The Detroit Lions are hoping Hendon Hooker will continue to showcase development ahead of his third NFL season.
Hooker was up-and-down in training camp last season, but did have a pair of strong showings in the preaseason. After making his regular season debut in three mop-up appearances last year, Hooker was eventually demoted to the emergency third quarterback behind Jared Goff and Teddy Bridgewater in the postseason.
Now, the Lions have brought in veteran Kyle Allen to compete for the backup job with the Tenessee product. In the first opportunity to perform in front of the media, both players showed that they still have room to grow.
Though Allen brings pedigree as a former starter, Hooker is still viewed as the favorite to win the job. With an extra preseason game this year, he will have plenty of opportunities to prove to the coaching staff that he belongs as the team's backups.
Overall, Hooker remains one of the more intriguing backups across the league due to his unproven status and pedigree as a third-round pick. In a recent ranking of each of the NFL's 32 backup quarterbacks, Hooker ranked 16th.
"Hooker hasn’t played much since being viewed as a top quarterback prospect in the 2023 draft," Manzardo said. "The third-round pick missed his rookie season due to a torn ACL and had only nine passing attempts as Jared Goff’s backup last year. Hooker lacks experience, but he does have the benefit of leaning on a stacked offense in case he’s needed to fill in for Goff in 2025."
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On the first day of training camp, the Las Vegas Raiders were not active on the field, but off it, they were. The Raiders made a series of moves to add players, and that also meant they had to make moves to cut players on the roster as well. The Silver and Black will take the field for their first practice on the field tomorrow. On Monday, the Raiders waived wide receivers Zakhari Franklin and Key'Shawn Smith. They also waived linebacker Jailin Walker and cornerback Mello Dotson. These moves came after the Raiders signed some new players for their roster. Wide receivers Phillip Dorsett II and Seth Williams. Guard Atonio Mafi and safeties Jamal Adams and JT Woods. We know that the Raiders have a lot of question marks at the safety want wide receiver positions. These are two areas of the Raiders team that have a lot of young talent. The Raiders now give those positions some veteran players who can come in and teach the youth and compete with them as well. That is something that head coach Pete Carroll has talked about all offseason long. Carroll has also talked about whether the Raiders can get better by adding players; that is what they will do. On Monday, we saw that happen, and now we will see if the Raiders have something in the new players that they have brought in. "We want to win a bunch of games, I can't even imagine anything [else]," said Carroll on Tuesday. "I've been winning 10 games a year for 20 years or something. What are my expectations? We want to win a bunch. And I don't care who hears that, it doesn't matter to me. "It ain't about what anybody hears, it's about what we do." "There's nothing more important for our guys than being a good teammate, and I see the value in that so much more clearly than I have in the past," he added. "The demands that come on every player, every player has the opportunity to help our team by being a better teammate than they've been in the past." The Raiders have addressed a lot of different positions this offseason to step up their team for success, and the moves for the Raiders in training are not over just yet. Find us on X (formerly Twitter) @HondoCarpenter and Instagram @HondoSr and talk to us in 2025 about Carroll and more. While here, check out our Facebook page WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE to discuss all Raiders content in 2025.
Caitlin Clark might be the most popular figure in women's basketball right now, but she continues to draw shots left and right, both on and off the court. The Iowa product has stayed even keeled and mostly unrattled, but that doesn't mean she won't fight back. That's why, in the light of Kelsey Plum's recent comments, she decided to take matters into her own hands and clapped back at her with a simple, six-word message. Plum shared a picture of her during the WNBA's All-Star Weekend, which showed half of a Nike logo in the background. Clark was quick to spot it and just wrote "Thank u for the Nike ad." This happened just hours after Plum seemingly took a shot at Clark and her Team Clark teammates for reportedly not getting involved in their pre-game protest. “The T-shirt was determined this morning. Not to tattletale, but zero members of Team Clark were very present for that,” Plum revealed. “That really needed to be mentioned,” Sabrina Ionescu added while both laughed. WNBA All-Stars warmed up with a T-Shirt that read 'Pay us what you owe us,' ahead of their new CBA agreement, which is expected to be signed in the offseason. WNBA players get around 9 percent of the league's revenue, and they're asking for a bigger share since most of them also have to play overseas during the offseason because of the salary disparity. Plum is the vice president of the WNBPA, so it's not surprising to see her so involved in the protest and the demands. Then again, it's hard to understand the reasoning behind the tattle telling, as not only does it show that there might not be a united front ahead of these negotiations, but it also drives attention away from where it should be.
