Every NFL season produces stars who dominate highlight reels and award ballots, but just as often, some of the league’s most impactful players operate in relative obscurity. Whether it’s because of their position, draft pedigree or the situation around them, these contributors consistently win their matchups and drive results without national recognition — the players […]
Now that the 2025 college football season has concluded, it’s time to take stock of the year’s top performers. The PFF College 101 highlights the 101 best players from the 2025 season, combining PFF grades, on-field impact and positional value to provide a comprehensive look at college football’s elite.
In this piece, we break down rookie production across all 32 teams from the 2025 season to date, presenting every rookie who logged meaningful snaps, with tables sorted by total snaps played and contextualized using PFF grades and PFF Wins Above Replacement (WAR).
The Los Angeles Rams travel to Lumen Field to face the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, Jan. 25, with kickoff set for 6:00 p.m. EST on FOX, in a third meeting between division rivals this season — and the winner advances to Super Bowl LX.
The New England Patriots head to Empower Field at Mile High on Sunday, Jan. 25, for a high-stakes AFC showdown with the Denver Broncos, with kickoff set for 3:00 p.m. EST on CBS.
The Indiana Hoosiers completed one of the most dramatic turnarounds in sports history, rising from the losingest Power Four program two years ago to national champions with a 27-21 victory over Miami. Indiana sealed the title in a back-and-forth game defined by special-teams swings and momentum-shifting plays.
Fernando Mendoza profiles as a solid NFL starter after a dominant 2025 season in which he earned a 91.6 PFF grade, won the Heisman Trophy and led Indiana to the national championship game. His evaluation is built on elite clean-pocket efficiency, strong decision-making and poise under pressure, with enough arm talent and mobility to succeed […]
Each week, we will highlight an interesting grade or stat from every game in the NFL. To dig deeper into every game, including snap counts for every player, subscribe to PFF+.
Each week, we have broken down some of the highest-graded individual plays, complete with tweets to show you the action. Here are a few standout plays from the divisional round.
The Lions are finalizing a deal to hire former Cardinals offensive coordinator Drew Petzing as their next offensive coordinator, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter.
Seahawks running back Zach Charbonnet will need season-ending surgery after suffering a significant knee injury Saturday, coach Mike Macdonald said Monday.
The Bills fired coach Sean McDermott and promoted Brandon Beane to president after Buffalo again failed to reach the Super Bowl despite its regular-season success.
New Giants coach John Harbaugh said too much is being made of who has more power to make decisions and that it's important that he and GM Joe Schoen work together.
Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford says he and his teammates immediately turned their focus on overtime when they saw Caleb Williams' touchdown pass at the end of the fourth quarter on Sunday night.
We'll have to wait until Sunday to find out which two teams are playing in Super Bowl LX, but we learned the identity of the game's referee on Tuesday.
Giants head coach John Harbaugh downplayed his desire to report directly to ownership during an introductory press conference on Tuesday and stressed the need to work collaboratively with General Manager Joe Schoen and others in the organization as they try to build a winning team.
After Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison was arrested and booked for trespassing earlier this month, Addison's legal team expressed confidence that their client would be exonerated.
As the Giants and John Harbaugh worked to finalize a deal for him to become the team's head coach last week, one of the topics of discussion was whether Harbaugh would report directly to management.
Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow rarely uses Twitter, but he was bothered enough by what he saw and heard during the divisional round of the playoffs to log on and defend NFL officials against accusations that they missed calls.
Before the 2026 coaching carousel exploded from two to 10 vacancies, the thinking was that first-time head coaches would have a hard time getting any of the available jobs.
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