For many years, Joe Montana was viewed as the most successful playoff quarterback in NFL history. Tom Brady has since surpassed Montana, and on Sunday, Patrick Mahomes can vault Montana and make a strong case that he’s behind only Brady in NFL postseason history.
Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh compared a throw quarterback Justin Herbert made to one of the biggest plays in NFL history: "The Catch" by San Francisco 49ers legends Joe Montana and Dwight Clark.
One of pro sports’ biggest underdog stories, quarterback Kurt Warner worked as a grocery store stocker and played in the Arena Football League before joining the St. Louis Rams
Notre Dame football watched this unique pairing take place on the sidelines: Joe Montana and Travis Scott linking up together.
In the Bay Area, it is still known as “The Catch”—Dwight Clark’s fingertip reception of a Joe Montana pass with ... San Francisco a 28-27 win over Dallas and symbolized the beginning ...
Joe Montana was in Atlanta to support his alma mater Notre Dame in its national championship bid against the Ohio State Buckeyes.
Former Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy appeared to be a front-runner for the Chicago Bears head coaching gig, but the team ultimately went a different way.
Mark Andrews' drop that ended the Ravens' comeback against the Bills is sure to go down as one of the most infamous moments in NFL playoff history.
As Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs seek to be the first team to win three straight Super Bowls, we look at the other eight who had a chance.
The Kansas City Chiefs’ dream of creating history with an unprecedented Super Bowl ‘three-peat’ remains alive following their Divisional Round win
It's fitting that the first 12-team college football playoff will feature two of the country's most storied programs in Ohio State and Notre Dame. The Buckeyes are in search of their first national title since 2014 and their third this century.
MGM+ will air its new NFL Icons documentary on former Troy Trojan Demarcus Ware. The NFL Icons docu-series focuses on legends of the NFL and the fourth season of the series will continue on Jan. 24 with “NFL Icons: DeMarcus Ware” at 9 p.