NFL 2026 Offseason Thread

Yes, sorry, typo.

So basically, it was a variation of the Streisand Effect.

I thought you failed to remember the Titans. :winking_face_with_tongue:

Booooooooo.

(Actually, that was great, well done).

I mean, since they’re named the Patriots, shouldn’t they be “America’s Team”! :grinning_face_with_smiling_eyes:

I’m not going there.

:disappointed_face:

I see your team is going through the usual Super Bowl winners staff poaching

Yeah, lost our OC and our passing game coach, so we’re stealing to fill those. :smiley:

It’s the Post-Super Bowl Shuffle.

Circling back to this delightful article from Seahawks Wire (reported by @Atamasama) that Robert Kraft was secretly circulating fake rumors that the Allen estate would be selling the Seahawks after the Super Bowl in a psy-ops style cheating scandal (!!). Because the Patriots are HUGE CHEATERS!

Today, the Allen estate began selling the team:

No word yet on if Kraft has begun sabotaging the sale…

I’m sure a fake mustache is involved.

Yesterday, the Bears announced that they are raising their season ticket prices by 13.5% for 2026, on top of a 10% increase last year, and an 8% increase two years ago.

Team president Kevin Warren announced it this way:

Something tells me that “detailed analysis and market research” means “other teams continue to jack up prices, too, and we want to take advantage of our fans being excited by a playoff team, by squeezing them for more money.”

I’m slagging on the Bears here, but rapidly-rising ticket prices are endemic across the league, and sports in general.

https://wgntv.com/sports/bears-announce-highest-season-ticket-price-increase-in-last-3-years/

I kind of doubt that this is a data driven decision at all. One, every team is going to see some bump in sales when they trot out a good looking alternate, so I don’t think you can get any meaningful sales data comparing the entire year’s sales of the standard livery versus the short-term sales spike from a limited-edition throwback/alternate uniform design. Two, ownership doesn’t really have that way of doing things, they love to knee jerk everything.

The baby blue looks good and looks more distinctive than the navy blue. Navy is an overused color and staking their claim to the baby blue palette is probably smart strategically. There have been a lot of calls for the Chargers to switch back to their baby blues as their standard design, the Titans squatting on it now will have a mild chilling effect on that change.

But the big thing is that they are opening a new stadium in 2027, and in 2026 they will be outfitting the new stadium with tons of Titans branding. The franchise seems very interested in having a fresh start and they can’t practically wait to rebrand in 2027 as the designs will be visible. They are making the shift now in preparation for the 2027 move.

I’ve always had a minor quibble with the Patriots current design. Of all the teams they have the best claim to the Red, White and Blue color scheme and then choosing not to use the actual formal colors of the USA seemed like a bit of a whiff. I’m sure there was a cynical marketing reason where they wanted a brand color they could “own” per se, but the old Pat Patriot colors feel more natural for that team. Would be cool to see them go back to that full time sometime soon, even if the Pat Patriot logo isn’t retained as-is.

Hopefully in 2027 we’ll get to finally see a Polar Bears alternate uni here in Chicago. I especially like that the Bears seem to be making the all-Navy shirts and pants combo their unofficial “playoff fit” as that’s my favorite combo.

Thanks for that context. That, in combo with @Great_Antibob ‘s note about the Titans’ owner’s possessive feelings about the powder-blue-and-red Oilers scheme, makes sense.

They do look sharp in that scheme.

It’s still better than the weird “storm blue” uniforms.

It vaguely reminds me of the ugly greyish blue uniforms that the Seahawks previously wore.

I vastly prefer the new Seahawk colors, or their original iconic colors. I think the modern day Patriot colors are fine (particularly the silver helmets with red facemasks).

I honestly prefer the Ravens and Vikings colors.

Weirdly enough, I really like that color. I don’t think the overall design works as well, it needs some contrast somewhere, but as an alternate I kind of dig it. It helps that I think it looks good as a casual shirt which isn’t the case for most jerseys.

Ah, the Reebok era (2002-2011). I liked it ok, but I like the current and the throwback better.

I will concede that the shade of blue might look good with a different color combination.

This week, in Bears news:

  • Tuesday: “We’re raising season ticket prices by 13.5% for this year. Thank you for your support.”
  • Thursday: “Our ‘vision’ is building a new stadium in Hammond, Indiana.”

The Bears seem to really not be good at messaging, and have been all over the board on what they plan to do with their stadium. In the last two years alone, their public statements have essentially been (in chronological order):

  • “We’re excited about building a new stadium complex in Arlington Heights!”
  • “We’re excited about working with the City of Chicago on a new stadium!”
  • “Our focus is back on Arlington Heights!”
  • “We are considering options in Northwest Indiana!”
  • “We’re very excited about Arlington Heights again!”
  • “We’re very excited about Hammond!”

Granted, a lot of this is coming down to their dealings with various governmental and taxing bodies, and it’s pretty evident that they have been playing Chicago off of Arlington Heights, and Indiana off of Illinois, in hopes of getting tax breaks and infrastructure upgrades. Even so, if I were a Bears fan, I’d be getting very sick of the back-and-forth.

https://wgntv.com/northwest-indiana/indiana-lawmakers-to-meet-thursday-morning-to-review-proposal-for-bears-to-build-new-stadium-in-northwest-indiana/

To be fair, the Gary Bears has a certain - je ne sais quoi - to it.

Brian Fleury is officially the new OC in Seattle, and did his first press conference.

I guess after winning the Super Bowl, you don’t want to fix what isn’t broken. Mike Macdonald did say that he wanted continuity, which was why they interviewed so many people from within for that job, and even though they did an outside hire, they got someone with previous experience working under Shanahan much like Klint Kubiak did.

While much of Fleury’s answer leaned on typical platitudes, the intent is clear: Don’t mess up a good thing. Kubiak’s offense was undoubtedly good, ranking eighth in yards per game and passing yards per game, and finishing third in points scored per contest (28.4). Paired with an elite defense, the Seahawks’ offense outscored the team that ranked one spot ahead of them (New England at 28.8 points per game) in Super Bowl LX, burnishing Kubiak’s reputation as a brilliant coach with a bright future.

It remains to be seen what personnel on the offense is still around next season. It’s one thing to have the goal to continue things as they were from before, it’s another to actually have the people to do it. Losing people is going to be inevitable after winning the Super Bowl. People see free agency, and see their value be higher than ever after getting a ring.