'Better than half these dudes in the league': Raiders star Davante Adams would love for Tom Brady to come out of retirement



Las Vegas Raiders star wide receiver Davante Adams said he'd happily play with Tom Brady even if he were 58 years old.

It was widely speculated that NFL legend Tom Brady would play his last season with the Raiders to coincide with their move from Oakland to Las Vegas, which included a brand-new mega stadium. However, Brady retired as a member of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Although, much of the rumors seemed to culminate in Brady becoming a minority owner of the Raiders instead.

The team is currently struggling to find a solid quarterback, prompting podcast host and former NFL player Shannon Sharpe to ask Adams if he would play with Brady should he unretire.

'I don't know if they're going to let me.'

In fact, Sharpe barely got the words out before Adams started to answer.

"Tom Brady ... would you want — how old's Brady?" Sharpe began.

"Hell, yes," Adams interrupted.

"Damn, you didn't even let me finish the question!" Sharpe came back.

"I know exactly [what you were going to say]. I knew when you said 'Tom Brady' I knew what you said," Adams continued.

The 31-year-old wide receiver said he knew exactly what Sharpe was about to ask, adding that he has to "talk about how old [Brady] is."

"I don't care, I don't care!" he said on the "Club Shay Shay" podcast.

"Would you take Tom at 47 or 48?" Sharpe continued.

Adams clarified that even a 58-year-old Brady would still be one of the better quarterbacks in the NFL.

"He's getting older, but I mean he's still got to be able to throw it better than half these dudes in the league."

The last time Brady seriously talked about a possible return to the NFL was in April 2024, when he said on the "DeepCut with VicBlends" podcast that he "wasn't opposed" to a Michael Jordan-style comeback.

"Let's say one day there's a situation, right? Maybe it's a [San Francisco] 49ers, maybe, you know, heading to the playoffs. Offense is great ..." the host described.

"Patriots, could be Raiders, could be ... never know," Brady interrupted.

"God forbid somebody goes down," the host continued. "Would you pick up that phone?"

"I'm not opposed to it," Brady said at the time. "I don't know if they're going to let me if I become an owner of an NFL team. I don't know, I'm always going to be in good shape, always be able to throw the ball, so to come in for a little bit like MJ coming back? I don't know if they'd let me, but I wouldn't be opposed to it," Brady concluded.

Adams went on to tell Sharpe that his team's offense was one that was "fit for a Tom Brady" due to it being an "offense that you have to have extremely high-level execution to be able to make it work."

Adams was also asked if he felt pressure to live up to the idea that Raiders players are troublemakers on and off the field.

In a hilarious response, Adams said that while he wants to people to "fear" him when they're playing against him, "You don't want them to fear that you're about to shoot them or rob them!"

"Nothing like that! We can't be getting too out of control with it," he laughed.

Brady has consistently stayed in headlines since his retirement, particularly with his massively successful Netflix roast. However, after garnering over 14 million views in the first week of airing, Brady later revealed that the impact the roast jokes had on his children was too much for him to consider participating in such an event ever again.

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50 Years Later, We Still Remember The ‘Immaculate Reception’ And The Great Roberto Clemente

Half a century later, people from well outside the Steel City can and do commemorate two occasions — one of them epic, the other tragic.

'Y'all gotta stop and open your eyes. You can't be that blind or stupid': Jason Whitlock reacts to Dave Chappelle's SNL monologue



Saturday’s episode of “Saturday Night Live” featured comedian Dave Chappelle, whose epic monologue about former president Donald Trump, Kyrie Irving, and Kanye West left the left confused.

The New York Times published an article that claimed Chappelle mocked Kanye and Kyrie. But Jason felt anyone who actually saw the episode might have had a different takeaway. “Fearless” contributor Shemeka Michelle and host Jason Whitlock broke down Chappelle’s jokes to determine if he’s a friend or foe of the canceled icons. Shemeka also helped Jason make sense of what the NYT published.

Whitlock added that Chappelle's monologue perfectly captured the lies perpetrated by the left that accuse Trump of being racist. "Y'all gotta stop and open your eyes. You can't be that blind or stupid," Whitlock said.


\u201cY'all gotta stop and open your eyes. You can't be that blind or stupid. #DaveChapelle #DonaldTrump\u201d
— Jason Whitlock (@Jason Whitlock) 1668470280

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Whitlock: Why didn’t ESPN treat Carl Nassib like Caitlyn Jenner and Michael Sam?



Raiders defensive end Carl Nassib did not make history last night. He did make progress.

Celebrated by corporate media as the NFL's first "openly gay" active player, the sixth-year defensive end made the biggest play on Monday Night Football. Midway through overtime, Nassib sacked Baltimore quarterback Lamar Jackson, causing a fumble that allowed the Raiders to win a wildly entertaining game.

