NFL Legend Drew Brees Receives Good News on Tuesday
New Orleans Saints legend and Pro Football Hall of Fame nominee at quarterback, Drew Brees, retired from the NFL in 2021. Despite walking away from the game, he has found multiple ways to stay involved with football.
Brees, 46, departed the NFL as a Super Bowl champion, seven-time passing yards leader and was named to 13 Pro Bowl teams during his 20-year career. Upon retirment, Brees had a one-year stint as an analyst with NBC in 2021, and will make his return to the booth this season for Netflix on Christmas Day.
Brees has also been heavily inolved with one of the fastest-rising sports in the world, and no it's not pickleball, it's flag football. Before calling it an NFL career, Brees co-founded a flag football business called Football ‘N’ America (FNA).
On Tuesday, Front Office Sports' Ben Horney reported that Brees' company was purchased by Unrivaled Sports.
"Unrivaled Sports, the youth sports holding company of private-equity veterans Josh Harris and David Blitzer, has taken notice," wrote Horney. "On Tuesday, the company announced it has bought Football ‘N’ America (FNA), a flag football business co-founded by former Saints quarterback Drew Brees in 2017."

Former New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees.Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images
Horney revealed that Unrivaled has moved quickly since opening its doors last spring, as it they own 20 entities, four of which are in the flag football space. While this move may come off as a massive payday for Brees where he no longer has to be involved, the company still envisions him being the face.
“The impetus for this combination was really a long-term partnership with Drew,” said Unrivaled's CEO to FOS. “We think he’s one of the foremost ambassadors for the sport.”
Brees' FNA has created 24 leagues around the United States, and can be found in places such as California, Louisiana and Texas. With flag football having nearly 3 million participants under the age of 17, accoridng to the NFL, it is very clearly going to be integral part of the sport's continued growth.
With a reported net worth of $160 million and a clear passion for youth sports with four kids of his own, Brees seems to be the perfect advocate for the continued rise in flag football's popularity.
Ex-Steelers QB Russell Wilson Claps Back at His Former Head Coach With Major Shade

Quarterback Russell Wilson stressed throughout his tenure with the Pittsburgh Steelers how much he enjoyed playing for Mike Tomlin. Wilson hasn’t shared those same feelings for his former head coach with the Denver Broncos — Sean Payton.
He’s unlikely to anytime soon.
There appears to be no love loss between Wilson and Payton. This week, the two exchanged insults through traditional and social media.
Wilson fired his shade at the Broncos head coach with a post on X on Tuesday.
“Classless … but not surprised …,” wrote Wilson.
“Didn’t realize you’re still bounty hunting 15+ years later through the media.”
Classless… but not surprised…. Didn’t realize you’re still bounty hunting 15+ years later through the media. 😎😂 #LetsRide 🤣
That post referenced Payton’s year-long suspension for “Bounty Gate. An NFL investigation in 2012 found former New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Gregg Williams paid bonuses in a bounty system to his players for deliberately injuring opposing players.
Williams allegedly ran the bounty system under Payton, who was the team’s head coach.
Wilson’s post was in response to Payton essentially telling reporters he would have preferred to face Wilson instead of rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart in Week 7.
“They found a little spark with that quarterback,” Payton said of Dart. “I was talking to [Giants owner] John Mara not too long ago, and I said, ‘We were hoping that that change would have happened long after our game.'”
Russell Wilson Responds to Sean Payton
There have been a lot of rumblings over the past year and a half that Payton didn’t want anything to do with Wilson after their first year together in Denver. Those rumblings reached a fever pitch after December 16, 2023 when cameras caught Payton irate at Wilson along the Broncos sidelines in a game against the Detroit Lions.
After the 2023 season, the Broncos released Wilson despite owning him $39 million.
The Steelers signed Wilson in NFL free agency. Pittsburgh was able to ink him to a league-minimum deal because his contract with the Broncos meant Denver owned him the difference from $39 million.
In summary, Payton and the Broncos paid Wilson about $37.8 million last season to play for the Steelers.
That’s an obvious sign a coach doesn’t like a quarterback.
Wilson has not really addressed his relationship with Payton publicly. But clearly, the quarterback has had enough of Payton subtlety throwing insults at him.
Steelers Media Defends Wilson Against Payton
Things didn’t end well for Wilson in Pittsburgh. After beginning 6-1 as a starter, the Steelers lost their last four regular season games in 2024.
Including the playoffs, Wilson finished with an even 6-6 record with the Steelers.
Even still, some Steelers pundits were glad to see Wilson go on the offensive against Payton after receiving shade from the Broncos head coach.
It may have been classless for Payton to say he’d rather face Wilson than a rookie quarterback. But it’s hard to deny that the Broncos, and Steelers for that matter, are better off without Wilson.
With their comeback against Wilson’s Giants on Sunday, the Broncos improved to 5-2 this season. The Steelers are 4-2 with Aaron Rodgers behind center.
Wilson led the Giants to an 0-3 start before getting benched in favor of Dart. Wilson has lost his last seven regular season starts.
He is 23-35 as a starting quarterback since the start of the 2021 campaign.