Schefter added on the podcast that he did not want to leave the NFL Network when he did in 2009, but a salary disagreement forced his hand and he left for ESPN. Schefter signed a multi-year extension with ESPN worth $9 million a year in 2022, around the same time that ex-reporter Adrian Wojnarowski did.
Adam Schefter has been one of the most important people at ESPN as the network's leading insider on NFL news, often breaking some of the biggest stories in the entire sport. But at 58 years of age and with no shortage of money in the bank,
Kansas City Chiefs fans are not happy with ESPN's Adam Schefter today. The issue started Saturday night, when Schefter tweeted out a story about the NFL potentially expanding its replay review system to look into plays that could include quarterback's sliding.
T he Kansas City Chiefs have been the talk of the town but for all the wrong reasons. Instead of celebrating the Chiefs and the history they are making—the history they are on t
Even Pat McAfee thinks Adam Schefter went too far in his coverage of Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs this weekend. After multiple iffy calls benefitting Mahomes and the Chiefs during their AFC divisional round win over Houston,
Emmy Award-winning actor Eric Stonestreet made pointed remarks about ESPN’s Adam Schefter following the ESPN personality’s social-media posts about the Chiefs and Patrick Mahomes.
The NFL is expected to expand its replay assist to account for plays that could include the quarterback slide over the offseason, according to ESPN's
The New Orleans Saints are the last team with a vacant head coaching position, and their search is reportedly set to pick up in the coming week. ESPN's
Mike McCarthy is no longer planning to coach this year, and Eagles offensive coordinator Kellen Moore has emerged as a lead candidate for the Saints job, the last remaining head-coach vacancy in the NFL.
ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter is now reporting that the Saints have been able to set up some in-person interviews with their top remaining candidates.
The Commanders hedged their bets with most acquisitions under Peters. Very few signings received long-term commitments. Most got one-year, prove-it deals with the promise of more