Dallas Cowboys strength and conditioning coach Markus Paul dies at 54

Dallas Cowboys strength and conditioning coach Markus Paul died Wednesday at 54, a day after suffering a medical episode

The Dallas Cowboys’ strength and conditioning Markus Paul, who had a medical episode at the team’s facility Tuesday, died on Wednesday, the team announced.

Per a statement from the Cowboys: “The organization extends its prayers and support to the Paul family, and the team will recognize and remember Markus, a valued and loved member of the Cowboys Family, prior to the Thanksgiving Day game tomorrow afternoon.”

“The loss of a family member is a tragedy, and Markus Paul was a loved and valued member of our family. He was a pleasant and calming influence in our strength room and throughout The Star,” owner Jerry Jones said. “His passion for his work and his enthusiasm for life earned him great respect and admiration from all of our players and the entire organization. We offer our love and support to his family in this very difficult time. Our hearts are broken for his family and all of the individuals whose lives he touched and made better.”

 Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Per ESPN on Paul’s career:

Paul joined the Cowboys in 2018 as an assistant to Mike Woicik and was named the strength and conditioning coordinator upon McCarthy’s arrival as coach. Paul played five years as a defensive back in the NFL with the Chicago Bears and Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1989-93 after four seasons at Syracuse, where he was a two-time All-American.

He entered the coaching ranks in 1998 with the New Orleans Saints and then spent five seasons with the New England Patriots’ strength staff under Woicik from 2000-04. In 2005 and ’06, Paul was the director of physical development and head strength and conditioning coach for the New York Jets.

He spent 11 seasons with the New York Giants as an assistant strength coach before joining the Cowboys.

 

All charges dropped against former Giants’ No. 1 pick DeAndre Baker

Chargers have been dropped against former New York Giants’ No. 1 pick, DeAndre Baker

A wild and twisted story takes another twist as all charges have been dropped against former New York Giants’ first-round draft pick DeAndre Baker, it was announced Monday.

Baker, a first-round pick out of Georgia in 2019, was being prosecuted on four counts of robbery with a firearm. He was originally charged with four counts of armed robbery and four counts of aggravated assault with a firearm for allegedly taking jewelry and cash at gunpoint during a dice game in Miramar, Florida, in May.

With the charges dropped, Baker’s attorney, Patrick G. Patel, told SNY’s Ralph Vacchiano that getting back into the NFL is the main goal.

“DeAndre is excited,” Patel said. “He can’t wait to get back in the NFL, get off the exempt list and get rolling. There’s no reason this shouldn’t happen right away because this kid’s been the victim from the jump.”

Watch: Boston Scott races 56 yards for an Eagles’ touchdown

Boston Scott burned the New York Giants for a long TD run.

The Philadelphia Eagles are facing another comeback against the New York Giants. They got a big play out of Boston Scott in the third quarter and with a two-point conversion cut an 11-point deficit to three.

Watch as the running back takes off from the Philly 44 and doesn’t stop until the end zone. The 56-yard run made it 14-9 and Doug Pederson played the numbers to cut the gap to a field goal on the conversion.

The Giants have seen enough of Scott in 2020. His great catch in their first meeting lifted Philly to victory.

Listen: Carson Wentz calls ‘Hulk Hogan, Hulk Hogan’ audible

The Eagles turned to sports entertainment for an audible call against the Giants

All sorts of different celebrity names pop up in audible calls by quarterbacks.

Sunday as the Eagles were on the move against the New York Giants, Philadelphia quarterback Carson Wentz turned to sports entertainment.

Give a listen as Wentz shouts “Hulk Hogan,” Hulk Hogan” to his offense.

The Eagles were trying to draw the Giants offside and Big Blue didn’t fall for Philly’s swerve.

Watch: Daniel Jones makes it to end zone on 34-yard run

Daniel Jones with a 34-yard run for the Giants against the Eagles.

Daniel Jones accomplished Sunday what he was unable to do in the New York Giants’ first meeting with the Philadelphia Eagles: Finding the end zone on a long run.

Watch as the Giants’ quarterback goes untouched into the end zone on a 34-yard scamper.

Of course, when the Giants met the Eagles in Philadelphia earlier in the season, Jones took off and was on his way to the end zone before the Turf Monster swallowed the quarterback on what wound up as a viral 80-yard run.

Week 10: How to survive and advance in your knockout pool

Week 10: How to survive and advance in your knockout pool

What does Bill Belichick consider one of the great moments of his career?

