National Football Post publishes two kinds of content. This page explains both, and how to reach us when we get something wrong.
Where the reporting comes from
The great majority of what you read here is wire reporting from Field Level Media, a professional sports news agency. Those stories carry the Field Level Media byline and are published as we receive them. We do not add to them, and we do not put a staff name on someone else's reporting.
What carries a human byline
Our weekly NFL and college football recaps are written under the byline of a named editor. These are the only articles on this site written by us. They are analysis, not reporting: they contain no original sourcing, no scoops, and no anonymous sources. Everything they assert traces back to a wire story we've published, and we link to those stories so you can check.
How the recaps are made
Each week, our editor reads every wire story the site has published. Those stories are then given to an AI language model, which produces a first draft of the recap. The editor rewrites, verifies, and edits that draft, checks every factual claim and every link against the underlying reporting, and only then publishes it.
No AI-written text reaches this site without a person editing and approving it. A person reads every recap before it appears, and that person's name is on it.
Photography
Photographs accompanying wire stories are licensed through our agreement with Field Level Media and credited to the photographer and agency in the caption. If you believe an image is used in error, tell us and we will remove it while we look into it.
Corrections
We correct errors promptly and visibly. If a story contains a factual error, submit a contact form with the URL and what's wrong. Substantive corrections are noted on the article itself; typographical fixes are made silently.
Where an error originates in wire copy, we correct it here and notify the agency.
Last updated: July 2026