Shannon Sharpe apparently claims he was hacked on Instagram Live after NSFW video gets posted

An NSFW video surfaced on Shannon Sharpe’s Instagram account on Wednesday.

We are, as I always say, a family website, so we won’t be linking to the video in question that surfaced on Wednesday from Shannon Sharpe’s Instagram account.

Here’s what we can tell you: it is very much NSFW in nature. All we know is that a five-minute Instagram Live video came from Sharpe’s account, it was deleted, and then he apparently posted an Instagram Story claiming he was hacked before that too was deleted. As of publishing this, we haven’t heard anything since from the podcast host and ESPN star.

That’s it. Here’s what he posted before it was deleted:

https://twitter.com/JenD_04/status/1833928474198781958

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Pro Football Hall of Famer sees an AFC Championship berth for Browns

A Pro Football Hall of Famer envisions an AFC Championship berth for the Browns. With one condition…

Hall of Fame tight end and co-host of ESPN’s First Take Shannon Sharpe has made a huge prediction for the Cleveland Browns and the 2024 NFL playoffs.

The former Denver Bronco used his platform to explain why he thinks Cleveland has one of the most talented rosters in the NFL and how Deshaun Watson is the man to bring it all together:

“I just need Deshaun Watson to give me 85 to 90 percent of what he once was, and I like the Cleveland Browns.”

https://twitter.com/AmirReza7_/status/1830680569715532081

Sharpe earlier explains how, when healthy, Cleveland’s roster is one of the best in the NFL. The majority of last year’s defense has returned and is looking for an even bigger impact than they had last season. Sharpe’s argument about Watson’s quarterback play is also a common one.

After seeing how the Browns were able to beat the 49ers last year with multiple backups on offense, it makes you wonder how far the team could’ve gone if Watson was healthy. That is a question that Shannon Sharpe has on his mind as well.

The Browns will look to kick off that playoff run when they host the Dallas Cowboys this Sunday in their newly named home, Huntington Bank Field.

Former NFL star Chad Johnson with high praise Commanders QB Jayden Daniels

Chad Johnson was in attendance for Jayden Daniels’ practice performance against the Dolphins.

Former NFL star wide receiver Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson was present for Thursday’s joint practice between the Washington Commanders and Miami Dolphins.

What did the six-time Pro Bowl receiver think of Commanders rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels?

“Did you Jayden Daniels today,” Johnson asked co-host Shannon Sharpe on Saturday’s edition of “Nightcap.”

“He looked good,” Sharpe responded.

“You know, I went to Dolphins practice, I went to the joint practice, and I was able to see them; it might have been Thursday’s practice,” Johnson said. “Maaaaan, that boy looked like……you know how you see some rookies, and they look like they just belong. Like he’s been here before. Man, he in that pocket, man, so G—–n calm and relaxed. Pressure coming all around him, he just stepping up in the pocket. He looked nice. And this was in practice so I expected what I saw in the game.

Here’s some backstory: In Thursday’s practice, Daniels was phenomenal, reportedly throwing five consecutive touchdown passes at one point against the Dolphins, earning praise from those in Miami.

In Saturday’s game against the Dolphins, Daniels played two series, completed 10 of 12 passing attempts for 78 yards, and rushed for 13 more.

Here’s the full episode of “Nightcap,” and you can see Johnson and Sharpe discuss Daniels at around the 2:07:35 mark.

https://www.youtube.com/live/FrN4EtaBz0k?si=QNgGx2PHMhPCl0Xc

Daniels’ performance against the Dolphins was somewhat overshadowed by No. 1 overall pick Caleb Williams, who also had a terrific performance. But anyone who saw Daniels knows the league is paying attention.

Deion Sanders, Shannon Sharpe and more react to Broncos’ new uniforms

The Broncos’ new uniforms have been well-received by fans, pundits and former players, including Deion Sanders and Shannon Sharpe.

The Denver Broncos unveiled a new uniform set this spring and they broke out white jerseys with white pants in their preseason opener last week.

In their second preseason game against the Green Bay Packers on Sunday night, the Broncos wore white jerseys again but switched to orange pants. The look was well-received by fans, pundits and former players, including Deion Sanders and Shannon Sharpe.

Here’s a sampling of how Twitter/X reacted to the new look:

https:/twitter.com/fashion_nfl/status/1825185532168818843?s=46

The Broncos will also wear white jerseys for their final preseason game and their first two regular season games. Denver will wear its new orange jersey for the first time in Week 3 and the Broncos will wear alternate jerseys three times in 2024 (view the complete uniform schedule here).

Denver unveiled its new uniforms in April. The team’s throwback uniform seems to be the team’s most popular look among fans, but the primary home and road uniforms are drawing generally positive reviews in preseason.

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View all of the Broncos players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Randy Gradishar is the latest Broncos legend to enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame. View the full list here.

Former Denver Broncos linebacker Randy Gradishar will be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio on Saturday evening.

So, how many players do the Broncos have in the Hall of Fame now? That depends on who you believe qualifies for the count.

