NFL General News

Back in February the Kansas City Chiefs became the first NFL team since the New England Patriots in 2003 and 2004 to repeat as Super Bowl champions. The next challenge for the Chiefs is winning three consecutive Super Bowl titles -- a feat no team has ever achieved.

The Patriots were the last to attempt it in 2005. Injuries and the defense taking a step back were among the factors in the Patriots failing to three-peat. They won the AFC East division with a 10-6 record (they were 14-2 each of the previous two years) and beat the Jacksonville Jaguars in the AFC Wild Card round before losing 27-13 to the Denver Broncos on the road in the Divisional Round.

The head coach of those Patriots teams was Bill Belichick. He also was the defensive coordinator of the New York Giants when they ended the San Francisco 49ers' three-peat bid in 1990. Belichick was asked Monday during his weekly appearance on the Pat McAfee Show about his outlook on the Chiefs and their quest for a third straight title.

Belichick highlighted a few areas, specifically on the Chiefs defense, that could be a concern.

"Overall as a team, run defense, turnovers, I think that’s an area they’re going to want to improve in," Belichick said. "I just think it’s gonna be tough this year. They’re a good team, don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that. I just think this third year, for it all to fall into place three years in a row, is tough. If anybody can do it, it’s probably Kansas City, but it won’t be easy. It won’t be easy.

"I’m not sure how tough the AFC West is gonna be, but in the end, I think they’re gonna have some tough opponents through the course of the season and the playoffs. But Andy (Reid) will have them ready to go. I think they’ll maybe score more than they did last year. We’ll see if they can hold up defensively. They lost a couple of good coverage players, obviously (L'Jarius) Sneed. We’ll see how all that comes together."


View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1825570384655327236



The Chiefs gave up the fourth-most yards per carry (4.5) last season. They also forced the fourth-fewest turnovers. So Belichick is right about improvements needing to be made in those two areas.

The loss of star cornerback L'Jarius Sneed, which Belichick mentioned, is a huge one for Kansas City. His departure in free agency will put even more pressure on young cornerback Trent McDuffie.

Of course, having the best quarterback (and best player) in the sport -- Patrick Mahomes -- is a massive boost to the Chiefs' chances of winning again. The Chiefs are never out of a game because of Mahomes, and he has proven that with several impressive playoff comebacks, including the Super Bowl in 2019 and 2023. And if the offense is even better this season compared to 2023 -- which is a very real possibility -- maybe it won't matter a whole lot if the defense isn't an elite unit.

But winning the Super Bowl once is hard enough. Doing it two years in a row is extraordinarily difficult. A three-peat has proven impossible to this point. It's hard to bet against the Chiefs, but this will be the toughest challenge the core of this team has ever faced.
 
Fresh off a new four-year, $212.4 million deal, Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is heading into the 2024 season with a lot of confidence. Some of that confidence is spreading into how he speaks about his NFL experience, including under former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores.

In an interview with "The Dan Le Batard Show" on Monday, the fifth-year quarterback opened up about about training with his former coach. Tagovailoa was incredibly candid when explaining the difference between Flores, his former coach, and his current head coach Mike McDaniel.

"To put it in simplest terms," Tagovailoa said, "if you woke up every morning and I told you, ‘You suck at what you did, that you don’t belong doing what you do, that you shouldn’t be here, that this guy should be here, that you haven’t earned this.'
"And then you have somebody else come in and tell you, ‘Dude, you are the best fit for this, like you are accurate, you are the best whatever. You are this, you are that.’ Like how would it make you feel listening to one or the other?"


View: https://youtu.be/QH9mSPfI8dU


Flores coached Tagovailoa, who was selected by Miami fifth overall in 2020, for his first two years in the league. McDaniel took over as head coach in 2021 after Flores was fired.

Tagovailoa spoke about gaining confidence and being more outspoken between his rookie season and now, saying that part of that was due to coaching changes.

"There's been a lot of growth between Year 2 and then going on to Year 5 now," Tagovailoa said, saying that he didn't think he was "mature" enough when he was a rookie to be as blunt as he is now. "I'm not the same person I was last year," he added.

And now, Tagovailoa is being open about his experience with Flores and how it affected how he thought of himself and his game.

"You hear it — regardless of what it is, the good or the bad — and you hear it more and more, you start to actually believe that. I don't care who you are, you could be the President of the United States. [If] you have a terrible person that's telling you things that you don't want to hear, or that you probably shouldn't be hearing, you're gonna start to believe that about yourself," Tagovailoa said.
Prior to becoming head coach of the Dolphins, Flores spent a decade in various roles with the New England Patriots under Bill Belichick, a coach known for being incredibly blunt and straightforward, with mixed results. Flores, who has spent the past season as a defensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings, filed a racial discrimination lawsuit against the NFL in 2022, which is ongoing.

The 26-year-old quarterback said that he is now incredibly comfortable with McDaniel, who has been encouraging and has also been receptive to his ideas. That comfort has not come easy, with Tagovailoa having to move past some of those comments that Flores put into his head.

"It's basically been, what, two years of training that out of, not just me but a couple of the guys as well that have been here since my rookie year," Tagovailoa said.

Tagovailoa played well in his first two seasons, but started to come into his own on the team under McDaniel. He had a great season last year, throwing a career-high 29 touchdowns and a league-leading 4,624 yards.

Tagovailoa will head into this season hoping to cure the Dolphins' playoff woes: The Dolphins have not advanced past the first round of the playoffs since 2000.
 
Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is heading into the 2024 season with a lot of confidence. Some of that confidence is spreading into how he speaks about his NFL experience, including under former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores.



Brian was mean to me, and coached me hard instead of coddling me


- Tua Tagovailoa



crying-dawson.gif
 
The mental state of professional athletes nowadays is pathetic.
They get too used to getting coddled even before they hit college. Tua should have been fine with hard coaching, though. He played under Saban of all people.
 
Brian was mean to me, and coached me hard instead of coddling me


- Tua Tagovailoa



crying-dawson.gif
We all need some ass-kicking in our lives in some sort of shape or form from a superior for our own benefit

These players from this generation and even the previous one just don't understand that.
 
tua is a little bitch...🙄
flores' response was classy.
christ,if this is what most players are like now, bb should tell teams to fuck off if he gets asked for interviews.
 
Back
Top