Empire State Building to turn green again if Eagles win Super Bowl

New Yorkers won’t be happy with the Empire State Building if the Eagles win Super Bowl LVII

The folks behind the lighting at the Empire State Building caused a furor and social media sensation when they turned things green and white to celebrate the Philadelphia Eagles victory in the NFC Championship Game.

The people in charge aren’t backing down if the NFC East champs win the Super Bowl.

They are going to do it again, according to the New York Post.

“The Empire State Building will continue its annual practice of being a virtual scoreboard for the Super Bowl, and will then light for the winning team.” an Empire State Realty Trust spokesperson said.

There is no love lost between New York and Philadelphia. The teams are enemies and the sports fans have a volatile relationship.

The building’s management views the Sunday stunt as a way to attract tourists from around the world to the Big Apple landmark to pay $79 each to visit the observation decks on the 86th and 102nd floors, a source with direct knowledge of the company’s plans told The Post.

“They believe they play to billions, and not locals,” the source said.

Indeed, insiders said execs took a victory lap after the building’s Jan. 29 tweet — titled “Fly Eagles Fly” showing the building lit in Philly color following the victory over San Francisco — garnered 45 million views and countless more on Instagram and TikTok. The building stayed lit green-and-white for hours until the LED display switched to the red and white of the Kansas City Chiefs following their victory in the AFC title game

What color jerseys will the Chiefs and Eagles each wear in Super Bowl LVII?

What color jerseys will each team wear in Super Bowl LVII?

The fashion statements have been delivered for Super Bowl LVII.

The Kansas City Chiefs will be in their white jerseys.

The Philadelphia Eagles will wear green.

And, if you are looking for a trend … teams wearing white jerseys have won 15 of the past 18 Super Bowls.

Super Bowl LVII: Chiefs DL Chris Jones is set to test the Eagles’ NFL-best offensive line

Chiefs DL Chris Jones put on an absolute pass-rush clinic against the Bengals in the AFC Championship game. The Eagles should be VERY concerned.

It is amazing to consider that Sunday’s AFC Championship game marked Chiefs defensive lineman Chris Jones’ 13th postseason appearance, and he didn’t have a single sack in his first 12 playoff performances. This included Kansas City’s win over the 49ers in Super Bowl LV — a Jones game so dominant, it could be argued (as I did) that he should have been named the gane’s Most Valuable Player. You can completely disrupt an offense without sacks, and Jones has done it more often than most.

That said, when Jones finally broke his sack drought against the Bengals on Sunday, he did it with authority. Jones had two sacks, and he also had three quarterback hits and five quarterback hurries. Cincinnati’s injury-ravaged offensive line, which looked impressively solid against the Bills in the divisional round, had no shot of keeping Jones at bay. Nor did the rest of Kansas City’s defensive line fail to eat. Joe Burrow was pressured on 21 of his 49 dropbacks. Burrow took five sacks, and under pressure, he completed just five passes on 13 attempts for 81 yards, no touchdowns, both of his interceptions, and a passer rating of 20.5.

Others on that Chiefs line got their work in, but Jones was the superstar. The Bengals tried just about everything to stop him short of double-teaming him on every play (it was about half the time), and nothing worked. Jones played all over the line, and got pressures from the left and right edges, and from the left and right defensive tackle gaps.

“Yeah, he’s so good,” Burrow said of Jones after the game. “He makes it so hard on you. He’s so big, strong and physical. He really understands what you’re trying to do to him up front. You have to give them credit, they had a really good rush plan. They let their big-time pass rushers go to work.”

There was an element of last year’s AFC Championship game that stuck in Jones’ craw all season long, and he was more than ready to prove his readiness this time around.

“I think I planned for this game – my whole offseason was dedicated to this game. I missed a few big plays last year, unfortunate they were able to move forward, and I put that on my shoulders. So this offseason, I dedicated my whole offseason to making sure that when that moment calls, for me specifically, that I’ll answer the call.”

