NFL's 2024 Pro Bowl Games Viewing Guide
The NFL announced on Wednesday the players participating in each of the on-field and off-field skills competitions that make up the 2025 Pro Bowl Games taking place Thursday and Sunday in Orlando, Fla.
Right tackle Brian O’Neill will take Johnson’s place, giving the Vikings seven players total. His 80.8 PFF grade was tied as the 12th-highest among all tackles in 2024, and he was credited with only allowing two sacks.
Many of the NFL's best players will put their talents on display during the 2025 Pro Bowl Games, a multi-day competition between the AFC and NFC. The two conferences will compete
The NFL Pro Bowl has become a source of a lot of mocking, and rightfully so. There's no more game (thank goodness!) and instead a bunch of events and games that usually leave players shaking their heads.
Joe Burrow, Ja'Marr Chase and Trey Hendrickson are scheduled to compete in three of the five events in Thursday's Pro Bowl Skills Show.
When the inital Pro Bowl rosters came out, the Baltimore Ravens led the league with nine players selected, two more than any other team. Now, less than half of
Russell Wilson has a chance to turn the 2025 Pro Bowl Games into his own audition, much like Derek Carr did before landing with the Saints.
Former Raven and current Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Patrick Queen will replace his former Baltimore teammate, LB Roquan Smith, in the 2025 Pro Bowl Games. Queen led all Pittsburgh Steelers defenders in combined tackles with 129,
Tennessee Titans defensive lineman Jeffery Simmons will be heading to the 2025 Pro Bowl. Simmons was named as a replacement on the AFC's Pro Bowl roster on Wednesday after Ravens' defensive lineman Nnamdi Madubuike was not able to attend due to injury.
Before that, though, we still have the Pro Bowl Games to be played. Since Super Bowl players voted into the NFL's annual all-star event are not eligible to actually suit up for the Games, which include skills competitions and a flag-football tournament,
The New England Patriots and Kansas City Chiefs have been the NFL's only two dynasties in the free agency and salary cap era.