There are several players — running back Floyd Little, quarterback John Elway, safety Steve Atwater, tight end Shanahan Sharpe, offensive lineman Gary Zimmerman, running back Terrell Davis and cornerback Champ Bailey — who are obvious Broncos Hall of Famers. That’s seven.

Quarterback Peyton Manning only played four years in Denver, but he won the AFC West in all four seasons and won Super Bowl 50 with the Broncos. That’s eight. Outside linebacker DeMarcus Ware spent the majority of his career with the Dallas Cowboys, but he won his ring in Denver. Nine.

John Lynch won a Super Bowl with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but he, like Manning, played the final four years of his career with the Broncos — and he’s a member of the team’s Ring of Fame. Ten.

So Gradishar is essentially the 11th Denver player to reach Canton. There are others, though. Safety Brian Dawkins played three seasons with the Broncos. Cornerback Willie Brown played four seasons in Denver before a 12-year stint with the Oakland Raiders. Running back Tony Dorsett and cornerback Ty Law also spent one season each with the Broncos.

Additionally, late team owner Pat Bowlen was enshrined in the Hall of Fame in 2019. So there are at least a dozen members of the Hall of Fame who Broncos fans can claim as their own. Up next should be former coach Mike Shanahan, who was snubbed again by voters in 2024.

Here’s a quick list of every former Bronco in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

1. RB Floyd Little (1967-1975)

(Dick Raphael-USA TODAY Sports)

2. LB Randy Gradishar (1974-1983)

(Rod Hanna-USA TODAY Sports)

3. QB John Elway (1983-1998)

(Photo By USA TODAY Sports)

4. DB Steve Atwater (1989-1998)

(Getty Images)

5. TE Shannon Sharpe (1990-1999, 2002-’03)

(MARK LEFFINGWELL/AFP via Getty Images)

7. OL Gary Zimmerman (1993-1997)

(USA TODAY Sports, US Presswire Sports Archive)

8. RB Terrell Davis (1995-2001)

(Jamie Squire /Allsport)

9. CB Champ Bailey (2004-2013)

(Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

10. DB John Lynch (2004-2007)

(Rick Scuteri-US Presswire Copyright Rick Scuteri)

11. QB Peyton Manning (2012-2015)

(Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports)

12. OLB DeMarcus Ware (2014-2016)

(Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

13. Owner Pat Bowlen (1984-2019)

(Manny Rubio-USA TODAY Sports)

14. DB Brian Dawkins (2009-2011)

Brian Dawkins
(Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports)

15. CB Willie Brown (1963-1966)

(Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports)

16. RB Tony Dorsett (1988)

(Rod Hanna-USA TODAY Sports)

17. CB Ty Law (2009)

(Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports)

Davante Adams says playing with Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers again ‘would be amazing’

Davante Adams would like to play with Aaron Rodgers again.

If Davanate Adams makes a move this season, he hopes it will be to the New York Jets. That was the message from Adams this week in a podcast with Shannon Sharpe as the Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver touched on numerous topics including a possible trade to the Jets.

The rumor mill has been in overdrive this week linking Adams with a move to the Jets where he would be re-united with Rodgers. The duo spent the first eight years of Adams’ NFL career together with the Green Bay Packers.

On his podcast, Sharpe asked if Adams was open to being reunited with Rodgers. Adams spoke of the possibility, but said that a trade from the Raiders to the Jets isn’t something he is seeking or even wants to put out there.

That doesn’t mean, however, that Adams wouldn’t like to play again with Rodgers.

“I’ll answer like this, if I’m going to be reunited with anybody, it would be Aaron, okay? But or be, you know, relocated, and be anywhere it would be with Aaron,” Adams told Sharpe.

“There was a lot of that stuff going on last year in the media and them asking, you know, ‘What are you going to do about this? Are you thinking about going here?’ and they talk about whatever without me even being involved in [the conversation]. And it ended up getting all the way to the point where it got in the locker room, and people was thinking that it was, you know, I was putting it out there to force (a trade). And I’m like, ‘Y’all just don’t understand man.’ You know, I hate to say it like this because it makes me sound like I’m trying to put myself on a pedestal..but when you’re the level, a certain level of player, it don’t have to come from you. And most of the time it’s not coming from you.”

Adams then added very succinctly and clearly that “I’m locked in with the Raiders, and I really feel good about this team and as far as I know, they feel good about me.”

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Then, he pivoted to the idea of a trade and playing for the Jets. At no point did Adams indicate that he wants a trade or is seeking a trade.

But he is on a Raiders team right now that is clearly rebuilding and is likely not a playoff contender.

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The Jets, on the other hand, are very much a playoff contender. And they’re a Super Bowl contender if they added Adams to their offense.

“And if that ever changes, that got to a point where they weren’t feeling the same way…I ain’t done playing so obviously we will figure out whatever we needed to figure out,” Adams said.

“But the thought of playing with Aaron is obviously amazing – I already know what that’s like which was similar to why I came here and in reunited with Derek (Carr), was because I had familiarity with him.”

Sports talk personality Skip Bayless is reportedly leaving FS1’s ‘Undisputed’

Skip Bayless has hosted “Undisputed” since he left ESPN in 2016.