In a game filled with Las Vegas scapegoats, Nassib was the unquestioned hero. He bailed out Raiders quarterback Derek Carr (interception), receiver Willie Snead (dropped pass that led to an interception), right tackle Alex Leatherwood (false start at the 1-yard line), and head coach Jon Gruden (delay-of-game penalty in overtime).

Nassib's sack-strip wasn't spectacular. He rolled around the left side of Baltimore's offensive line after a stunting defensive tackle washed two Ravens linemen inside, freeing Nassib to blow past an overmatched running back. Nassib hit Jackson from behind. The ball popped out, and one of Nassib's teammates recovered it. The defensive play design had as much to do with the sack as Nassib did.

That's not said to diminish his effort or his performance. Injuries forced Nassib into the playing rotation, and he delivered the most important play of the game.

Here's what's odd and a potential sign of progress.

Nassib won the game, and ESPN, the Worldwide Leader in Sports, didn't treat the moment like a moon landing, which is one big step for mankind. In fact, ESPN appeared to mostly ignore Nassib's sexuality. I watched ESPN's Peyton and Eli Manning special broadcast of the game. I never heard the topic broached among the Mannings or their guests. Although Charles Barkley wore a Nassib jersey on the broadcast. I asked friends who watched the normal "MNF" broadcast, and they said Steve Levy, Brian Griese, and Louis Riddick did not dwell on Nassib's sexuality.

Last night and Tuesday morning when I checked ESPN.com, Nassib was not prominently mentioned. This is odd. It appears ESPN went out of its way to downplay Nassib's sexuality.

Let's think this through. The network that showed Michael Sam kissing his boyfriend on a 24-hour loop in 2014 isn't leaning into Nassib making a game-winning play on Monday Night Football. Sam, of course, was the University of Missouri defensive end the Rams selected on the final day of the draft in the final round.

A year after Sam's draft kiss, ESPN named long-retired, former male Olympic decathlete Caitlyn Jenner the most courageous athlete of the year for telling the world she felt like a woman trapped in a male body.

It was just a few years ago that ESPN was gloating in media circles about its ability to turn the Gruden-led "MNF" broadcast into a shrine for diversity and inclusion.

What's going on here? The first openly gay active NFL player decides the only professional football game on television, and ESPN fails to brand the moment as history rivaling Hank Aaron's 715th home run.

Something is right with this picture. I suspect it's Carl Nassib. Apparently he legitimately has no interest in allowing the media to exploit his sexual desires. This is progress. Nassib wants to be judged as a football player, not by what arouses him sexually. I suspect Nassib and the Raiders asked ESPN to avoid making his sexuality part of the game narrative.

Most people who define themselves by their sexuality — whether straight, gay, or bi — have little of value to offer the world beyond their sexual organs and identities. The hyper-promiscuous straight jock is intellectually and spiritually bankrupt.

I do think ESPN underplayed Nassib's big night. It's a positive feel-good story. His teammates clearly don't care all that much about his sexuality. They celebrated his big play with the same enthusiasm as Derek Carr's game-winning touchdown pass.

Nassib isn't the first gay player to be accepted inside an NFL locker room. Nor is he the first to make the most important play in a huge game.

There is value in Nassib sharing his sexuality. His success on pop culture's most masculine stage, the NFL, makes it less likely that young men who don't fit traditional masculinity standards will be ostracized and bullied.

That's not an endorsement of homosexuality. It's an acknowledgement of necessary, healthy progress. Our society tolerates all sorts of sexual sin. It's a horrific mistake to single out one form of it for demonization while celebrating other forms that damage the nuclear family.

The demonization and hostility cause a backlash that leads ESPN to give Caitlyn Jenner awards for the work of Bruce.

The Raiders' vax requirements highlight the power of comedian Steve Hughes' years-old warning about 'health regulations': It's about control



Those Las Vegas Raiders this week really showed the NFL and its millions of fans this week how much they are truly concerned about the well-being of Raider Nation.

Mark "Son-of-Al" Davis declared this week that only fans who can prove they have been vaccinated will be permitted to attend home games.

They had to fall in line with Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak's command that large events can be mask-free if all attendees are vaccinated against COVID-19.

Davis, a man clearly concerned about health, said in a statement, "Health and safety has always been our number one priority."

Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

In fact, Davis and his team are so concerned about fan safety that, well, they're allowing anyone who isn't vaxxed but really wants to come to the game to get the jab in the parking lot, throw on a mask, and ... head into Allegiant Stadium.

Yeah, you read that right.

Please to be noting: They did not bother to explain how a just-vaxxed-minutes-ago person with a mask is less dangerous than a non-vaxxed person with a mask.

Maybe — just maybe — it's not about their health.

The entire episode is reminiscent of the brilliant Steve Hughes' "I'm offended" clip that went viral several years ago.

