break in the third quarter at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium Dec. 21, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo.  (David Eulitt/Getty Images)

    “They look for things that trigger, ‘Oh, that’s a foul. That’s a penalty.’ It’s the slightest jersey grab, but that’s something that triggers their psyche to say, ‘Oh, I saw that jersey grab, I’m throwing the flag.’ It’s just an immediate reaction to them. So, no, I don’t think there’s favoritism. Obviously, in the world that we’re in today, if that were ever to be the case … we have all the resources in the world to find out … right? We would know.”

    Rudolph spoke to Fox News Digital on behalf of his own charity, Alltroo, where fans can donate to the campaign, and in turn, those dollars go directly to players’ charities. But Rudolph and his partners have added a couple of twists.

    This year, with just a $10 donation to Alltroo, fans can win both a trip to the Super Bowl with Drew Brees in New Orleans and an opportunity to announce a draft pick in Green Bay later this year if they donate to a Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee’s charity. 

    Considering that 94% of people who donate to Alltroo had never donated to a nonprofit before, Rudolph says it’s a “win-win” for everyone.

    Kyle Rudolph on field

    Minnesota Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph before a game against the Detroit Lions at U.S. Bank Stadium.  (Harrison Barden/USA Today Sports)

    “What we wanted to create was an opportunity for die-hard sports fans, not just the high-net worth individuals or the big corporate brands, to have an opportunity to support us. And then the flip side is people are winning once-in-a lifetime experiences and items that may be out of reach. 

    “So, trying to create that win-win scenario where we’re raising additional funds for charity that wouldn’t otherwise be, and then, ultimately, offering these once-in-a lifetime experiences to fans that otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford it,” Rudolph said, noting that Super Bowl prices are “insanely out of price for a lot of people.”

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    “Whatever you’re willing to donate to these players’ causes, 100% of the proceeds will go directly to these player causes. So, we can just be the vehicle that passes through these donations and then, at the end of the day, a lucky fan’s gonna have the opportunity to go up there and announce a draft pick at the draft and realize someone else’s dream. 

    “So, all in all, super cool for me to have the opportunity as a former nominee to really spearhead this initiative on behalf of the league. For as little as a $10 donation, you have a chance to win.”

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  • Ex-NFL star Julian Edelman slams Chiefs’ referee favoritism: ‘Bunch of bull-oney’

    Ex-NFL star Julian Edelman slams Chiefs’ referee favoritism: ‘Bunch of bull-oney’

    Ex-NFL star Julian Edelman slams Chiefs’ referee favoritism: ‘Bunch of bull-oney’

    Former NFL wide receiver Julian Edelman heard it all when he was playing for the New England Patriots when it came to referees always being on their side. 

    The Kansas City Chiefs are going through the same thing as they’re on the cusp of history, as they could be the first team ever to win three straight Super Bowls. Not even Edelman and the Tom Brady-led Patriots were able to accomplish that during their dynasty. 

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    Wide receiver Julian Edelman #11 of the New England Patriots gestures toward the crowd as he runs onto the field prior to a game against the Cleveland Browns on October 27, 2019 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. New England won 27-13.  (Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)

    During an appearance on “The Rich Eisen Show,” Edelman was asked by the program’s namesake if he’d heard about the referee favoritism conspiracy theories going around during this year’s playoff run, specifically when it came to his own experience dealing with that during his days in Foxborough.  

    “It’s apparent when you’re on top, everyone wants to bring you down,” Edelman responded. “It’s a bunch of baloney that the league is helping the Kansas City Chiefs. If you have a problem with it, go beat ‘em. The refs aren’t involved when you throw interceptions, when you fumble the ball, when you jump offsides, when you don’t convert third down or fourth down. They can’t control that. If you want to beat ‘em, go beat ‘em. Don’t talk about it – be about it. I’m so sick and tired about people saying that about the Chiefs.”

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    Edelman faced similar criticism during his time with the Patriots from 2009-2020, where he was a three-time Super Bowl champion (2014, 2016, 2018). Fans would theorize that the referees were favoring Brady and the Patriots throughout those Super Bowl runs, but Edelman shed some reality on the situation. 

    “We all have scouting reports on each ref crew and how they like to [call] the game,” he said. “You learn about it during that first part of that game.  If they’re calling it tight, you tighten back. If they’re not, you just hope they’re consistent throughout the whole thing, which they usually are.

    Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce

    FILE – Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) and quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) wait to lead the team onto the field before a preseason NFL football game against the Jacksonville Jaguars, Aug. 10, 2024, in Jacksonville, Fla.  (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File)

    “Yes, they miss calls and they do these things, and there’s some bad calls here and there. But there’s a handful of roughing the passers for guys that don’t even have a resume that you looked at this year that got the call. If it’s close, leave it alone. Yeah, they’ll probably have to address that sideline awareness stuff, but these whole graphics about, ‘Oh, they get the call, and they don’t give the call to them.’ Because they’re coached better.”

    Because of the dynasty talk revolving around the Chiefs, the natural comparison to the Patriots, which was the league’s last dynasty, have been made. 

    Eisen asked Edelman if he sees any similarities between his Patriots teams and the Chiefs in recent years. 

    It all comes down to getting the job done in clutch situations.

    Julian Edelman

    Julian Edelman speaks on stage during Stagwell Panels at Cannes Lions on June 20, 2023 in Cannes, France.  (Lionel Hahn/Getty Images for Stagwell)

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    “They’re situational tight,” Edelman said. “You watch them on third down, you watch them in the red area. A lot of these games when you get to this time of the year, they’re not won by the team that makes the most plays. Yeah, that’s part of it. It’s always the team that makes the least amount of mistakes. That’s what they do. They play mistake-free, they play situationally tight, they’ll lull you to sleep, and then they’ll beat you when they need to. That’s stuff we used to do.”

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  • Ex-NFL star touts ‘awesome’ impact Taylor Swift has made since going to Chiefs games

    Ex-NFL star touts ‘awesome’ impact Taylor Swift has made since going to Chiefs games

    Taylor Swift is set to be a focal point at the Super Bowl for the second consecutive year as she will very likely be in a suite at the Caesars Superdome cheering on Travis Kelce.

    There is a lot less uncertainty around her appearance than there was last year. Swift was in the midst of the Asian leg of her “Eras Tour” and needed the conditions to be just right for her to fly back to Las Vegas to watch the Kansas City Chiefs take on the San Francisco 49ers.

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    Taylor Swift embraces Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce after the AFC Championship NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

    This time, the tour is finished, and Swift has her sights set on New Orleans. While the broadcast cameras were not necessarily on her every move during the playoffs so far, the impact she has made on fans – specifically young female fans – has been indelible.

    Former New England Patriots star Julian Edelman underscored that point during his appearance on “Fox & Friends” on Tuesday.

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    Taylor Swift smiles during Kansas City Chiefs football game with Travis Kelce

    Taylor Swift started showing up at Chiefs games last season. (David Eulitt/Getty Images)

    “Honestly, it’s been an awesome thing because my daughter does talk about football,” Edelman told Fox News Channel’s Ainsley Earhardt. “You know, playing for the New England Patriots, it’s terrible to hear your daughter say Chiefs all the time. 

    “It gives us a conversation point. She loves learning about it.”

    Edelman will be a part of FOX’s coverage for Super Bowl LIX with Charissa Thompson, Charles Woodson, Michael Vick, Peter Schrager, Kristina Punk and Cooper Manning.

    FOX’s coverage of Super Bowl LIX will begin at 1 p.m. ET. Coverage can also be streamed live on Tubi for the first time ever.

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    The Chiefs will take on the Philadelphia Eagles.

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  • Ex-NFL star Clay Matthews discusses responsible gun ownership as a father, raising sons to be hunters

    Ex-NFL star Clay Matthews discusses responsible gun ownership as a father, raising sons to be hunters

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    Ever since he retired, Clay Matthews has spent plenty of time on the field – just not the gridiron.

    The Green Bay Packers legend is not only part of a legendary football family, but he was raised a hunter and is doing the same for his children as well.

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    Matthews was one of four ex-NFL players nominated for Colt’s Safety Impact Award, designed to elevate and amplify nonprofit organizations that are pushing the envelope in firearm safety and education.

    Green Bay Packers Clay Matthews, #52, is victorious during game against the San Francisco 49ers at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on Sept. 9, 2012. (John Biever /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    Matthews has backed Project ChildSafe, a charity that he says hits close to home as a father of three children all under the age of 10.

    “This was a natural fit to work with Colt to come together on something that means a great deal to me, to give back and promote this education of firearm safety,” Matthews said in a recent interview with Fox News Digital.

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    “[Project ChildSafe does] such an amazing job at this comprehensive education, from providing free locks for firearms to actual safes, working with local law enforcement, it was just a no-brainer… Project Child safe just really designated with me.”