The Alabama Crimson Tide are hoping that they've found a player who can compete to be the quarterback of their future. On Tuesday, Tayden Kaawa from Orem, Utah, committed to Kaleb DeBoer and the Crimson Tide. The BYU Cougars were one of Kaawa's finalists, so it's notable that Alabama was able to pull him out of Utah. He's ranked as the No. 6 player from the state, according to the 247Sports Composite. Boise State was also a finalist, but Alabama's reputation spoke for itself on the recruiting trail with the four-star quarterback. “It’s one of the greatest colleges for football,” Kaawa told Steve Wiltfong of Rivals. “The coaches there are great. They make you a better football player and better person.” Kaawa took an official visit to Alabama in June, and it was that visit that really seemed to have sealed the deal for the Crimson Tide. “Love the environment, the coaching staff to the medical staff,” he explained. Kaawa is Alabama's second 2026 quarterback commitment, joining four-star quarterback Jett Thomalla from Omaha, Nebraska. Kawwa is ranked as the No. 26 quarterback in the 2026 class, according to the 247Sports Composite. Thomalla is the No. 12 quarterback according to the same rankings, so it will be interesting to see how the two co-exist in the same class moving forward. With redshirts likely, they could also find themselves on different tracks in Alabama's timeline. Either way, Kaawa is the 20th commitment to an Alabama class that's ranked No. 4 nationally.
Micah Parsons is not holding back on his feelings regarding his lack of a long-term deal with the Dallas Cowboys. One of the best pass-rushers in the league, Parsons is heading into the fifth and final year of his contract with the Cowboys. He'll be an unrestricted free agent in 2026 and, right now, he has no guarantees of a long-term contractual future with the Cowboys. After practice on Tuesday, Parsons gave a frank answer when asked about his lack of a long-term deal. The long and short of it is that he's looked around the NFL and has seen top pass-rushers getting massive contracts. The question is, why hasn't Dallas and owner Jerry Jones put that same type of investment into him just yet? "When you go around the league and you see these other teams taking care of their best guys, I seen T.J. [Watt] gotten taken care of. Maxx [Crosby] got taken care of. Myles [Garrett] got taken care of, [and] he's got two years left on his deal," Parsons said, according to Todd Archer of ESPN. "You see a lot of people around the league taken care of, and you wish you had that same type of energy." Parsons has notched 52.5 sacks over his first four seasons. For comparison's sake, Watt has 58.5 sacks in the same time period and Garrett has notched 60. Watt and Garrett are two of the best pass-rushers in recent memory, and Parsons is right there alongside them. As far as how he sees it, he, of course, believes he's the best in the world at what he does. "I feel like I'm the best at what I do," Parsons said. "You can argue whoever, but stats, numbers don't lie. The consistency is there, and the availability is there." Watt just signed a three-year, $123M contract extension with the Pittsburgh Steelers, while earlier this offseason, the Browns signed Garrett to a four-year, $160M extension with $123.5M of that guaranteed. The Cowboys and Jones have a reputation for being stingy negotiators, and they've taken many of their top players to the limit in the past before signing deals. To that point, Parsons seems to be aware that he's not in a unique situation. "This is not like I'm getting treated differently than anybody else. I don't take it personal. I just don't understand," he said. With that said, Parsons is clearly frustrated about the lack of long-term guarantees of his future in Dallas. So much so that he went as far as to say that if the Cowboys don't want him in Dallas, he's happy to move on and take care of business elsewhere. It's worth noting that Jones hasn't helped ease the tension, either. At the start of training camp on Monday, he went as far as to suggest that even if the Cowboys do sign Parsons, that doesn't mean he'll be available because of injury. Jones said that Parsons was injured for six games last season, while in reality, the star pass-rusher missed only four. "I've been pretty consistent. If they don't want me here, they don't want me here and I'll go about my business. I understand the nature of the business," Parsons said. "Like I said, as far as I'm here and under contract, I'll do what I have to perform at the highest level but at the end this is the business. Same way Jerry Jones, Stephen Jones and the other Jerry Jones take care of their family is the same way I need to take care of my family. I've got three kids of my own, so we all need to take care of our own family at the end of the day."
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