Important NFL dates, times for Chiefs in March of 2023

March is the busiest month of the NFL offseason calendar for the #Chiefs and the rest of the league.

March is perhaps the busiest month of the NFL offseason calendar. The 2023 NFL Scouting Combine just wrapped up, but there are still some important dates on the way soon. The franchise tag deadline, the legal tampering period and the start of the NFL’s free agency period are just a few of the important events that are soon to arrive. There are also some key dates and events specific to the Chiefs, including contract guarantee trigger dates.

Here’s a quick look at the NFL calendar for March and what fans should be aware of over the course of the next month:

Big Ten Hockey Tournament: Wisconsin goalie stands on head to beat Notre Dame

Win or go home Saturday for the Irish.

Notre Dame put a season high 50 shots on goal against Wisconsin in the opening round of the Big Ten hockey tournament Friday night but it didn’t matter as Jared Moe turned away 49 of those shots in the 3-1 Badgers victory.

The complete writeup below is courtesy of Notre Dame athletics:

SOUTH BEND, Ind.  – No. 7 Notre Dame Hockey fell to Wisconsin, 3-1, in the best-of-three series opener of the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals on Friday night at Compton Family Ice Arena (3,634).

The Irish earned a season high by putting 50 shots on goal and held the Badgers to 28 on the night but Jared Moe’s 49 saves backstopped Wisconsin to the win.

Graham Slaggert tied the game, 1-1, just past the 13 minute mark of the second period, but the Badgers scored 38 seconds to take back a lead they would not relinquish.

“They played well so give them their due,” head coach Jeff Jackson said after the game. “It was playoff hockey, and you have to be prepared. Anything can happen in the playoffs. The goaltender played well, they keep you on the outside and we have to find a way to penetrate that.”

Graduate student Matthew Galajda made 24 saves for Notre Dame.

Notre Dame (25-10-0) finished 1-for-5 on the power play, while Wisconsin (10-22-3) was 0-for-1.

How It Happened

Five minutes into the opening frame Cam Burke nearly got the Irish on the board after following up a Max Ellis shot on goal, but following video review it was ruled the puck never crossed the goal line after hitting the far post.

Justin Janicke took a nice feed from Jack Adams in the high slot and rang one off the crossbar at 8:25 of the first.

The Irish continued to pressure and with 5:20 left in the first, Jake Pivonka’s stretch pass sprang Ryder Rolston on a partial breakaway attempt but his attempt went wide.

Wisconsin’s Brock Caufield then struck first, scoring his seventh of the season at 15:22 of the first.

Notre Dame had a power-play chance late in the first, with the best look coming from Nick Leivermann but his shot was pushed off the post by Wisconsin goaltender Jared Moe and cleared off the goal line by a defenseman.

Notre Dame trailed 1-0 after one.

With the extra attacker on during a delayed penalty, Jake Boltmann stepped into a one timer with 15:03 left in the second but it was stopped by Moe.

Galajda made a big shoulder stop on Daniel Laatsch at 11:11 of the second and smothered the follow-up attempt. Then Justin Janicke had a chance at the other end but couldn’t solve Moe.

Graham Slaggert broke through at 13:52 of the second, finishing off a one-timer from a Nick Leivermann cross-ice feed while the Irish were on the power play, with Ryder Rolston picking up the second assist. It was Slaggert’s 10th goal of the season.

But Wisconsin’s Dominick Mersch scored 38 seconds later to restore the Badgers’ lead to 2-1, which they would take to the locker room.

The Irish peppered Moe in the early going of the third but couldn’t tie it up before Zach Urdahl finished off a two-on-one chance with Sam Stange for a 3-1 Wisconsin lead at 5:57 of the third

Stastney set Landon Slaggert up in front with 8:39 left in the third, but the puck skipped over the sophomore’s stick when he tried to redirect it in the net.

Galajda was pulled with 3:42 left in the game, but the Irish were unable to extend the game, ultimately falling, 3-1.

Notes

  • With an assist tonight, Nick Leivermann extended his point streak to three games (Feb. 25-Mar. 4; 0-4-4).
  • With Graham Slaggert scoring a goal, it marked the third consecutive game with a tally from the Landon Slaggert/Graham Slaggert/Trevor Janicke line.
  • For Slaggert, it marked his 10th goal of the year, extending his career-high total.
  • Slaggert also became Notre Dame’s fifth 10-goal scorer this season.

Next Up

  • Game two of the best-of-three series will take place at 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, March 5 at Compton Family Ice Arena on March 4-6 (tickets).
  • The game will also be available on BTN+.

WATCH: Nick Saban and Alabama Football team march for social justice

Nick Saban and the Alabama football team march throughout campus in support for social justice and in opposition of recent injustices.

A few days ago, Alabama’s senior running back Najee Harris shared details of a march for social justice that would take place on the University of Alabama campus.

The plan to march from the Mal Moore Athletic Complex to the Foster Auditorium schoolhouse door was performed Monday afternoon with Crimson tide head coach Nick Saban leading the way.

While the march was seemingly organized by members of the football program, athletes form various sports across the University of Alabama participated.

Saban also spoke to his team and the public at Foster Auditorium as the march concluded.

This march comes just over a week after Jacob Blake was shot by police officers in kenosha, Wisconsin.

Being outspoken on social issues is not new for Saban and the Alabama football team in 2020. In a video posted by the team’s social media account back in June, coach Saban and numerous players were featured in a video that held a powerful message, “all lives can’t matter until Black live matter.”

