
When it comes to this year's Super Bowl, only one player received some mail from the National Football League.
There weren't a ton of penalties in the big game earlier this month, but the NFL still found a way to get some money out of one member of the Seahawks' defensive backfield.
In this week's Gameday Accountability report, the league announced that of the 178 total snaps in Super Bowl 60 only one resulted in finable behavior.
According to the NFL, Seattle cornerback Josh Jobe was the only player disciplined for his actions in the fourth quarter of the season's biggest game.
With 13:24 left Jobe was flagged for unnecessary roughness on Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs, first for his late hit, and then for his retaliation after Diggs came back at him.
The play resulted in two fines of $9,222 for the hit out of bounds, as well as "Striking/kicking/tripping/kneeing."
Elsewhere in the NFL world, the league is reportedly upset with one of its main broadcasting partners because of how much it's paying for the media rights to one of it's biggest competitors.
According to Puck's John Ourand, the commissioner and NFL owners are extremely bothered by how much more the NBA is getting for it's Sunday night package compared to its own product.
“Executives at the NFL are irritated. [The NBA deal] irritated them,” Ourand told longtime sports media insider Andrew Marchand. “The idea that NBC is paying more for ‘Sunday Night Basketball’ than for ‘Sunday Night Football.’ These are people and personalities, and it makes the executives at the NFL crazy that that happens. So, could they come in and just start to turn the screw because of that NBA deal?”
.@Ourand_Puck says NFL executives were irritated by NBC's NBA deal ...
— Andrew Marchand (@AndrewMarchand) February 12, 2026
Full pod https://t.co/NWdTgYNIxo pic.twitter.com/Q5ISZ4MmLE
The NFL takes a lot of pride in its place atop American sports right now and it makes sure its networks pay a premium for it.
NBC is currently paying around $2 billion for its media package with the National Football League. However, the NBA is getting around $2.5 billion per season as part of its 11-year agreement that was signed back in 2024.
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