The second week of the NFL Network’s countdown of “The Top 100 Players of 2024” is underway, and on Tuesday, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy made his top 100 debut alongside teammates Nick Bosa, Deebo Samuel Sr. and the remaining of the athletes ranked 21-30. Purdy was voted onto the list at No. 28 by his peers, current NFL players, after putting together a career-best season in 2023 while leading his team to a Super Bowl LVIII run.
Purdy ended the 2023 season at the top of many of the league’s top statistical categories including passer rating (113.0) and passing yards per attempt (9.6), fourth in completion percentage (69.4) and fifth in passing yards (4,280). His 4,280 passing yards set a single-season franchise record, surpassing the previous record held by former 49ers quarterback Jeff Garcia (1999-2003). Purdy’s production in 2023 also earned him Pro Bowl honors and resulted in San Francisco’s QB1 racking up the most votes of any player in the league.
The vote to determine the top 100 athletes in the NFL is in its 14th year and includes only the ballots of current players in the league. The accompanying video series, which is now streaming on NFL+, is produced by NFL films and gives an inside look at the this elite group of athletes ahead of the 2024 season.
The full list of “The Top 100 Players of 2024” will be rolled out each morning at 9 a.m. PST on NFL+ in groups of 10 through Wednesday, July 31. The top 10 will be announced on Friday, August 2 at 5 p.m. PST live on NFL Network. Before the top 10 are unveiled, “The Top 100 Players of 2024: #100-11” airs on NFL Network on Wednesday, July 31 at 5 p.m. PST, recapping this year’s list thus far.
The Carolina Panthers have made it clear they still believe in the long-term potential of former No. 1 draft pick Bryce Young. But for now, the second-year quar
On the same day Mel Kiper defended his idea to ban two high safety defenses in the NFL, Tony Kornheiser used his pulpit on Pardon the Interruption to prop
In the modern NFL, players who get significant playing time on both offense and defense are almost unheard of. But Chargers
NFL offenses are going through a crisis. Gasp! Points are down! Yards per passing attempt are down! Won’t someone think of the offenses! A myriad of soluti