Additional points: Hogan, Buccaneers, Steelers

NFL veteran receiver Chris Hogan gets posted on Twitter about Adam Schefter from ESPN.com, but not because he just signed with a new team. In a twist of news that I did not see coming, Hogan submitted the Premier Lacrosse League project in March. Hogan played mostly lacrosse in college, because you probably know if you’ve watched any broadcast of a game he played in his heyday with the Patriots. Hogan was an incredible story, as he played only one college football season at Monmouth after moving from Penn State, where he played lacrosse.

He continued with Bills after a few years of training and became a well-known name during his run with New England in 2016-18. In those three years it was frequent Tom Bradyit’s the biggest deep threat and it was a big part of two Super Bowl winning teams. He signed with the Panthers in 2019, but his injuries limited him to eight catches in seven games. He was with the Jets for the first five games of their disastrous 2020 season, catching 14 balls for 118 meters before landing in the injured reserve and later being cut. He is now trying to return to his first sport at the age of 33. It is not clear whether he will be effective or not, but we at PFR wish him all the best.

Here are more from the world of football:

  • I’ve already heard that 68-year-old Bruce Arians will not leave at sunset after The buccaneers Super Bowl wins, so why would his 82-year-old offensive consultant Tom Moore? It seems that Moore does not intend to give up soon, as he told Guy Limbeck from the Rochester Post Bulletin that “I want to train until physically or mentally I can’t or until I die. He added “because there is absolutely nothing to stop me. So I want to train as much as I can, I want to train as long as someone hires me and I can do the job I should be doing. ” Moore never managed to become head coach, but had several OC races in the NFL, coordinating Colts’ most recent offense from 1998-2008. He was Arians’ assistant head coach at the 2013-17 cardinals.
  • Steelmakers recently had two players to retire, long Center Maurkice Pouncey and tight end Vance McDonald. Although they both drifted away from the game without Pittsburgh cutting them, the Steelers still receive financial success. These two retirements will result in a $ 9 million dead balance for Pittsburgh’s Mark Kaboly of The Athletic tweets. Steelers are not in the best cap situation, which helps explain why Ben Roethlisberger he will have to restructure his contract if he wants to return for another season.

.Source