CBS 42’s Simone Eli was present for the march and the speeches that were given afterward.

 

Wives of current, former Seahawks organize ‘Bridge to the Future’ walk

Wives of current and former Seattle Seahawks have organized a “‘Bridge to the Future” march across I-90 at 2:00 p.m. on June 13, 2020.

NFL players aren’t the only ones who are participating in marches around the country in protest of racial injustices, their wives are organizing events too.

“My wife and her friends are putting together a March for Solidarity & Justice! ” linebacker K.J. Wright posted on his Instagram account. “Join us this Saturday at 2 as we take the necessary steps towards making the future better for our children.”

Wright’s wife, Natalie, Tiffany Chancellor and other members of the Seahawks’ Women’s Association are coordinating the event.

The march is called the “Bridge to the Future” and will feature a walk from Mercer Island across the I-90 bridge in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

The march kicks off at 2:00 p.m. PT from Aubrey Davis Park.

Complete information can be found on Wright’s Instagram page.

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Report: Dwayne Haskins, Doug Williams to meet with D.C. Mayor Bowser about BLM protest

Both Haskins and Williams will reportedly travel to D.C. this weekend to meet with Mayor Bowser and discuss the BLM protests.

According to The Athletic‘s Rhiannon Walker, Washington Redskins quarterback Dwayne Haskins, and SVP of Player Development Doug Williams, will head to Washington D.C. this weekend to speak with Mayor Muriel Bowser, who attended the protests for Black Lives Matter on Saturday.

Haskins has been very vocal on social media about the need for police reform, and the protests against police brutality that sparked after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis a couple of weeks ago. As for Williams, he is famously known as the first African-American quarterback to win a Super Bowl in the NFL, which he did with the Redskins in 1987.

Mayor Bowser has been active regarding protests in Washington D.C., though she has faced some criticism online for making hollow acts, such as painting ‘Black Lives Matter’ on the street in front of the White House, but making no movement towards defunding the police department. It is unclear what will be discussed with Haskins and Williams come to chat, but you can reasonably guess that this will be part of the conversation.

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March, the longest month of our entire lives, is reportedly ending

(We hope.)

It’s ending.

We hope it’s ending.

March 2020, the single longest month in the history of the world, will come to an end tomorrow. At least I really hope it will come to an end tomorrow. I’m not going to believe it until I see the calendar and see April 1, and not like, March 32, or the black, dead eyes of Satan himself laughing at me, I won’t believe it.

Do you remember the tornadoes that hit Nashville? It was terrible, a lot of people had homes damaged. Lives were lost.

That was March. That was this same month. If you had asked me that this morning, I would have told you that happened in January, or possibly back in 2019. No, it happened on March 2. That was this month.

What about in the political realm? How about Super Tuesday, when Joe Biden was buoyed by Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar dropping out of the race, and ran out to a big delegate lead over Bernie Sanders?

That was March. That happened this month. Technically, Pete Buttigieg was still running for president in March. He dropped out on the first, but for a day that occurred THIS MONTH, Buttigieg was still in the presidential field.

I barely remember what Mayor Pete looks like. He looked like Celtics coach Brad Stevens, right?

Mayor Pete? Celtics coach Brad Stevens? Who’s to say.

A global pandemic started causing thousands of people to die. Cities, entire countries, were shut down. All the major professional sports leagues were canceled or postponed, an unprecedented number of people filed for unemployment, our economy tanked, and we all ran out of toilet paper. That’s happened in the last, like, two and a half weeks.

Anyway, tomorrow, it’s over. March will end. April will start. The month T.S. Eliot famously called “the cruelest.” I don’t see how it could possibly be crueler.

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Important NFL dates, times for March 2020

These are the dates you should keep an eye on during March 2020.

The Super Bowl LIV celebration didn’t last long for Kansas City. Brett Veach and his crew have been hard at work, ensuring that the Chiefs remain competitive for the 2020 NFL season.

The team spent the past week in Indianapolis for the NFL Scouting Combine. With a new month upon us, it means there are new important dates to monitor in the NFL calendar. Several big ones happen in March, such as the start of the new league year. Here’s a look at the upcoming NFL calendar and the dates that Chiefs fans should be aware of.

March NFL calendar of events

February 24 – March 2: The NFL Scouting Combine kicks off from Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.

March 12: Marks the final day that teams can use the franchise tag or transition tag on players (keep your eyes on Chiefs DT Chris Jones, who is expected to be tagged).

March 16-18: The NFL’s legal tampering period begins. Teams can begin negotiating with pending free agents.

March 18: The 2020 league year begins at 4:00 p.m. ET. All 2019 player contracts expire at this time. The free agency period for the 2020 season officially opens.

March 18: Club option deadline. Prior to 4:00p.m. ET, teams must exercise club options on players with options clauses in their contracts. If they don’t, they forfeit the rights to those players.

March 18: Restricted free-agent deadline. Teams must submit qualifying offers to their RFA’s with expiring contracts in order to retain a Right of First Refusal/Compensation.

March 18: Exclusive rights free-agent deadline. Teams must submit a contract tender to retain exclusive negotiating rights to their players with expiring 2019 contracts who have fewer than three accrued seasons.

March 18: Top 51 rule. Teams must be under the salary cap by 4:00 p.m. ET with only the top 51 contracts counted against it.

March 18: The trading period for the new league year begins at 4:00 p.m. ET. Trades can be agreed upon prior to March 18, but won’t process until this date.

March 29-April 1: NFL Owners spring meeting in Palm Beach, Florida

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