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Marcedes Lewis can make NFL history
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The Denver Broncos are making NFL history, and it’s happening on both sides of the line of scrimmage. The Broncos lead the NFL right now with 36 sacks. That part of their record-setting equation isn’t exactly news, as Denver has held that lead for the last few weeks.
After a few injury-plagued years, Taylor appeared in 14 games last season and rushed for over 1,400 yards, setting the stage for what could be an iconic 2025 campaign. Over the Colts' first eight games,
Derrick Henry made history on Sunday. Henry scored his 111th career rushing touchdown in the second quarter of the Baltimore Ravens' matchup with the Chicago Bears, passing NFL legend Walter Payton for No. 5 on the league's all-time list. The touchdown also gave Baltimore an early 7-6 lead.
The NFL has seen some unbelievable games where teams refused to quit, no matter how bad things looked. These comebacks remind fans why you never change the channel — anything can happen until the final whistle.
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Jonathan Taylor becomes 1st in NFL history to score 3 TDs in 3 straight games against same team
Indianapolis running back Jonathan Taylor has become the first player in NFL history to score three touchdowns in three consecutive games against the same team.
Aaron Rodgers and the Pittsburgh Steelers looked to get back on track in Week 8 of the 2025 NFL season, facing his former team, the Green Bay Packers, at home on “Sunday Night Football. The Steelers were coming off a disappointing loss to 40-year-old Joe Flacco and the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 7.
The top 11 names are all quarterbacks, with Super Bowl champion Jalen Hurts currently filling that No. 11 spot on $51 million per year. The first non-QB to get a look-in is Micah Parsons, who joined the Green Bay Packers earlier this year and signed a deal worth $46.5 million per year. Parsons is the best-paid non-QB in the league.