Not that Jones played badly in that game — he had six quarterback hurries in 34 pass-rushing snaps — but this time around, he cranked things up several levels.

As for that first sack (and the second), Jones claimed not to care about it (and them).

“It’s been a lot made by you guys,” Jones said with a laugh. “Y’all make it bigger than what it is. I really personally do not care about stats in the playoffs. My job is to make sure that I play hard, play physical, set a different side of the line of scrimmage and make my teammates around me make plays. Rather it’s taking the double team the whole game or rather it’s getting the one-on-one and winning. I think you guys blow it out of proportion. It doesn’t really matter to me, but I’m glad that you guys can have another story that Chris Jones finally got a sack.” 

Well, in that spirit, let’s get past the obvious and dive into what Jones did in what amounted to a perfect pass-rush clinic.

VIDEO: Was the AFC Championship game Patrick Mahomes’ best NFL performance?

Was Sunday’s AFC Championship game the best performance of Patrick Mahomes’ NFL career? Doug Farrar and Luke Easterling discuss it.

In this week’s episode of “4-Down Territory,” powered by KIA, Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar and Luke Easterling of Bucs Wire and Draft Wire went over the idea that Sunday’s AFC Championship game was Patrick Mahomes’ ultimate NFL performance.

In the Chiefs’ 23-20 AFC Championship win over the Bengals, Patrick Mahomes completed 29 of 43 passes for 326 yards, two touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 105.4. And he did it against a defense that had had his number in each of the last three times these teams played. Moreover, he did it on an obviously injured right ankle,and down multiple receivers due to injury. We’ve seen all kinds of amazing things from Mahomes since he started terrorizing the NFL in 2018, but was this the most impressive game of Mahomes’ NFL career? 

Doug: I think it was. It’s certainly in the top two or three. In this spotlight, against a defensive coordinator in Lou Anarumo who had taken his  lunch money over and over, and down four receivers due to injury, Mahomes took the field (just barely), and you could see as the game went on that whatever he took to make his performance possible in the first place was wearing off. He was more and more hampered as things went along. And still, he got it done as he hadn’t before against this team. 

The most remarkable turnaround came in the second half. The Bengals had made Mahomes look like an undrafted free agent in the second halves and overtime in the three previous Chiefs losses: He completed 25 passes on 44 attempts for 503 yards, no touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 54.5. In the second half of this game, with his body and his receiver corps falling apart, Mahomes completed 16 of 24 passes for 161 yards, a touchdown, no picks, and a passer rating of 99.5. Mahomes doesn’t have a lot of demons to exorcize in his career, but he certainly took care of a few on Sunday. 

Patrick Mahomes redefined his greatness in this AFC Championship victory

Luke: Yeah, we’ve seen some otherworldly things from No. 15 already in his career, but this was so important. Just like you said, the recent history against the Bengals, the high stakes, the injuries (both his own and his teammates’)…he had every reason to fold and let Joe Burrow take another one from him in front of his own home crowd. Instead, he delivered the kind of gutsy performance we’ll be talking about for years to come, especially if the Chiefs go on to finish the job in Arizona.

[mm-video type=video id=01gr439kdwcf88hmc7vm playlist_id=none player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gr439kdwcf88hmc7vm/01gr439kdwcf88hmc7vm-ad700ef502cd45a9767ef3168f0d0616.jpg]

Early money makes Eagles small favorite over Chiefs in Super Bowl LVII

The betting line for Super Bowl LVII between the Chiefs and Eagles forecasts a tight game

Expect a tight game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LVII if the betting analysts are correct.

The line opened as a pick’em before Philly floated to 2-point favoritism.

The total — or over/under — is at 49.5 points.

Super Bowl LVII will be played in Glendale, Az, at State Farm Stadium on Feb. 12.

 

Chris Stapleton, Babyface, Sheryl Lee Ralph to perform prior to Super Bowl LVII

Chris Stapleton and Babyface will do the honors before Super Bowl LVII

The national anthem will have a country music flavor prior to Super Bowl LVII. The NFL revealed on Tuesday that Chris Stapleton will perform the anthem before its championship game on Feb. 12.

