Dan Lanning shuts down potential of NFL coaching leap in near future

Dan Lanning says he has no NFL head coaching aspirations at this time, but Duck fans better hope the Chiefs Andy Reid doesn’t retire soon.

Oregon Ducks football coach Dan Lanning made it crystal clear that he wasn’t going to leave his current job for any college job in the nation.

He just told the whole world that he wasn’t leaving Eugene for Tuscaloosa as Lanning posted on social media that he wouldn’t be going to Alabama to replace Nick Saban.

College football is one thing, but the NFL is another.

Lanning was recently on the Pat McAfee Show on ESPN and discussed several subjects, including the possibility of leaving Oregon for a head coaching job in the NFL.

I used to dream of coaching in the NFL. I’m from Kansas City. I gew up a big Kansas City Chiefs fan. But I’ll tell you this, there’s nobody in the nation that I want to coach the Chiefs other than Andy Reid. He’s got to keep killing it. This guy solves problems. I’m cheering for Andy every week, Pat Mahomes, Travis Kelce. The Chiefs got to keep winning. I love where I’m at. I think that’s really clear. This is where I want to be.

The Duck fanbase can relax a bit as Andy Reid isn’t expected to leave the Chiefs any time soon, but with the stunning announcements of Pete Carroll leaving the Seahawks and Bill Belichick leaving the Patriots, anything is possible.

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Henry Winkler would rather talk about Patrick Mahomes than the ‘Barry’ season finale

Given how brutal that episode was, I don’t blame him.

Henry Winkler’s resurgence has been wonderful to watch.

The actor who rose to prominence playing Arthur “Fonzie” Fonzarelli on Happy Days has re-entered the public consciousness over the past two decades thanks to his Hank Zipser books, as well as roles in Adam Sandler-adjacent films (The Waterboy, Here Comes the Boom) and as the iconic “worst [expletive] attorney” Barry Zuckerkorn in Arrested Development.

As good as he’s been, the defining piece of his renaissance is his role as acting coach Gene Cousineau in HBO’s Barry, a dark comedy that has aggressively favored the former word in that descriptor over the latter as it has gone on. Winkler has been Emmy-worthy throughout the show’s third season, but there was no better display of his talent and range than in the season finale, which was broadcast Sunday night.

But when he went on Rich Eisen’s show as part of a promotional tour to discuss his work, Winkler was more interested in the NFL than talking about himself.

“Have you met Patrick Mahomes?” Winkler asked a surprised Eisen, who’d launched into a plug for Barry moments before being kindly interrupted. “He’s one of my heroes. That’s true. I root for that team, even though I have never lived there. I think he is just phenomenal to watch.”

“Apropos of?” asked Eisen.

“Nothing!” responded Winkler, who then went on to ask about Aaron Donald’s contract status — and then earnestly congratulate the three-time defensive player of the year — as the host and his production crew laughed in the background. The legendary actor then went on to riff about the durability of football players and Sandler’s inability to dress himself properly before finally getting back to the show he was ostensibly there to talk up.

This is all massively on-brand for Winkler, who remains a cultural icon but constantly comes across as a guy who genuinely wants to swap stories with whomever he’s lucky enough to talk with. He began a pre-finale interview with Vulture by dissecting his experiences with Frank Sinatra. He ended it by talking about all the dogs he hugged on the set of Barry:

“I made friends with all of them. They were all in a pen in the backyard where it took place. There were 32 in total, and I hugged every one of them. I’m a dog lover. I have three dogs. A Labradoodle, a goldendoodle, and a one-legged, idiosyncratic German shepherd.”

This is all to say Patrick Mahomes should absolutely carve out a spot on his schedule to meet Winkler and possibly visit a dog shelter together. If Winkler’s latest round of interviews is any indication, they’ll have plenty to talk about.

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Tom Brady one-upped Patrick Mahomes by joking about his awful NFL Combine

Brady gets another one over from Mahomes.