After co-host Shannon Sharpe left last summer, FS1 sports talk show “Undisputed” may be undergoing an even more seismic change.

On Monday, Ryan Glasspiegel of the New York Post reported that Skip Bayless, who has hosted the show for the last eight years, will be leaving the network with his last show set for later this summer.

Bayless, one of the biggest names in sports media, left ESPN in what was seen as something of a coup back in 2016. He had previously hosted the show “First Take” for the network from 2007-16.

Now, he’s reportedly a free agent again.

Glasspiegel reports that the show has seen a dip in ratings since Sharpe’s departure following the 2023 NBA Finals. After taking several months off, the program returned with a new format that featured a rotating panel of guests joining Bayless.

Bayless was reaching the end of his current deal with Fox Sports, which the New York Post’s Andrew Marchand reported in 2021 to be worth $32 million over four years.

According to Glasspiegel, “Undisputed” is expected to continue without Bayless.

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Flashback to the original HBO ‘Hard Knocks’ at Ravens training camp

With the Ravens back on the show, some football fans have been flashing back to that inaugural season.

Monday’s news cycle brought the exciting announcement that NFL Films and HBO’s Hard Knocks series will, for the first time, chronicle an entire NFL division. The AFC North was selected, and it will be covered during the reality series “In Season” portion.

This marks the Baltimore Ravens’ first appearance on the popular program since its inception in 2001.

The Ravens were coming off the franchise’s first Super Bowl win at the time.

Once again, the Ravens are making Hard Knocks history, as they become one of four teams to be in the first divisional edition, complementing their status as the series’ inaugural team selected. According to both NFL Films and HBO, the production was “the first sports-based reality series” in television history.

For the first twenty years of the series’ history, the focus was on the training camp portion of the season only. Then, in 2021, the Indianapolis Colts became the first team to participate in the in-season edition.

This year will mark the first time Hard Knocks has an offseason edition, with the New York Giants selected as the subject matter. With the Ravens back on the show, some football fans have been flashing back to that inaugural season.

The video below features arguably the most iconic clip from that first season: Tim Anderson bringing down the house with his hilarious lampoon of Shannon Sharpe at the rookie talent show.

Watching Sharpe’s reaction, as he loses his mind with laughter, makes the bit much funnier. In the same episode, Todd Heap did a spot-on impersonation of coach Brian Billick, which was pretty hilarious as well.

If you want to watch the first full episode of the entire series, it is embedded here below:

 

Arike Ogunbowale withdrew from U.S. Olympic player pool ‘months ago’

That’s unfortunate.

Most basketballs would love to accomplish even part of what former Notre Dame standout [autotag]Arike Ogunbowale[/autotag] already has. However, she has not made a U.S. Olympic team, and she doesn’t seem to think it will happen anytime soon.

Ogunbowale recently was interviewed on the podcast “Nightcap”, hosted by Shannon Sharpe and Chad Johnson. In talking about the selection process for the 2024 Olympic team, she didn’t hold back:

“Me being me, I just felt the vibes. When it comes to that stuff, it really doesn’t have much to do with your game. It’s really about who they feel like fits with the team. That’s on the men’s side, too.

The committees say they look for people who … I don’t know, honestly. But I could already tell. I actually took my name out of the pool months ago. With the pool, it’s a big commitment. If I know they’re not picking me, I’m not going to keep going to these [camps] when I know the vibe. I’m not going to give you my time if I know the vibe.”

You can see all of Ogunbowale’s interview here:

Here’s hoping that Ogunbowale finally will get her chance at Olympic gold in 2028.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Shannon Sharpe seemingly forgot Kyrie Irving had a game-winning shot in an NBA Finals Game 7

Shannon Sharpe might have forgotten the biggest moment of Kyrie Irving’s career.

Kyrie Irving is playing in his second career NBA Finals as he tries to help the Dallas Mavericks overcome a 2-0 series deficit with the Boston Celtics.

However, per Shannon Sharpe (fresh off a new contract extension), this is apparently the first time the veteran Irving has played in the Finals. And that would be omitting a rather famous series between the Golden State Warriors and Cleveland Cavaliers in 2016.

Ho hum … I guess?

During Monday’s First Take, Sharpe declared that Game 3 of these Finals against Boston was the “most important game in Finals history” for Irving. Uh, not to discount how critical a game in a championship series is, but that’s not remotely true. Not even close.

Folks, in case anyone else forgot, Irving was the second-best player on the 2016 Cavaliers — a team that completed a 3-1 comeback in the 2016 Finals over a remarkable Warriors squad that won 73 games in the regular season. In that comeback, Irving hit a clutch winner in Game 7 on the road in Golden State.

It’s one of the greatest shots in NBA history. Full stop:

Frankly, regardless of whether Irving helps Dallas win the 2024 Finals, it’ll be hard for him ever to top this moment. That was likely the most important game he’ll ever play in, and it was likely the biggest shot he’ll ever make.

Sharpe and anyone else trying to manufacture tension for Game 3 would do well to remember that.