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- Weekly series dedicated to current NFL games and news.
- This journey connects the legends of Nigeria's Igbo people and the Gullah Geechee of the southeastern U.S. low country to the modern legend of NFL icon Jim Brown.
- The personal journey of Buffalo Bills defensive lineman Eli Ankou is juxtaposed with the tragic story of Hanna Harris, a 21-year old Native woman from Montana who was abducted and murdered on the Northern Cheyenne reservation in 2013.
- Auburn's Derick Hall survives the near-death experience of being born four months premature, rising to become an elite defensive end and transforming his Gulf Coast community.
- A Nigerian-born football player with California roots, tries to keep his NFL dream alive in Japan, and undergoes a transformational experience that goes far beyond the game.
- Drawing strength from supporters in two countries, Illinois twins Chase and Sydney Brown overcome extreme poverty and heartbreaking adversity to reach national prominence.
- Pro Football Hall of Fame president David Baker travels around the USA knocking on doors to let future Hall of Famers know they've been selected to the Class of 2021.
- An NFL storyteller reflects on the profound ways the game of football has impacted her life and career.
- Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs forms a friendship with a young brain tumor patient, and their unbreakable bond provides the inspiration to pursue a lifelong dream.
- Steve Smith Sr. returns to the University of Utah for the inspirational story of All American linebacker Devin Lloyd, who helped lead the team to its first Pac-12 title in honor of two beloved teammates lost to gun violence.
- A group of young girls and Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart join forces to ignite a flag football movement in Southern California.
- Panthers tight end Hayden Hurst opens up to Giants tight end Darren Waller about his dramatic odyssey through depression, addiction, and healing.
- Buffalo poet and activist Jillian Hanesworth makes a passionate statement about her heartbroken community leaning on its beloved football team to help heal from off-field tragedy.
- Tim Jefferson, star Air Force QB and celebrated pilot, travels the nation to trace the football connections to the legendary Tuskegee Airmen.
- Commanders All-Pro special teamer Jeremy Reaves turns his career around through the lasting lessons of the most important person in his life.
- For Week 14 of the NFL season the New England Patriots traveled to Indianapolis for the first time in two years. The Colts had long been rivals in the AFC's Eastern Division but with 2002 divisional realignment were now in the AFC's Southern Division and both teams sported 9-2 records. The Patriots had defeated the Colts in six of the two teams' previous eight meetings, all with Peyton Manning as quarterback, and for nearly three quarters of this game the Patriots shut down the Colts en route to a 31-10 lead. But Tom Brady was picked off by the Colts, who then drove down for a touchdown on 4th and 9 at the Patriots' 13-yard line. Another Brady interception led to a one-play Peyton Manning touchdown drive, and on the Colts' next possession tied the game at 31. But the Patriots promptly scored another touchdown on a Tom Brady to Deion Branch toss, leaving the score 38-31. However, a Kevin Faulk fumble led to a Colts field goal and a poor punt from kicker Ken Walter in the final three minutes of the game set up a heart-stopping goal-line showdown led by the Colts' Edgerrin James against a Patriots defense led by Willie McGinest.
- The 2006 AFC Divisional Playoffs came to Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego in January 2007 as the New England Patriots, champions of the AFC's Eastern Division, took on the AFC West champion Chargers. Both original members of the American Football League, the two teams had met in the playoffs once before - the 1963 AFL Title game won by the Chargers 51-10. This was the fourth meeting of the 2000 decade for both teams; in 2001 the Patriots, in Tom Brady's third career start, rallied from a 26-16 gap in the final minutes and won 29-26 in overtime, while the Chargers turned two Brady INTs into a 21-14 win in 2002 and ran roughshod over the Patriots in Foxboro in 2005 in a 41-17 rout. For this playoff matchup the two teams probed each other, feeling out the exact physical nature of each other's defenses. For much of the first quarter neither team could move the ball consistently, but the Patriots broke the scoring ice with a 50-yard Stephen Gostkowski field goal. The Chargers then got momentum and handed the ball to LaDanian Tomlinson, the league Most Valuable Player, and he rushed the ball to set up two Charger touchdowns. The Patriots for their part struggled to move the ball and Tom Brady in particular found San Diego's defense extremely tough, but in the final two minutes of the first half Brady began connecting with his receivers and in the final seconds found Jabar Gaffney, the unsung hero of the Pats' playoff rout of the NY Jets the week before, in the endzone. The Patriots crawled closer to the Chargers in a grinding third quarter, eventually kicking another field goal. But in the fourth the Chargers got a run behind Tomlinson and found the endzone for a 21-13 lead. The Patriots clawed to the 50, but on 4th and 5 Tom Brady threw a pass that was picked off by Marlon McCree of the Chargers. It was here, however, that the game changed entirely, for Troy Brown caught McCree and yanked the ball out of his hands; Reche Caldwell, a former Charger, grabbed the fumble and suddenly the Patriots had possession and a new set of downs despite the sideline harangues of the Chargers and their coach Marty Schottenheimer. Brady kept throwing, finding Gaffney for first downs, then finding Ben Watson for a first down at the Chargers 5 (Watson's only catch of the game), and finding Caldwell for a touchdown. The Patriots now had to try a two-point conversion, and a direct snap to Kevin Faulk was rushed in successfully; Schottenheimer had tried to call time-out as he saw the play developing but it was to no avail. The Chargers were forced to punt after a 3-and-out and the Patriots were pinned at their 34. On third and ten Brady huddled with his receivers - "Who's the f(lanker) on this play?" he asked; "I am," Caldwell replied; "Shady, I want you to run a Go." Brady then launched a long strike caught by Caldwell; Caldwell tried to score with the catch but as he tightroped the sideline lost his footing and fell out of bounds at the Charger 14. This now set up a time-consuming series of runs ending in a Gostkowski field goal and a 24-21 Patriots lead with 54 seconds to go.
- 1956–TV Episode
- 1956–TV Episode