Baltimore Ravens LB Kyle Van Noy believes Eagles RB Saquon Barkley is giving the New York Giants the “middle finger” each time he plays.
Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley is far too classy ever to say an ill word or make an obscene gesture toward anyone, even if the situation justified it. Instead, Barkley, who is on his way to his first Super Bowl after his rocky breakup with the New York Giants last offseason,
ESPN's Chris Russo took to "First Take" to pump the brakes on the comparison between the two superstar players. He also made a blunt statement -- Henry has had the better career between the two players. "Derrick Henry's had a better career at this moment than [Saquon] Barkley's had," Russo said.
Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley left the New York Giants in the dust with his historic 2024 campaign.
Coming out of halftime, the Eagles were down 24-7. On the first play from scrimmage, Saquon had a beautiful 59-yard run that brought the offense to the Buccaneers’ 11-yard line. He came out of the game after that play and let Kenny Gainwell finish the drive.
Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson ... Eagles running back Saquon Barkley, who rushed for 2,005 yards, and Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow who led the NFL with 4,918 passing yards and ...
Saquon Barkley ran 60 yards for a touchdown on the Philadelphia Eagles’ first play, and he finished with 118 yards and three scores as the Eagles romped into the Super Bowl with a record-setting 55-23 win over the Washington Commanders on Sunday in the NFC Championship Game.
The Giants let Barkley go to an NFC East rival, with whom he rushed for 2,000 yards and is playing in the Super Bowl.
Saquon Barkley's rushing prop odds might be inflated, but that doesn't make Barkley a bad bet when the Eagles face the Rams on Sunday, January 19.
After days of silence, New York Giants LB Kayvon Thibodeaux and former Dallas Cowboys WR Dez Bryant are going at it again.
As long as Smith’s record has lasted, there are plenty of Super Bowl records that will be much harder to break. Here’s a look at the five most unbreakable single-game records in Super Bowl history: Steve Young completed 24 of 36 passes for 325 yards and six TD passes in the 49-26 rout of the Chargers in Super Bowl XXIX.