Though the video of Hughes' "Comedy Roadshow" performance burned up the internet for his willingness to lambaste the Church of the Perpetually Offended, the Raiders' "for your health" vaccine mandate lined up nicely with the comedian's warning that governmental health and safety regulations are about control, not health.

Take cigarette bans, for example.

No smoking allowed, the regulators say. It's for your health.

Well, can we still buy cigarettes? Of course.

Where's the heath protection there?

You can't come to the game if you're not vaxxed, the regulators say. It's for your health.

Well, can we come if we get vaxxed at the game? Of course.

Where's the health protection there?

Steve Hughes - Health and Safety & Offended Comedy Routines (HQ) youtu.be

Las Vegas Raiders mandate vaccines for home games, offer to jab fans in the parking lot before games — then they can enter with masks



The Las Vegas Raiders announced this week that fans will be required to provide proof of vaccination on their cellphones in order to attend home games, becoming the first team in the National Football League to implement such a mandate.

Furthermore, in one of the stranger addendums to a vaccine mandate policy yet, the organization offered to give unvaccinated fans a jab in the parking lot on their way in. Those fans then would be permitted entry but would need to wear a mask during the event.

In a news release issued Monday, the team said that fans will be required to display their vaccination using "CLEAR's free mobile app and Health Pass feature." The policy will go into effect ahead of the team's regular-season opener against the Baltimore Ravens on Sept. 13.

Further details regarding the mobile app program and the on-site vaccination initiative were scheduled to be outlined during a news conference Tuesday afternoon at Allegiant Stadium.

NEW: NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders will require attendees to provide proof of vaccination on their phone to enter the sta… https://t.co/VhvQN6ngRc

— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) 1629171678.0

The new rule was implemented in response to a state directive regarding large events issued by Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak. On Monday, Sisolak announced a health advisory change for large event organizers that allows them to host a mask-free event so long as everyone in attendance is vaccinated against the coronavirus.

"Health and safety has always been our number one priority," Raiders owner Mark Davis said in a statement. "After consultation with Governor Sisolak and other community leaders, this policy ensures that we will be able to operate at full capacity without masks for fully vaccinated fans for the entire season."

In May, the Raiders announced a policy requiring all full-time staff in both the football and business operations to be fully vaccinated against the virus. Shortly after, Allegiant Stadium's management company, ASM, implemented a vaccine mandate for full-time staff, as well.

It remains to be seen if more NFL teams will follow in the Raiders' footsteps as the season approaches. Last year during the pandemic, fans were largely barred from attending games until later in the season when certain teams opened up stadiums with extremely limited capacity.

Vaccines have been a controversial subject since the start of training camp when the league announced stringent health protocols intended to make life more miserable for unvaccinated players as part of an effort to encourage vaccinations.

In response, several players — including Arizona Cardinals wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins and Buffalo Bills slot receiver Cole Beasley — expressed outrage at the rules.

NFL drops COVID hammer on 2 teams: Massive fines, lost draft pick for not following virus rules



The NFL wasn't playing when it said it was going to implement and enforce more stringent COVID protocols. After sending a first round of fines following Week 2 of the season, the league levied even bigger fines and punishments on two teams this week, according to ESPN.

Not only did the fines total in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, but also one team was stripped a 2021 draft pick.

Who screwed up?

The Las Vegas Raiders and the Pittsburgh Steelers found themselves in hot water this week. The NFL cracked down to the two clubs for violating the league's increasingly stringent COVID protocols.

In September, Raiders coach Jon Gruden and his team were fined $100,000 and $250,000 respectively for Gruden's failure to wear a mask on the sidelines during a game against the New Orleans Saints.

Now the team has suffered a new round of fines, and the have been stripped of their sixth-round pick in the 2021 draft, ESPN reported.

Gruden was fined another $150,000, and the club was dinged $500,000. A few players also faces smaller individual fines for violations.

ESPN's Adam Schefter said the recent round of fines were based on three main violations:

Coach Gruden has failed to wear a mask consistently.

Gruden has repeatedly apologized for his lax masking, noting "I've had the virus. I'm doing my best. I'm very sensitive about it.

A number of players attended a large indoor gathering.

The event in question was an event for Raider tight end Darren Waller's charity, the Waller Foundation on Oct. 5. Multiple players were at the charity event but were massless and mingling with the crowd.

The team permitted an non-credentialed person into their locker room after a game.

Gruden said during a video news conference, ""I'm just going to say [I'm] very proud of our organization, how we've handled this entire protocol and this entire process and I'm not going to comment any further than that. We, as I said last week, I believe we're on the cutting edge of being the best in servicing players and I'll leave it at that," ESPN reported.

The Steelers were fined a total of $350,000, according to a Friday morning EPSN report.

The team was slapped with a $250,000 fine for not wearing masks. And head coach Mike Tomlin was hit with a $100,000 penalty fo falling to wear a mask.