When a draft event like the NFL Combine rolls around every year, a lot of players like to reminisce about how they did while throwing on air or catching passes while running a straight line. Sometimes the conversation is about how they were incredible athletes, true physical specimens destined for pro football. And sometimes it’s about how they beat the odds after an awkward jump or a less-than-special 40-yard dash.

Patrick Mahomes is, of course, an outstanding NFL player. To highlight Desmond Riddler’s run as a quarterback, the official league account referenced Mahomes’ 40-yard dash from the 2017 Combine (a respectable 4.80). The Super Bowl MVP took exception (in jest) on Twitter.

Tom Brady —a former rival of Mahomes who went 3-1 against the Chiefs quarterback — had to throw his name and famous “unathletic sixth-rounder” story into the mix to one-up Mahomes one more time.

Mahomes undoubtedly proved a lot of critics wrong when he became the face of the NFL after the Chiefs’ 2020 Super Bowl win. But Brady’s starting point as someone who didn’t fit the stereotypical quarterback mold to then become arguably the greatest player of all time? That’s a little more impressive, as Brady wasn’t afraid to remind Mahomes.

Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes’ mom wants ESPN to stop calling him ‘Pat’

ESPN was calling Patrick Mahomes by the wrong name and his mother wasn’t having any of it.

ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” crew has unleashed the wrath of Patrick Mahomes’ mom, Randi.

She’s been watching the game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Baltimore Ravens, which has been the cause of her frustration. It’s not because ESPN’s crew is talking bad about Mahomes or anything like that. They’re just not calling him by the right name and she’s not having any of it.

The new group of broadcasters for “Monday Night Football” composed of Louis Riddick, Brian Griese and Steve Levy have spent most of the evening referring to Mahomes as “Pat.” The issue — Pat Mahomes is Patrick’s father. Pat is the MLB pitcher who played for the Minnesota Twins and the New York Mets, not the quarterback for the Chiefs.

Mahomes’ mom took to Twitter to voice her frustrations.

“Guilty, guilty, guilty,” ESPN’s Louis Riddick said during the broadcast after learning of the Randi Mahomes’ tweet. “I get it, I get it.”

The next time Riddick referred to Patrick, he got it right and called Chiefs QB by the name of his birth certificate. You know what they say, “If mom isn’t happy, nobody is happy.” Good on the ESPN crew for having some fun with it and making sure they get it right moving forward.

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Fighting Irish Wire: Staff Super Bowl Picks

So what happens Sunday when Kansas City tries to end their 50 year title drought and San Francisco tries to join the Steelers and Patriots as the only teams with six Super Bowls?

What happens Sunday evening in the final football game we get until late August?

Alright, that’s said an no offense is meant to the XFL or fans/players of any other league but you catch my drift.

So what happens Sunday when Kansas City tries to end their 50 year title drought and San Francisco tries to join the Steelers and Patriots as the only teams with six Super Bowls?

Here is how the Fighting Irish Wire Staff sees Super Bowl Sunday going:

Mike Chen: Chiefs 35, 49ers 24

Pat Mahomes is just too damn good and proves to be too much for the 49ers to handle.

Geoffrey Clark: Chiefs 35, 49ers 17

Mahomes is built for moments like this and when the lights shine brightest he won’t disappoint. Not exactly a reach but he’s easily the MVP come 10 pm Sunday.

Jeff Feyerer: Chiefs 27, 49ers 23

The Chiefs just have so many weapons I don’t know how you stop them. Sure the 49ers have a great running game but I trust the KC game plan and secondary to both be better against that running game than the Packers were.

Nick Shepkowski: Chiefs 27, 49ers 24

Oddity of this game is that the stats don’t match the narrative. The 49ers actually allowed more points than the Chiefs did this year while the Niners also out-scored Kansas City in 2019. Defense wins championships, right?! Chiefs in a classic.