    Fans can vote for their favorite player until Friday on safetyimpactaward.com, and for every vote cast, Colt will donate $1 (up to $10,000) to the winner. Plus, if a safety happens in Super Bowl LIX, fans will have a chance to win $100,000.

    “This is a competition after all, so I’m asking you to vote for my charity,” Matthews quipped, as he is up against Fletcher Cox, Joe Thomas and Adam Vinatieri.

    Clay Matthews on field

    Green Bay Packers outside linebacker Clay Matthews, #52, leaves the field after their game on Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018 at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Mark Hoffman / USA TODAY NETWORK)

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    Matthews said his soon-to-be 10-year-old son wants to go deer hunting soon, while his 5 year old “wants to sit in the blind for turkey hunting season this upcoming year.” The kids also get dressed up in “camo and blaze orange” quite often, he admits.

    “People can guess what type of family we are,” he joked.

    However, with that comes a lot of responsibility, and Matthews gave advice to his fellow firearm owners on how to keep everyone safe.

    “First is have them locked up at all times. My kids from a young age have been brought up around firearms, whether it be hunting, recreational shooting, clinking, whatever it may be, but they understand dad’s in charge of that. You don’t have free rein. They’re completely locked up. I’m in charge of that,” Matthews said. 

    Clay Matthews and Aaron Rodgers

    Green Bay Packers linebacker Clay Matthews, left, points to Super Bowl MVP Aaron Rodgers after giving him a championship belt after the win against the Pittsburgh Steelers during Super Bowl XLV at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on Feb. 6, 2011. (USA TODAY NETWORK-Wis. via Imagn Content Services, LLC)

    “And just the attention to safety, really, knowing where the barrel is pointed, finger off the trigger, stuff that seems easy for most gun owners, but when you’re raising children to be in that lifestyle to shoot firearms, you’ve just gotta teach and ingrain at a young age. 

    “My father did a fantastic job with me. I know I was the kid, ‘Dad, can I see this? Can I see that?’ ‘No, no, no.’ But when I got out there, there was a responsibility that I felt I had growing up in that environment, and hopefully my kids will have the same.”

    Ahead of their deer hunting day, Matthews said he will be taking his oldest son out for practice – likely after a flag-football game.

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    “I was raised in Southern California, so I didn’t have the opportunities to be out in the field all the time, but I’ve always had this drive to the outdoors and firearms,” he said. “So for me, I love sharing this with them.”

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  • Ex-NFL star Julian Edelman makes bold Tom Brady Super Bowl LIX prediction

    Ex-NFL star Julian Edelman makes bold Tom Brady Super Bowl LIX prediction

    Former New England Patriots star Julian Edelman will be covering the Super Bowl as an analyst for FOX Sports when Super Bowl LIX takes place on Feb. 9 in New Orleans.

    Edelman will also get to work alongside, in some capacity, with his former teammate Tom Brady, as the legendary quarterback will be on the call with Kevin Burkhardt when the Kansas City Chiefs look to make history against the Philadelphia Eagles.

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    Announcer Tom Brady looks on before an NFC wild card game between the Philadelphia Eagles and the Green Bay Packers at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on Jan. 12, 2025. (Bill Streicher-Imagn Images)

    The game will put the finishing touches on Brady’s first full season as a broadcaster. He will get to put everything he has learned over the course of the season into a finished product with millions of viewers set to tune in to the FOX broadcast and the Tubi livestream of the game.

    Edelman appeared on Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends” and had high expectations for the seven-time Super Bowl champion.

    “I guarantee he’s probably going to be very fired up,” Edelman said. “He’s probably going to be imagining himself in those situations.

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    Julian Edelman pregame

    Wide receiver Julian Edelman, #11 of the New England Patriots, gestures toward the crowd as he runs onto the field prior to a game against the Cleveland Browns on Oct. 27, 2019 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)

    “I think it’s going to be a great performance by him because he’s gonna get to show us inside looks to things only he knows Patrick Mahomes is going through.”

    Brady has reportedly been barred from meeting with teams ahead of the game, which is usually reserved for broadcasters to gather knowledge to help them through their calls, because of his minority ownership stake in the Las Vegas Raiders.

    The former Patriots wide receiver said he believed Brady would be able to persevere without those meetings.

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    “I’m sure he can figure it out on his own. I’m pretty confident coaches and players of the other team don’t mind talking to Tom Brady,” he said.

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