Resigning from the New York Jets is considered by Bill Belichick a great moment in his career.

Patriots coach Bill Belichick has eight Super Bowl rings, two as an assistant with the New York Giants, and six as coach of New England. So, what would he surprisingly consider one of the defining moments of his legendary career?

How about walking away from the job as head coach of the New York Jets by writing his resignation on a piece of paper? On Jan. 4, 2000, moments before he was to be formally introduced as the Jets’ coach, he scribbled on a sheet of loose-leaf paper that he was resigning as the “HC of the NYJ.” He handed it to team officials and conducted a 50-minute news conference.

“Well, not only one of the most defining, but you know, one of the great moments of my career,” Belichick said Tuesday on WEEI. “That combined with Robert [Kraft] giving me the opportunity to come here, I couldn’t have asked for anything more. That wasn’t a good situation for me and I didn’t want to be part of it, so I wasn’t. The other half of that was Robert giving me the opportunity to come here and trading, he gave up quite a bit to get me to come here, and that was a big trade.

“I am very thankful that it worked out. I appreciate all the support from Robert, the Kraft family, the Patriots organization and all the New England fans and I’ll keep trying to do my best for this team and this organization — give them the very best that can and I very thankful for the opportunity to come here. I just wasn’t going to stay there in that situation.”

Belichick was going to take over from Bill Parcells after the 1999 season but chose to exit. The Patriots acquired his services at the price of some draft picks.

The letter below outlines the five draft picks that were involved in the exchange, with the Jets receiving the Patriots’ 16th overall pick in the 2000 NFL Draft, along with a fourth and seventh in 2001. In return, the Patriots got Belichick, a fifth-round pick in 2001, and a seventh-round pick in 2002.

If you were wondering how the picks turned out, click here.

Watch: Alex Smith leads Washington to first touchdown since breaking his leg

Alex Smith’s miraculous comeback continues with a touchdown drive for Washington

The Alex Smith comeback continues. He had to enter the game against the New York Giants on Sunday when Kyle Allen was injured. Smith led Washington to a touchdown, the first TD drive he guided since suffering his gruesome leg injury in 2018.

The scoring play was a one-yard plunge by Antonio Gibson.

It capped a six-play, 75-yard drive that meant much more than six points on the scoreboard.

 

How one play can sum up the NFC East in 2020

Antonio Gibson fumbled and the race was on to recover it. Football follies.

The NFC East is awful. And the New York Giants and Washington Football Team showed how inept the division is on one play Sunday.

Watch as Antonio Gibson fumble and the Football Follies and Keystone Kops are on as neither team can cover the football.

Eventually, the Giants recovered. The NFC East, however, is not going to recover this season.

NFL reveals Week 9 announcer schedule

The NFL schedule for announcers is out and the broadcasters are planning their treks.

Week 9 of the NFL season is upon us. The Packers visit the Niners to start play and the Jets play host to the Patriots to finish it.

Here’s your coverage map.

Thursday

Green Bay at San Francisco, FOX|NFL|Amazon 8:20 p.m.
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Erin Andrews & Kristina Pink

Sunday

Denver at Atlanta, CBS 1 p.m.
Greg Gumbel, Rich Gannon & Jay Feely

Seattle at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Chris Myers, Brock Huard & Jen Hale

Baltimore at Indianapolis, CBS 1 p.m.
Ian Eagle, Charles Davis & Evan Washburn

Houston at Jacksonville, CBS 1 p.m.
Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta

Carolina at Kansas City, FOX 1 p.m.
Kevin Burkhardt, Daryl Johnston & Pam Oliver

Detroit at Minnesota, CBS 1 p.m.
Kevin Harlan, Trent Green & Melanie Collins

Chicago at Tennessee, FOX 1 p.m.
Dick Stockton, Greg Jennings & Laura Okmin

NY Giants at Washington, FOX 1 p.m.
Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma & Shannon Spake

Las Vegas at LA Chargers, FOX 4:05 p.m.
Joe Davis, Mark Schlereth

Miami at Arizona, CBS 4:25 p.m.
Andrew Catalon, James Lofton & Michael Grady

Pittsburgh at Dallas, CBS 4:25 p.m.
Jim Nantz, Tony Romo & Tracy Wolfson

New Orleans at Tampa Bay, NBC 8:20 p.m.
Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth & Michele Tafoya

New England at N.Y. Jets, ESPN 8:15 p.m.
Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick & Lisa Salters

Byes: Cincinnati, Cleveland, L.A. Rams, Philadelphia