Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice has his disciplinary hearing scheduled for September 30th in New York, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. And wouldn’t you know it, this convenient timing means Rice gets to suit up for the first month of the season before Roger Goodell’s hammer potentially comes down.
When it comes to NFL players creating mayhem and/or causing injuries while driving, there is precedent. When it comes to NFL players street racing on a city highway among and around other cars in broad daylight on video, there is no precedent.
Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice on Thursday received five years of probation and 30 days in jail from a judge in Dallas County, according to ESPN insider Adam Schefter.
The impact of NFL head coaches is arguably greater than any other major US sport. Heading into the 2025 season, these are the best head coaches ranked from first to worst.
A year after Jones' death, former Ravens teammates Torrey Smith, Bryan Hall and Ray Rice are among those helping Emily London-Jones carry on Jones' mission.
Jamal Lewis won the RB1 job with 80 percent of the vote. Who will be the next back to join him on the Ravens All Quarter Century Team? In our kickoff poll for this journey to find the Ravens All Quarter Century Team, you all voted emphatically to name Jamal Lewis as RB1.
Ray Rice’s days on the football field came to a sudden conclusion in 2014 after an arrest for third-degree aggravated assault on his future wife, which led to his indefinite suspension from the NFL.
Chiefs receiver Rashee Rice faces a variety of issues, from civil liability to criminal liability to potential NFL discipline to a potential P.R. nightmare arising from the perception/reality that he caused or contributed to a multi-car accident by street racing, and then fled the scene on foot.
With another wild NFL offseason in the books, teams are ready to open the 2025 regular season. We won't know the true results of the offseason moves until the season plays out, but here's a look at how each team addressed its needs.
Just because it's impractical or unpopular doesn’t mean the league won’t still pursue it, Michael Tunison writes. So it behooves anyone involved in the process to treat the matter as a potential reality.
Ray Rice: “Now I just want to be supporting other people and I would love a platform that expands on just helping other players understand the long view of their lives…" https://t.co/AYQlgl2BS7
Ezekiel Elliott may very well see his six-game suspension reduced. One would think, should that happen, it’d be a setback for NFL executives, but it’s unlikely they would see it that way.