Stapleton follows other country singers singing the anthem for football’s biggest night. In 2022, Mickey Guyton performed A year earlier, superstar Eric Church was joined by R&B singer Jazmine Sullivan.

Other country artists who have performed the anthem since 2000 are Faith Hill (2000), the Chicks (2003), Carrie Underwood (2010), and Luke Bryan (2017).

Stapleton was named the 2022 CMA Male Vocalist of the Year in November.

Additionally, “America the Beautiful” will be sung by Babyface.

This year’s Super Bowl will take place in Glendale, Az.

A “60 Minutes” profile of Stapleton from last year.

NFL reveals Rihanna as Super Bowl LVII halftime performer

Rihanna will perform at halftime of Super Bowl LVII in Arizona on Feb. 12

The NFL has come up with a huge name for halftime of Super Bowl LVII in Glendale, Arizona, in February.

The league revealed during its games on Sunday that Rihanna will be the act during the break of its championship game on Feb. 12.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Ci8KpteuaJU/

“Rihanna is a generational talent, a woman of humble beginnings who has surpassed expectations at every turn. A person born on the small island of Barbados who became one of the most prominent artists ever. Self-made in business and entertainment,” said Shawn “JAY-Z” Carter.

This marks the first year of a partnership between Apple Music, the NFL, and Roc Nation.

This is a marked change from a few years ago when the singer turned down an offer to perform out of solidarity with exiled QB Colin Kaepernick.

“I couldn’t dare do that. For what? Who gains from that? Not my people. I just couldn’t be a sellout,” she told Vogue. “I couldn’t be an enabler. There’s things within that organization that I do not agree with at all, and I was not about to go and be of service to them in any way.”

 

Jags tied with 3 others for lowest odds to win Super Bowl LVII

The Jags, Jets, Texans, and Lions all will start at the bottom in terms of Tipico’s post-Super Bowl LVI odds.

The 2021 NFL season has officially ended after the Cincinnati Bengals and Los Angeles Rams clashed at SoFi Stadium in a pretty entertaining battle. In the end, though, it was the Rams who were able to get the victory thanks to a late Cooper Kupp touchdown that put his team up 23-20 before the one minute mark of the fourth quarter.

Needless to say, there will be a lot of celebrating in Los Angeles, but oddsmakers have already moved on to the next Super Bowl. And as fans of the Jacksonville Jaguars would expect after they landed the No. 1 overall pick for the second consecutive year, the Cardiac Cats are tied for the lowest odds at the moment (+10,000), according to Tipico Sportsbook.

The Jags spent this offseason searching for a new head coach for the second consecutive offseason. After getting a head start and starting the interview process on Dec. 30, the team finally named the man they interviewed on that date, Doug Pederson, their next coach on Feb. 3.

However, that coaching change and the Jags’ 2021 season hasn’t done much to move the needle in the eyes of oddsmakers as a lot of work has to be done. As a result, they’ve been grouped with the Houston Texans, Detroit Lions, and New York Jets, all of which also have a +10,000 figure.

The good news is that the Jags have a lot of resources they could utilize to get better quickly, like some of the NFL’s top draft picks and the second- largest cap space figure in the league. They also have a quarterback in Trevor Lawrence who could mesh well with Pederson, and that could give some bettors more confidence in the Jags than the other teams they have been grouped with.

The bad news is that the Jags retained general manager Trent Baalke, who has been a part of teams that have registered records of 5-11, 2-14, and 3-14, respectively, during his last three seasons as a general manager. Needless to say, if the Jags are going to have any chance at improving like the Bengals, they are going to need reinforcements in their front office both above and below Baalke, as the team said they had plans to acquire.

Right now, the Jags not only are understaffed in their front office, but haven’t named a full coaching staff yet. However, Pederson has moved swiftly and impressively on the latter issue, which makes the front office situation the key one to watch for those who believe the Jags can make a big jump in 2022.